Monday, November 17, 2008

Boingo Get Ferry-Fi

Boingo Gets Ferry-Fi, Feeney Does WES

Posted by Sam Churchill on November 17th, 2008

Boingo Wireless announced today that it has acquired the Wi-Fi networks for the Washington State Ferries from Parsons Transportation Group, and will be providing Wi-Fi access to the daily commuters. Boingo will be adding 11 Washington State Ferries terminals and 15 Ferries to complement its owned and operated airport network.

Washington State Ferries operates the largest ferry fleet in the United States with 28 ferries traversing the Puget Sound and its inland waterways, carrying more than 26 million passengers to 20 different ports of call.

The Ferries Wi-Fi network will be moving to a Boingo-branded start page, where commuters and tourists will be able to purchase Boingo AsYouGo day passes for $7.95, as well as Boingo Unlimited for $21.95 per month. Boingo Unlimited is a monthly service that provides Wi-Fi access throughout the Americas and can be used at any Boingo location.

For current subscribers to the Washington State Ferries Wi-Fi, the monthly subscription will be a decrease in price from $29.95, and will now include the ability to connect to any hotspot in the Boingo Roaming Network. WiFiNetNews has additional background.

Construction is finished for the first commuter rail line in Oregon. The Washington County Commuter Rail will carry passengers between Beaverton, Tigard, Tualatin and Wilsonville when the line opens in February, 2008. The self-propelled diesel trains, which delayed the opening, will travel 14.7-miles between Beaverton and Wilsonville — with free Wi-Fi.

The Westside Commuter Rail will use a ruggedized mobile router system called the Cira (Cellular Internet Routing Appliance) designed by Eugene, Oregon-based Feeney Wireless. It uses EVDO for the backhaul. Everything is working as promised, reports the company.

The CIRA mobile router has been battle tested in New York City taxicabs. Creative Mobile Technologies (CMT) provides New York City taxicabs with credit and debit card processing, media and advertising content, text messaging, interactive passengers maps, GPS and electronic trip sheets. Today, CMT is the nation’s leading provider of total taxi technology solutions across the United States. and

Emergency medical vehicles can also use the Cira box to communicate to wifi enabled portable emergency equipment, such as EKG, blood pressure, etc., so first responders can transmit real time patient data to the hospital in transit.

Outfitting a bus with wireless capability costs about $1,000 to $2,000, reports USA Today.

Here are some transit agencies in the United States adopting Wi-Fi.


source : dailywireless.org

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