Archive for the ‘Press Mentions’ Category

HotSpot Shield: Keep yourself safe at public hot spots — for free

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

HotSpot Shield: Keep yourself safe at public hot spots — for free
By Preston Gralla, PC World

Feeling safe when you connect to a hot spot at cafe, airport, or some other public location? You shouldn’t. There are plenty of potential dangers lurking there, including nearby hackers who may try to sniff your packets, or figure out other ways to snoop at what you’re doing online. Particularly dangerous is if you visit any Web sites and type in your user name and password — they could be hijacked. This freebie promises to solve the problem. It claims to encrypt all of your data and packets while you’re in a public location, shielding you from any danger. The program is simplicity itself — install it, run it, and it claims to protect you. A few notes about its use. When you install it, make sure to turn off the Dealio toolbar so that the toolbar doesn’t install — it’s annoying adware. The program works fine without it. Also, when you launch the program, your default browser will launch, and ads may appear in it. You can just close that down, though, and Hotspot Shield will still work fine.

–Preston Gralla

AnchorFree and WebAds UK Bring First Broadband Media Network to EMEA

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

AnchorFree and WebAds UK Bring First Broadband Media Network to EMEA
By Anamika Singh, TCM

AnchorFree, provider of Hotspot media network, announced a partnership with WebAds UK, an independent, interactive advertising network to serve the EMEA region. This partnership will enable AnchorFree to expand its reach by connecting UK advertisers with thousands of mobile Internet users across Europe.

This innovative media network provides opportunity to reach targeted users in an unobtrusive manner with banner-like advertisements. The messages are delivered through AnchorFree’s broadband network which helps 100 percent accurate location-based targeting of users as per their particular interests, behavior and location. This also enables marketers to use it as a strategic tool to increase user engagement and brand interaction when mobile consumers are on the go and connected to the network.

“We are very pleased to support AnchorFree’s expanded presence in Europe and believe that this unique service will prove to be the future of the mobile Internet,” stated Jonas Jaanimagi, managing partner, WebAds UK. “Mobile professionals need to constantly access the Internet on the move, so in response to this demand we want to be able to offer advertisers access to this high-net-worth audience across Europe via a service that will quickly become an industry-standard model.”

Given the diversity of the EMEA region, it is critical to differentiate the delivery as per region and interest. This is where the networks ability to geo-target message delivery brings in a game changing differentiation for the advertisers. With ever-expanding Internet access points, it offers advertisers with an ideal environment to reach a large number of attentive, relevant traveling audiences.

As per AnchorFree, its broadband media network gets hundreds of millions of page views per month and serves more than one hundred brand advertisers internationally, including AirTran, Circuit City, Clorox, Ford, Harrah’s, Kaiser Permanente, Major League Baseball, McDonald’s, Princess Cruises, Prudential,Qwest ( News - Alert) and Toyota.

“Advertisers are looking for new and more impactful ways to reach targeted online consumers, and our broadband media network has been built explicitly to meet this need,” commented Mark Smith, COO of AnchorFree. “We already have millions of users in the EMEA region, and are committed to scaling this continued growth and creating compelling opportunities for advertisers. WebAds has established itself with a solid presence in the UK and surrounding countries, and tapping into this network footprint aligns with the three-fold AnchorFree value proposition: providing consumers with a free way to go online, encouraging distribution partners to generate revenue, and providing advertisers with a means to speak to the right audience at the right time.”

Anamika Singh is a TMCnet contributing editor.

Quick Fix: Secure Laptop on the Go

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

Quick Fix: Secure Laptop on the Go
By Paola Singer, Wall Street Journal 05/13/2008

Problem: Keeping a laptop’s information private on the road.

