Mapping complimentary vs paid Wi-Fi across the worlds hotel brands

From Hotel Chatter’s 2011 Wi-Fi report


Oh no, Apple are tracking my location

An article running in nearly all the British media outlets today reveals that Apple has been storing location data of iPhones and iPads customers.

How it took two British security ‘experts’ is totally beyond me, one of the iPhones key features in the ability to attach your location to many of the phones services, twitter, email and the facebook are a few. Photos can be ranked by location and the handy thing about google maps is it ability to guide you to your location based on where you are right now.

Of course, the ability to track a devise this is nothing new, Apple have just created some magical way if tracking people’s location, they just made the technology similar for the average person to use. Mobile Phone networks have been able to track user locations since the dawn of the mobile phone through the slightly complex yet simple method of triangulation, a measurement of the distance the devise sits between 3 masts giving a nearly pin-point accuracy.

The benefits for missing persons and for fighting terrorism far out way the nay sayers and privacy campaigners weak arguments.

It’s quite simple, if your a drug dealer, terrorist or having an affair and you don’t want to be found out – bin your phone (sorry if this inconveniences your life). If your a normal person with nothing to hide then stop crying, no one is that interested in your life location anyway.


Are you going to stand up against this? #notinmyname

More madness over the weekend, hundred’s of people had their travel plans distrubted because of a bomb left under a bridge in Newry on Friday, it took me close to 5 hours to get home from my office in Dublin.  I don’t see how cutting off the main road between Belfast and Dublin can somehow work towards a United Ireland, surely if you wanted a united Ireland you would be encouraging cross border travel!

This morning hundreds of more people were delayed getting to work because of a hoax bomb on the M1.  It won’t stop me living here, it won’t stop me doing business across the island, it won’t stop me raising my family in this wonderful country.

They must not win, we cannot allow them to win!

If you are stuck in traffic or your journey is delayed because of these people, don’t let it get you down, take some time to enjoy the scenery surrounding you, take some time to talk to the person stuck in the car next to you.  Don’t let it get you down, don’t let it anger you because if you do, they win.

We need to stand united against these people, we need a United Ireland, that is an Ireland that is United in standing up against these people.

Watch this video Ruth has put together to learn more about how you can make your stand!

Send your photo to : notinmynamevid@gmail.com , about now is good!


Dear twitter……… It’s not you, it’s me

I’ve using twitter for just over 3 years, the first surprising thing to note is that a web service has lasted more than 3 years….. Bebo anyone?

Before I start to explain, firstly let me say, twitter is amazing. The instant feed of news and current affairs both local and international rivals any other media platform, further to that I have met (yes actually met, in real life) some amazing people, OpenCoffeeLisburn was founded from a bunch of tweets and I’ve used twitter to place and receive business. Some of the projects I am working on right now have been born through twitter.

BUT…… It’s time to move on, lately I just have not been feeling the buzz from twitter. The dynamic of the people I interact with has shifted, twitter for me today seems to be less of an online community and more of a broadcast mechanic. As someone said to me just this morning ‘it’s like the people on CBs radios who had their mike keyed the whole time’ plenty of talking and not much listening. Self publication and flogging your warped point of view seem to be the order of the day (which, of course I too am guilty off) and I just couldn’t be bothered anymore.

So it’s gone. At 7.13pm today I deactivated my wiseguyrussell account and along with it, 23.456 tweets, 29 lists, 46 listings and 825 followers.

So what now? The people that matter know how to get me on other platforms and I know how to get them, as for the rest ‘I’ll see you in another life brother’

It’s been swell.


Can I get a freaking coffee please?

Last night myself and some buddies had the pleasure of attending the Irish Blog Awards in the Europa Hotel, Belfast (great night, enough about that though).

Once the event and eating were over, we decided to head to a pub, then it became apparent that all 4 of us were driving, so no point in heading to a pub on a Saturday night . Let’s get a coffee I thought! The words ‘Great idea’ resounded and we headed to the hip and happening ‘Lisburn Road’ for a coffee because after all, it was only 10.30pm.

First stop, Starbucks by the uni. Shut

Next stop, Arizona (made famous as a place to hang out in the evening and drink coffee), they were open but it was for take out only……… Despite the people sitting down behind us.

On to Morelli”s then. Again, they were open and seemed at first to want us to sit down and enjoy their establishment but then as it turned out, we were only allowed to sit down whilst we waited for our take out coffee. Thanks!

Everywhere else was shut…………… So we went to McDonalds, had some coffee, chatted then went home. Mission complete.

Now you can slag McDonalds all you want but they seem to know how to run a business better than the artisan places we give so much kudos too, incidentally, OpenCoffeeLisburn is only held at McDonalds because it is the only place in Lisburn open at 7am.

