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Freerunner – Truly Free Wi-Fi in Your Area

by Jay Garrett on May 20, 2009

freerunnerGenuine free Wi-Fi is thin on the ground…. errr….. air.

Those places that do offer ‘free wi-fi’ will stand over you until you buy a coffee, beer or bun.

That could be about to change with the introduction of Freerunner.

Freerunner has been thought-up by Owen Geddes, one of the people responsible for The Cloud network.

No need for a subscription as Freerunner is a solution for the UK, offering free to use access points in venues geared towards the community.

I’m talkin bout libraries (the few that are left), transport hubs (stations), community centres and schools.

Freerunner is also offering its Wi-Fi solution to commercial venues too for a charge – but a charge that’s just a third of the current rate set by other operators.

That means you can stop after that sixth extra-large-double-whip-caramel-macchiato.

‘Back in 2002, free, open access points were popping up all over the place and there was a real buzz about the potential of public Wi-Fi,’ says Owen Geddes, CEO of Freerunner. ‘Since then, networks have been locked down and access for a day can cost more than your home broadband costs in a month. Our vision is to give consumers free public Wi-Fi access whether they are in the the centre of London, the community centre at the end of their road or the local café in Hartlepool.’

The Freerunner network is based on Open Source technology, with distributed network architecture, no data centres and no single point of failure, which should mean reliability, a faster connection and a low operating cost.

The north east of the country will be the first to get in on the action.

If Freerunner takes off, which it really should, expect to see it down your street very soon.

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google-book-search-iphone-androidDo you already own an iPhone or Android powered mobile?

Don’t want to fork out $359 for the newest Kindle?

Well, Google Book Search has just been announced for iPhone and Android, letting iPhone and T-Mobile G1 owners read millions of public domain books on their blower.

Google Book Search actually scans the pages of realy-real books made of paper and that and then uses something called Optical Character Recognition (OCR) which turns the scan into text.

It shows the words as if they were a web page on the handset, minimising the amount of scrolling needed.

And if the spacing looks a bit odd, you can simply tap to see the original scanned in page instead.  Nicely does it :)

So, free books on your mobile can’t be bad – and it will be a darn sight lighter than dragging around 5 or 6 best sellers on holiday!

Google says it’s adding more books all the time – could this hurt the likes of the Kindle, iRex and Sony Reader?

What about the screen-size?  Could you and your eyes take reading a book on a phone screen – no matter how good they are?

Let us know below :)

Booksearch Blogspot.

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Europe To Get Online Library

November 20, 2008 Click to read more →

I’ve only just got back into regular reading again this year.  Shameful I know. Even more shameful is that since moving to London in February 2004 I’ve yet to join a local library!
Well, a new multimedia venture has just been launched that will bring together the content from more than 1000 cultural organisations across Europe in a [...]