Solution: Hackers can easily monitor a public Wi-Fi connection, which means using a hot spot can be unsafe. Even wired connections in hotel rooms may be vulnerable. To protect your laptop’s data, subscribe to a service that encrypts the information sent over the Internet by creating a virtual private network, or VPN. AnchorFree’s Hotspot Shield (anchorfree.com) is a free download that employs VPN technology to prevent others from viewing email, instant messages or credit-card information. The ad-supported service works with Windows and Mac computers. With Publicvpn.com, you can create a safe “tunnel” between a computer and the site’s server. There’s nothing to download; the service is set up through your built-in network connections interface (Windows or Mac), using a password. The ad-free subscription costs $6.95 a month or $69.95 a year. HotSpotVPN (hotspotvpn.com) offers several levels of security and starts at $8.88 a month, or $3.88 for a day pass. It supports Windows and Mac PCs, as well as iPhones and other mobile devices.

Caveat: HotSpot Shield, HotSpotvpn and Publicvpn work with both wired and wireless Internet connections. But other VPN services may work only with wireless.

Write to Paola Singer at paola.singer@wsj.com

Advertising to Fund the New Wireless Internet Service

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

Advertising to Fund the New Wireless Internet Service
By Ann- Marie Covin, Media Week

A new ad-funded service providing free and subsidised access to wireless Internet connections is to launch in the UK, following a partnership between US broadband firm AnchorFree and UK online ad network WebAds.

AnchorFree teams up with WebAds UK for mobile internet advertising

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

AnchorFree teams up with WebAds UK for mobile internet advertising
By Bhavana Navuluri, Computer Business Review

Hotspot media network AnchorFree has joined hands with WebAds UK, an interactive advertising network, to connect UK advertisers to mobile internet users across Europe.

Mark Smith, COO of AnchorFree, said: “Advertisers are looking for new ways to reach targeted online consumers, and our broadband media network has been built explicitly to meet this need. WebAds has established itself in the UK and surrounding countries, and tapping into this network footprint aligns with the three-fold AnchorFree value proposition: providing consumers with a free way to go online, encouraging distribution partners to generate revenue, and providing advertisers with a means to speak to the right audience at the right time.”

AnchorFree says that its network ensures that the advertisements are targeted at the right in-transit user basing on his interests, behaviour and location. Advertisers can reach their target audience through mobile internet service provided in coffee shops, hotels, train stations, airports and other outdoor places.

Jonas Jaanimagi, managing partner of WebAds UK, said: “Mobile professionals need to constantly access the internet on the move, so in response to this demand we want to be able to offer advertisers access to this high-net-worth audience across Europe.”

AnchorFree has been offering its services to advertisers including AirTran, Circuit City, Clorox, Ford, Harrah’s, Kaiser Permanente, Major League Baseball, McDonald’s, Princess Cruises, Prudential, Qwest and Toyota.

Locate Free Wireless with Wi-Fi Hotspot Finder

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

Locate Free Wireless with Wi-Fi Hotspot Finder
By Adam Pash, LifeHacker.com 04/09/08

The Wi-Fi Hotspot Finder webapp displays free wireless internet hotspots in your area on a Google Maps mashup. To use it, just give it your address, city, or zip and it’ll display many of the nearby hotspots. This sort of tool isn’t new by any means, but it is returning better results in my area than previously mentioned webapps like Hotspotr. If you give it a try, let’s hear how the hotspot finder measures up in your area in the comments. While you’re there, you may want to download wiPod, which stores all that hotspot information in note form for easy browsing on your iPod.

WiFi Hotspot Surfers Beware: Sharks Patrol These Waters

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

WiFi Hotspot Surfers Beware: Sharks Patrol These Waters
By Jack M. Germain, TechNewsWorld

The growing popularity of WiFi connections to the Internet from virtually anywhere — bus and train stations, airports and coffee shops for instance — drastically increases the chances of wireless users finding their data stolen. It’s a combination of more people connecting and hacking techniques getting better, Fiberlink Communications’ Dan Hoffman explained.

WiFi features are as standard on today’s portable computers as built-in modems used to be. Laptop users have become accustomed to the ability to connect to the Internet from practically anywhere to reach e-mail, Web sites and music download portals. Consumers even use wireless routers to connect to the Internet from anywhere in their homes.

