“˜HotSpots’ will soon allow you to surf while you sip
By Robert Esposito
Jan. 9, 2003 9:00 p.m.
Many of us at UCLA spend a lot of time in Starbucks drinking
coffee or tea and talking. There’s also the occasional
guy/girl with his/her Mac or ultra portable computer sitting beside
his/her nonfat grande latte.
T-mobile has noticed this and is creating “HotSpots”
all around the nation. HotSpots provide T1 wireless Internet access
to paying T-mobile customers. Airports and Borders Bookstores have
also jumped on the Hot bandwagon.
The only downside to this very tempting deal is the not-so-hot
$39.99 monthly fee (and this is with a promotional $10 discount).
If I spent every day in a Starbucks or spent a lot of time in
airports, the fee might be justified, but a mere college student is
not going to spend 40 bucks a month for wireless T1 access.
There are other options, however: $29.99 gets you unlimited
local access as opposed to the $49.99 unlimited nationwide
fee. Also, you can buy refillable access cards, $20 for 120
nationwide minutes or $50 for 300 nationwide minutes.Â
Finally, you can opt for a pay-as-you-go system for a $2.99 initial
fee and 25 cents/min rate. The price is still a bit steep for
me, but it should eventually go down.
Also, I would be afraid to whip out my laptop and sign on to
Kazaa at Starbucks because the “unlimited” access only
allows for 500 megabytes of transfer, with a charge of 25 cents
added for each additional megabyte. It would be easy to exceed that
rate if you were, say, streaming music videos off of Launch.com
while downloading movies from Kazaa.Â
Finally, before you take out your credit card, make sure your
laptop has a Wi-Fi 802.11b card installed. This is the wireless
technology that allows your laptop to receive high speed
Internet. Despite claims by T-Mobile that their service is
secure, just as you can listen in on other’s cordless phone
conversations, malicious bystanders could spy on the airwaves
around your computer, observing your activities or stealing
information.Â
The only way around this security weakness is to use a virtual
private network. In simple terms, a VPN service such as Boingo ($30
per year) creates a safe place to route all of your traffic by
insulating your traffic from other network traffic on the Internet.
Thirty bucks per year sounds fair for peace of mind. By the way,
other traditional options for protection such as software
firewalls, which selectively block network traffic, are not an
effective alternative to a VPN in wireless cases.
Wireless technology is amazing and very exciting. I enjoyed our
wireless network at home during winter break and now I want to have
wireless Internet access at UCLA and surrounding areas. It is an
addictive new technology. Luckily, UCLA has already instated a
wireless access program on campus.
UCLA’s Wireless Consortium Web page states that our
proximity to the L.A. media industries and Silicon Valley suited
the construction of a wireless network. They also believe that
wireless gaming is going to greatly help boost the expansion of our
network on campus.Â
While UCLA’s network is currently functioning, its use is
mostly limited to faculty and physically bounded within select
buildings on campus. Problems with “security and
scalability” still have to be ironed out before my dream of
playing Unreal 2003 and chatting with friends on AIM during class
can come true.Â
Hopefully, UCLA will become a HotSpot sooner rather than later
“¦ and best of all, it will probably be
free!  Â
Esposito’s top three portable entertainment devices
are: the Apple iPod, Gameboy Advance, and Samsung
SPH-A500 Color Screen mobile phone. E-mail Esposito at
[email protected].