Professional PHP

PHP Programming, Web Development, PHP Advocacy and PHP Best Practices.
« On the Perils of Inline API Documentation
Let Your Properties be Properties »

Where do you get your Wi-Fi?

May 6th, 2007

Sometimes you just have to get out of the house or out of the office. And some of those times, you have to use the internet as well.

I’ve collected a (short) list of places around town that have Wi-Fi. I usually use the Wi-Fi at a small local coffee shop. They are open longer hours than the public library and they don’t glare at you for your beverage. For the times when the coffee shop is not open, like late evening, I’ve been going to McDonalds.

Unfortunately, I went to McDonalds this evening and they seem to have gone pay for their WiFi. They want $2.95 for a two hour block. Now, I actually wouldn’t mind paying that. I had my credit card out. But I’d just shelled out $5 something for greasy meal that I really didn’t want but that I only bought so I could sit there and use the WiFi. I don’t think I’ve gone to McD of my own volition for years, not at least after 10:00 am when they stop serving breakfast burritos. That is until I found out they had WiFi.

After I thought about it, I put my credit card away. I took my $2.95 and headed over to a local bar/pizza place that has WiFi. I invested in a beer that I don’t really want so that I can use their WiFi. Well, now that I have it, its really not so bad.

Actually, I’ve done a couple php|arch columns from here before. And that’s what I have to do tonight, finish up a Test Pattern column and do some work on my 3 php|tek talks. When I’m done I’ll leave an extra $3 in the tip.

That’s where I get my Wi-Fi. Where do you get yours?

categories Misc
tags internet, php-architect, wifi

Related Posts

  • No related posts
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

4 Responses to “Where do you get your Wi-Fi?”

  1. #1 Norbert responds...
    May 7th, 2007 at 3:32 am

    We have this great resource over here which allows you to search for Wi-Fi hotspots in the country. It not only differentiates between free and commercial services but also helps discover new places which you never heard before. I guess there must be a similar service in the US, probably based on Google Maps.

  2. #2 Luke L responds...
    May 7th, 2007 at 4:15 am

    Over in the UK we get free ‘broadband minutes’ with our phone/internet package, which basically means we have so many free minutes of Wi-Fi access across the country, from pubs to McDs. Not that I use it much.

  3. #3 Jeff responds...
    May 7th, 2007 at 6:15 am

    Norbert, I’ve checked a few WiFi finding sites for my town. Some have no listings at all. Most only have the McDonalds or the Library. I’ve submitted the coffee shop to all the ones I’ve checked. None have the pizza place. There are no others that I know about.

    Luke, is that part of the law or just a private service?

  4. #4 Norbert responds...
    May 7th, 2007 at 11:55 pm

    I’ve read at this site that Sprint and Verizon provide EV-DO service across the US. I have no idea about the costs but it might be a more flexible alternative to local Wi-Fi hotspots. I run across some EV-DO info for the Mac, too.

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

code: use [code=php][/code].

Comment Preview

  • Search

  • Subscribe

    Subscribe All Posts
    Subscribe All Comments
    Subscribe All Bookmarks
    Subscribe with Bloglines Subscribe with My Yahoo Add to netvibes Subscribe in NewsGator Online Add to Google
  • Share This

  • Categories (Home)

    • Agile Methods (14)
    • Mac (14)
    • Misc (16)
    • Open Source (14)
    • PHP (95)
    • Software Design (28)
    • Usability (14)
    • WACT (7)
    • Web Design (20)
  • Recent Comments

    • Working with PHP 5 in Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard)  94
      noujoum, Michiel Van Kets, isorabins [...]
    • Sarah Snow Stever  24
      Dubai Web Design, Development, Snowcore, ennah [...]
    • Benchmarking PHP's Magic Methods  8
      stas, minikperi, Shelon Padmore [...]
    • Keywords and Language Simplicity  7
      olmse, Handy, minikperi [...]
    • Even the Big Guys Get Validation Wrong  4
      James Benson, Michael, Enric Naval [...]
    • Improved Error Messages in PHP 5  12
      James Benson, Iron, baggreeddog [...]
    • How to Transfer Mac OS X Application Data between Computers  36
      Secret Santa, micala, Khaled bin Alwaleed [...]
    • Programming Language Trends via Google  15
      MattW, Jeff Davis, retry [...]
    • PHP Development From Java Architects Eye  10
      Grrkkvho, Bobrila, FelhoBacsi [...]
    • The value of MVC  9
      Euvmetkk, Bobrila, Vulchak [...]
    • nofollow and comment spam  5
      Scopmazo, Qmumqckx, sss [...]
  • Pages

    • Tags
  • Recent Posts

    • php | tek Wrapup
    • php | tek 2008
    • Sarah Snow Stever
    • Benchmarking PHP’s Magic Methods
    • The Endpoints of the Scale of Stupidity on Video
    • Working with PHP 5 in Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard)
    • Keywords and Language Simplicity
    • Improved Error Messages in PHP 5
    • Michigan Taxes Graphic Design Services
    • Ruby versus PHP or There and Back Again
  • Archives

    • 2008: May
    • 2007: Jan Feb Mar Apr May Sep Oct Nov
    • 2006: Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Oct Nov Dec
    • 2005: Jan Feb Mar Apr May Sep Oct Nov Dec
    • 2004: Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov
  • Menu

    • Register
    • Log in