Why is McDonalds the only place open? Belfast is supposed to be a bustling European city not a ghost town at 11pm…… Unless you want alcohol that is.

Belfast : City of the future, if you are of retirement age that is.


Whats the Big (Society) idea ?

Yer Man David Cameron, off coalition Government fame has been chatting about his BigSociety again,

Here are the bullet points from Wikipedia;

The plans include setting up a Big Society Bank and introducing a national citizen service.[4] The stated priorities are:

  1. Give communities more powers (localism and devolution)
  2. Encourage people to take an active role in their communities (volunteerism)
  3. Transfer power from central to local government
  4. Support co-opsmutualscharities and social enterprises
  5. Publish government data (open/transparent government)

It’s all a bit nuts if you ask me……………………. but it all makes sense. I like it! Society is made up of a random bunch of people and local matters, matter to local people.  We all have different skill sets so why can’t we all give just a little bit back to society instead of taking all the time.

I have been doing charity work since I was 14, I started helping out with the Beaver Scouts, now (a few years later) i’m still scouting.  I don’t actively run a Friday night group any more but I use the skills learnt in my paid employment to sit on scouting boards, executive committees and also run events.  Don’t get me wrong, I love my paid employment but there is something satisfying about helping to educate kids through scouting.  Some of my happiest times have been spent in the pissing rain at scout camp.  Often I spend more time working for free, than working for money.  So why can’t we all do it?

Because we (as a society) are a bunch of lazy, selfish, freeloading morons……. don’t believe me?  What have you done today to make you feel proud (yeah)? If you can’t answer that, then you need to do something about it (now will be fine).

One of DC’s idea’s is to have a National Citizen Service, a sort of unpaid bunch of people (manly over 16 years olds) that can help out when the time arises.  It’s a great idea, the UK is one of the only EU countries that does not have a civil defense service and I have seen the civil defense do great work in Ireland during the floods.

Northern Ireland is the only UK state that does not have a 4×4 response team, despite calls to set one up.  During the Cockermouth floods in England, the 4×4 response team were as vital as the police and army were at getting people safe.

What can I do ? Give your time, like I said, everyone has something to offer and maybe just maybe if we all club together and do just one little thing, give just one thing back then we can make this world bearable for our children.

 


Calling all hoteliers……. Do you think you are good enough?

Fancy some free UK wide advertising?
Think your hotel is good enough to go under the TV lens spotlight?

Read on

I received the below press release today calling for hotels to put themselves under the spot light for a month of filming, ‘The Hotel’ will film everything in a chosen hotel for a month, hiring, firing, good service, Corp business, the restuarant and coping with the recession.

In terms of advertising, you could not get better value for money but be careful. There are two types of hotel out there;

The hotels that are shit hot &
The hotels that think they are shit hot

Can you guess which one the producers are after?

Get your house in order and get applying !

Read the rest of this entry »


What if the Internet got switched off? ….. And you owned a gun

Imagine a world with no Internet or cell phones. A scary thought eh? For the people of Egypt last week it became a reality as the Government pulled the plug to shut down all
communications in a hope to stop the rioters in their tracks. How wrong was that?

The Internet is the best form of communication and learning around, its both bias and un bias and what’s more IT’S LIVE. No waiting for a news bulletin or a daily news paper, the information contained is raw, both factual and bullshit, both regulated and unregulated.

We, as a race have never been as smart.

Yet the Government of egypt somehow think by pulling the plug, people will go back to state sponsored newspapers and television channels and back to ‘taking their word for it’. Of course what happened in reality was much different, people fought harder and
what’s worse, fundamentalists were able to work under the cover of darkness. Rumours and lies could spread easier and the only way to confirm things was to watch the correpted government broadcast. Total madness.

Dispite this and despite President Obamas plee’s to switch the Internet back on it has emerged that the USofA are actually planned their own Internet kill switch wrapped up in a lovely bill claimed to be ‘Protecting Cyberspace as a National security’

Don’t America’s have the right to bare arms? Good luck with that Mr President.


The future called, it said its going to be expensive

It’s difficult to be ‘all things to all men’ in fact many say it can’t be done, yet somehow Steve Jobs has managed to achieve this with the iPad, well in my house anyway. The iPad has became the most fount over device in my house, knocking the remote control of the top spot if has held for the last decade.

For me, the iPad is about constant communication and the perfect business tool for when I’m traveling and a good way to read books, for my wife (who hates technology) celebrity gossip websites, wikipedia and various online retailers get a nightly bashing and for my (nearly) 3 year old daughter, peppa pig is the game of the year and YouTube let’s her watch her favorite shows on demand.

