In a move the Saskatchewan government hopes will attract and retain
young people in the province, a new free wireless Internet service
is set to launch in May in four Saskatchewan cities.
"I think it just opens up possibilities," says Victoria Morris, one
of the facilitators at the province's first youth summit held three
weeks ago. "If you're at the Broadway Roastery or you're in a park
and you want to check your e-mail or you want to surf the Internet,
you have a place to do that."
Free wireless Internet access was one of the recommendations
emerging from the Saskatchewan Youth Summit, Morris said. Although
the service is one of many changes youth are looking for, they'll be
excited that government heard their voices and took action, she
said.
On Monday at the Broadway Roastery cafe, Premier Lorne Calvert and
Andrew Thomson, the minister responsible for information technology,
announced the province will provide free wireless Internet access
downtown, on university and college campuses and in trendy areas of
Saskatoon, Regina, Moose Jaw and Prince Albert.
Once the government spends $1.3 million installing wireless
transmitters the size of coffee cans on light standards and
telephone poles and a central antenna within each coverage zone,
people with laptops and other wireless devices can surf the web and
read e-mails around Saskatoon. So-called "hot spots" where people
can connect to the Internet will include River Landing, downtown,
the University of Saskatchewan, the Kelsey campus of the
Saskatchewan Institute for Applied Science and Technology (SIAST)
and on and around Broadway Avenue, north of Eighth Street.
Once up and running in May, Calvert said the network, called the
Saskatchewan! Connected initiative, will be the largest free
wireless Internet network in Canada.
I'm one of the 4 guys responsible for architecture/install/support of the existing Wireless Internet stuff for the company
this initiative was announced (With a hard deadline!) before they came to us with the idea
free wireless internet in the cities rules, but 3 months to design and implement then troubleshoot is kinda on the stupidly insane side of things
jeje?