April 7, 2004
Wireless a positive for Dayton
By Edy Wine, Freelance Writer for MediaMoments.com
and Peter Wine, Freelance Photographer for MediaMoments.com
I (Edy Wine) love working in downtown Dayton. Some have complained
about the expense of parking, the traffic and the “street
people.” They say they don’t feel “safe.”
I have worked around and overcome all those “problems.”
For every problem, there are three advantages or “good
things.” Now I may add wireless Internet to my list of
positives!
Having access to the Hot City network downtown gives me the
ability to check my e-mail and contact my family without spending
company money to make phone calls.
Wireless Internet also enables me to research subjects I want
to know more about but aren’t “business critical”
right now. With that new knowledge, I look like I know more.
It can also give me access to weather updates, to news around
town (and the world) and to retail sites so I’ll know
when and where to shop for office supplies or household items.
When my husband (Peter Wine) doesn’t pick me up from
work, I take the bus home. Using the Hot City network, I can
check the Greater Dayton RTA schedules and get information on
new services. That’s the way I beat high parking costs.
Using a bus pass or tokens saves a lot.
Dayton has many advantages, but if you don’t use them,
they’ll go away. If you don’t know about them, how
can you use them?
I can use wireless Internet to find out a little more about
downtown Dayton (and the businesses that call it home) every
day.
My husband runs the Webster Street Market Garden Railroad and
intends to use the wireless network to broadcast images from
that location.
Having collected little video cameras, he plans to put them
around the railroad and broadcast pictures on a Web page. This
will give folks at home a perspective on the railroad they cannot
get in person.
Using a mouse, they’ll be able to view images the cameras
capture. This wouldn’t be possible without the wireless
network; a hard-wired solution for a noncommercial application
like this would cost too much.
My working a couple of blocks from the Dayton Dragons stadium
brings up another thought. Imagine accessing the team’s
Web page to get the scoop on players while watching the game
from stadium stands. It’s possible with wireless Internet.
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