The devise is so in demand in my house, I’m considering purchasing another one for ‘the family’ but then it hit me. The future is damn expensive.

Up until now (through my adult and teenage life), I’ve had all the toys. Right now my essentials include a MacBook hooked up to the TV, another MacBook, two iPhones and an iPad, not to mention the monitors scattered across my desks in Dublin and Moira and various GPS devises. This addiction to technology has never seemed expensive to me for two reasons, firstly, my wife was never really that into new tech so we were never having to buy two at once and secondly as a person working in telecoms, certain toys are passed of a ‘work essentials’ and thus, never paid for.

Fast forward 15 years and my house will contain an 18 year old girl, a 15 year old girl, an aging geek and a yummy mummy, who knows there may even be a 12 year old throw in for good measure.

If 15 years time was today, I should imagine that my two daughters would each demand an iPhone, then a netbook for school and probably an iPad just cause dad has one. Given facetime is what it is and with the LBS apps getting better, my wife may even want to upgrade her Nokia 1110 to some form of iPhone.

Slight heart palpitations begin. How am i going to pay for this?

Of course some of you will be reading this and thinking ‘spoilt brats’ but I have grown up with a passion or technology which I believe has helped me be were I am today. I think it would be wrong to deny them of the same, if the passion is there and they are appreciated correctly.


The changing business model of a public Wi-Fi provider.

It’s great to see Wi-Fi back in the news again.

In two separately announced deals this week the UK Wi-Fi market has been turned on it’s head.  Firstly o2 have announced they are to launch their very own Wi-Fi network and hope’s to have more hotspots than BTOpenzone and The Cloud within two years.

O2 said access to the hotspots would be through a simple sign-up process and would be free to both O2 and non-O2 customers.  It remains to be seen how they plan the roll out but for a kick off, they plan to replace ‘The Cloud’ solution in their retail estate with their own giving them a launch figure of 450 locations, not to shabby.

It’s difficult to know how o2 plan to make money from the enterprise, certainly there is benefit in offering complimentary Wi-Fi to o2 mobile users, they do this already through partnership deals with BTOpenzone and The Cloud however to make it free to non o2 users will have to be underpinned by something, perhaps they plan to charge the venue for hosting the service, perhaps it will come under a marketing budget or maybe they will encourage other mobile operators to make use of their new Wi-Fi network for 3g offload directly competing with ‘The Cloud’ and ‘BTOpenzone’

In a second separate but loosely connected announcement BSkyB have announced they are purchasing ‘The Cloud’ for less than 50 million.  I would have thought that o2’s announcement was un-timely given a large amount of ‘The Clouds’ revenue comes form 3g offload and a lot of this is from o2, something o2 by the looks of it won’t be needing after 2013, The removal of 450 ‘cloud’ hotspots from o2 stores will certainly put a dent in ‘The Cloud’s’ site numbers but perhaps the deal had already gone to ink.

I should imagine that once the legal side of the BSkyB ‘Cloud’ acquisition has gone through Sky Broadband customers will start to receive complimentary Wi-Fi when they are out of the house, what BSkyB plan to do with the rest of the EU Cloud estate remains to be seen.

I always thought ‘The Cloud’ would be bought by a mobile operator much in the way AT&T purchased Wayport a couple of years to shore up their failing data network.

The Sky deal is interesting to say the least as it brings with it some conflicts.  Orange mobile customers for example can make use of ‘The Cloud’ hotspots, Orange also have a home broadband business which is direct competition to Sky.

The business model for a Wi-Fi provider is changing, it has changed.  Wi-Fi operators who are not concerning themselves with 3g offload and subscription based roaming plans are dead in the water.  Consumers aren’t demanding ‘Free Wi-Fi’ but rather to ‘Pay one price for data’ whereby you take out for example a home broadband package and it includes access to X amount of Wi-Fi hotspots, pay for a data plan on your phone and you can use it via the cell towers or in X amount of Wi-Fi hotspots.

I was reading our business plan from 2004 last night and oddly enough, the plan was then to build a Wi-Fi network that could be used as a data offload resource for mobile networks, something that is only becoming realised in the last 18 months.

o2 make an interesting point,

“Only 20% of people who have access to free public wi-fi on 02 tariffs actively use it despite the majority of devices being wi-fi enabled,” said O2’s business development director Tim Sefton

That means the growth Wi-Fi operators have seen in the last twelve months (over double the usage on our network) is only just the start of it.  Wi-Fi may have been concepted as a business in 2003 however it seems that this year we’ve finally (as an industry) taken the training wheels off and crafted some great business models for the future.