The problem, however, is that many portable computer users are completely clueless about the dangers of unprotected WiFi connections. They think that they can surf the Net with the same impunity as having a wired connection.

“WiFi use poses problems to both enterprise Rackspace now offers green hosting solutions at the same cost without sacrificing performance. Make the eco-friendly choice. users and private consumers for two reasons. One is the lack of security with public hotspots. There is no encryption by default. The second is accountability. WiFi presents many different ways to connect and needs to be simplified,” Dan Hoffman, senior systems engineer of Fiberlink Communications, told TechNewsWorld.

Enterprise WiFi and private users are at increased risk of having sensitive data stolen when they do not connect through VPNs (virtual private networks) and when the laptops they use lack up-to-date security patches. Computing in public area, even when not connected to a WiFi hotspot, makes users vulnerable to security breaches as low-tech as the prying eyes of people looking over their shoulders, Hoffman added.

For example, one method hackers use to steal information from WiFi-connected computers is sidejacking. Sidejackers gain site access to computers that are on shared wireless connections at hotels, coffee shops and other public WiFi locations. Once connected, the sidejacking hacker Latest News about hacker can infiltrate e-mails, view confidential information and change passwords without the consent or knowledge of the computer owner.

Easy Pickings

The growing popularity of WiFi connections to the Internet from virtually anywhere — bus and train stations, airports and coffee shops, for instance — drastically increases the chances of wireless users finding their data stolen. It’s a combination of more people connecting and hacking techniques getting better, Hoffman explained.

With so many people connecting to the same wireless connection, a robust software firewall is essential to protect the computer. Like its hardware counterpart, a software firewall blocks unauthorized access to a laptop from the Internet.

Perhaps the most often missed security measure is to turn off file-sharing applications when accessing the Internet from a public WiFi network New HP LaserJet P4014n Printer Starting at $699 after $100 instant savings.. This is an easy security hole to fix. Windows users can go to “My Computer” and “Windows Shared Documents.” Then, right click and go to “Security and Sharing” to turn this option off.

“A shared directory that isn’t inside a firewall is an open invitation to a hacker,” David Kent Jones, author of the e-book “Online Teen Dangers,” noted in discussing WiFi risks with TechNewsWorld.
Basic Security Tips

Fiberlink’s Hoffman offered WiFi users a set of guidelines to follow to ensure safe wireless connections to public hotspots. These security tips provide even more experienced wireless users a way to better secure data on laptops that are exposed to public WiFi connections.

1. Honor the Magic Number: Smart password combinations make the difference between secure and hacked wireless connections. For instance, there are 6,634,204,312,890,625 possible password combinations when using eight characters with the 95 keyboard character combinations. Change the user log-on often for wireless router access to make it difficult to guess. Use a combination of alphanumeric characters and other keyboard symbols. Keep the strong password safe by disabling or declining any password-saving features.

2. Know The Power of Three: Hackers use sophisticated blended threats based on a variety of tactics to defeat security. Know your equipment’s security blind spots. For example, make sure your laptop is equipped with a blend of security tools. These include antispam, antispyware and a personal firewall. Miss any one of these means forfeiting your security.

3. Block Prying Eyes: Recognize that prying eyes are everywhere. Stop thieves from snooping by making sure your IT department helps you encrypt your e-mail. Prevent unauthorized access to your e-mail with SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) encryption of both login file transfer functions. Otherwise, hackers can read your e-mail as the data moves through cyberspace. To further secure connections to corporate servers and applications, use a VPN.

4. Recognize That Wired and Wireless Are Not Created Equal: A wired connection (digital subscriber line or even dial-up) is inherently more secure than wireless. With wireless connections, data typically is sent unencrypted through the air between the mobile device and an access point near your room, making it very easy for hackers to sniff the data passively from as far away as the parking lot. Defeat remote snooping by disabling the laptop’s capability to automatically connect to signals.

5. Don’t Trust Your Internet Service Provider: Using a wireless router at home does not make you any safer than connecting on the go. Use the same level of security at home as you do when connected to a public WiFi network. Especially important is password-protecting your home WiFi network.

