“In a big win for a little Wi-Fi start-up called Fon Time Warner Cable will let its home broadband customers turn their connections into public wireless hotspots,a practice shunned by most U.S. Internet service providers,”USA Today reports.”For Fon,which has forged similar agreements with ISPs across Europe, the deal will boost its credibility with U.S. consumers.For Time Warner Cable, which has 6.6 million broadband subscribers, the move could help protect the company from an exodus as free or cheap municipal wireless becomes more readily available.Fon was founded in Spain in 1995 on the premise that people shouldn’t have to pay twice — once at home, then again in a coffee shop — for Internet access.At first, the company offered software that let members, called Foneros, turn Wi-Fi routers into shared access points,but it took hours to get up and running.In the fall of 2006,Fon,which counts Google and eBay’s Skype among its investors,started selling and sometimes giving away its own branded wireless router,called La Fonera.Since then, it has distributed about 370,000 of them worldwide.La Fonera splits a Wi-Fi connection in two:an encrypted channel for the Fonero and a public one for neighbors or passersby.Foneros can decide how much of their bandwidth to share with the public and can log on to any Fon router without charge.”Aliens,”as Fon calls non-members,can register on a Web page and pay a modest $2 or $3 for 24 hours of access”.
Time Warner and Fon
- April 23rd, 2007
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by Jim_Downing
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