Imagine sitting on your couch at home and, with the wave of an arm, turning up the volume on your stereo, or flipping the channel on a television set across the room. A few more hand waves could shut off the lights in distant rooms, or cause a fireplace to blaze to life.
Some MP hotspots
Sports stadiums want to enter the smartphone era. The challenge: connecting 100,000 fans.
A Texas company is selling this as a ‘charitable innovation initiative’
If you fear WiFi, you may also want to steer clear of baby powder
Some Canadians go to great lengths to escape waves of radiation from electronics that are considered harmless
Shooting victim Gabrielle Giffords returns to Congress for the U.S. debt vote, tens of thousands of Somalis flee famine in Kenya
Brian Dunning responds to Elizabeth May’s wi-fi concerns.
Elizabeth May explains, at length, her feelings about electromagnetic radiation.
The fallout from Elizabeth May’s wifi fears
‘Skooky840’ is a good neighbour; he or she doesn’t lock their WiFi. When my Internet connection is out, I hop on theirs until I get things sorted. I’m not sure why they don’t protect their signal with a password. Maybe they can’t figure out how to. Maybe they can’t be bothered. Or maybe, like some folks I know, Skooky840 leaves their signal open to be polite, as a courtesy to neighbours like me. As long as we don’t abuse it and run up their bills, hey- why not? I’d love to thank Skooky840 for making my life a little easier and our street a little friendlier, but I don’t know who they are. A WiFi signal, like the Internet Protocol (IP) address associated with it, is not a person.
A Texan grandma is years ahead of any Canadian, technologically speaking. She was the first to tap into a fledgling White Space broadband network, using technology that could allow broadband WiFi access to be blanketed over entire populations, much like a radio station’s signal.