This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2001/00440876.html
'Net
Insider
At least
they are consistent
By Scott Bradner
Network World, 03/05/01
As
a general rule, I don't like airports. This is a shame, since I spend so much
time in them.
Now I have yet another reason to dislike them, or at
least the people who manage them. It seems that some airports are trying to
muscle their way into position to overcharge for wireless Internet access.
The
basic reason I don't like most airports is that they were not designed for
people to use them. Instead they seem to have been designed so that they are
nice to airplanes. Atlanta's airport, which I had the misfortune to use
recently, is a perfect example. It seemed like the designers of the airport
never actually used airports. If they did, they wouldn't have made miles of
hallways without providing moving walkways to help people get around.
Atlanta's
airport is not as bad as many. At least it has some semireasonable food, even
if the food is not well distributed in the terminals. I've been in a number of
airports where there seems to be a conscious effort to ensure that the food
quality is low enough that the food you are offered on the plane will come as a
relief. Most airports also try to ensure the food stalls (it is rare that any
of them might rise to a level where they might be called restaurants) price
their goods at least twice as high as one would find in the rest of the world.
Five-dollar hot dogs and $3 Cokes are altogether too common, as are $7 charges
for 3-minute pay phone calls. It turns out that airports make a lot of money
off of their pay phones.
Money they make by ripping off travelers.
But this revenue stream is now under threat. Too many travelers are using cell
phones and bypassing the pay phones.
(As an aside, it's not just the
fly-by-night phone companies that participate in this rip-off - the February
issue of Consumer Reports says that one of the worst offenders is AT&T.)
According to press reports, the airports are fighting back by
restricting cell phone companies from installing their antennas in airport
buildings. One airport claims it is doing so out of concern over interference
with air traffic control and security systems, but that rationale is
suspiciously self-serving. So that crappy connection you get in the airport may
not be random chance.
Many of those airports are restricting companies
that want to install wireless LANs. At least one admitted that such networks
would get deployed as soon as the airport figured out how to make money from
them. As a wireless LAN user, this is a pain, but I guess the airports have to
uphold their well-deserved reputations.
Disclaimer: Harvard is
reputation-heavy, but does not fly. So the above is my lament.
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