Monday, March 5, 2007

Area residents prefer regional over local Wi-Fi

David Smith, The Examiner

SAN FRANCISCO - By nearly 2-to-1, Bay Area residents favor a regional wireless network rather than a collection of individual city and county Wi-Fi networks spread across the area, a new survey said.

The survey, commissioned by theBay Area Council, showed that 52 percent of the 600 residents questioned preferred a single network that residents around the Bay could tap into.

Twenty-eight percent said they’d like to see individual cities and counties provide blanket Wi-Fi access for their jurisdictions, such as those officials in The City are considering.

Los Angeles is working on plans for wireless Internet and has an advantage over the Bay Area, which has nine counties and 101 cities, said John Grubb, spokesman for the Bay Area Council, a business-oriented public policy advocacy group. In Silicon Valley, meanwhile, Peninsula cities are developing their own area-wide Wi-Fi network, now being tested in San Carlos.

“If there’s one thing and only one thing that we envy about Los Angeles it’s that they have a huge physical footprint served by one government body,” Grubb said.

Grubb said the council was working with the “biggest companies” in the area — he couldn’t name names — on rolling out “something big” on a regional wireless effort.

“These polling results certainly point to the need for one network for the whole region,” he said.

The survey found the number of residents using computers has stayed flat since 1999, when 79 percent said they used a PC at home, work or school. In 2007, that number is 81 percent.

The survey, conducted by Field Research Corporation during the second week of January this year, also detected a “digital divide” in the Bay Area — a link between Internet and computer use and income levels.

Of individuals making more than $80,000, 97 percent regularly use a computer whether at work or home, but just 62 percent of those earning less than $40,000 do the same. Similarly, 95 percent of those in the top income group access the Internet, compared with 52 percent in the lower income bracket.

Ray Hartz Jr., a 57-year-old resident of The City and manager at Barnes & Noble who took part in the survey, said having a regionwide Wi-Fi network would be beneficial, allowing every resident to access the Internet if they had a computer.

Computers need to be recycled like hearing aids or eyeglasses to provide people with the best chance of accessing the educational, social or professional opportunities the Internet provides, Hartz Jr. said.

“Having it available for everybody would be a great equalizer,” Hartz Jr. said.

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