6. Prepare for the Worst: Assume that sooner or later your laptop will be lost or stolen. Implement a password-protected screen lock. Do not store sensitive information such as usernames, passwords, Social Security numbers, bank account numbers or credit card numbers on the device. Companies should activate administrative device-wiping so that an IT administrator can remotely destroy data and applications on the mobile device in the instance that it is lost or stolen. Lastly, keep data backed up on a PC or server in case your mobile device is gone forever.

VPN for Anyone

Aware that more protection might make their services more attractive to users, some service providers have taken steps to strengthen the security of users on their networks. For instance, WiFi service provider AnchorFree started out giving away free WiFi connections to hotspots. Users watched brief advertisements to access a connection. That led to the release of a free download of the company’s HotSpot Shield.

“We created it to protect our WiFi connections. It creates a VPN or private tunnel between the laptop and the end point,” James Chavez, director of new business development for AnchorFree, told TechNewsWorld.

When the client application runs from the laptop’s browser, it creates a tunnel that has never been cracked, Chavez said.

The company released the free product 18 months ago. In a recent week it was downloaded 316,000 times, he added.
How It Works

Once enabled, HotSpot Shield conceals the user’s existence on the Internet, according to Chavez. Originally, AnchorFree permitted unlimited use; however, the company now restricts usage to 10 GB of data per month to curtail excessive use that clogs bandwidth.

Users can bypass monthly usage restrictions by participating in various incentive programs.

In addition to allowing individuals to stay secure, AnchorFree gives small businesses a solution that allows them to keep WiFi users on their networks secure. Businesses can offer free wireless access through AnchorFree and then direct their patrons to Hotspot Shield, a value-added tool for greater protection and security while online at a place of business, according to David Gorodyansky, cofounder and CEO of AnchorFree.

Monetizing Free Wi-Fi

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

Monetizing Free Wi-Fi
By Adam Kirby, Associate Editor — Hotels

Hoteliers torn between the allure of extra revenue from Wi-Fi and the desire to satisfy guests expecting free Internet access should consider exploring an emerging vendor niche—monetized complimentary access.

The concept allows hoteliers to generate revenue from guest Internet usage by contracting with a vendor that displays advertising throughout the duration of a Web-browsing session. In exchange, the user gets free Internet access, much the way a television viewer accepts commercial breaks in exchange for free programming.

California-based AnchorFree is one of the larger vendors offering such a product to the hospitality sector. The company pays hoteliers a percentage of its ad revenue generated from guest views—for example, a hotel with 150 rooms could expect to generate approximately US$25,000 per year in revenue. AnchorFree also provides hotels with software-equipped Wi-Fi routers at no charge.

The company even allows hotels to insert their own marketing materials into the Web browser ads. For example, a hotel could require guests to login with their loyalty club numbers, and then by accessing guests’ CRM profiles, the software can be configured to give guests relevant marketing pitches over the course of the Internet session.

“To generate premium revenues from these users, we enable hoteliers the ability to execute a sequential personalized experience with a user for the entire time they are on the Internet,” says Mark Smith, AnchorFree’s executive vice president for strategy. “This is much more than simply a pop-up ad that they may or may not click on.”

The ads come in the form of a “persistent desktop presence”—a banner ad atop the browser that rotates every 15 seconds. To avoid annoying guests, the program allows guests to close the ad, but the opt-out rate is extremely low—around 1%, Smith says.

AnchorFree executives say the company has about 3,500 franchised hotel properties in North America and 1,000 properties in the UK under two- and three-year contracts, including local deals with IHG-, Hilton- and Marriott-branded properties.

Making Cents of Ad-Supported Wi-Fi

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

Making Cents of Ad-Supported Wi-Fi
By Jeff Goldman, Wi-Fi Planet 2/14/2008

It’s still early days for ad-supported Wi-Fi, and companies in the space are trying many different ways to make the concept work.

There’s been a flood of news lately about advertising-supported Wi-Fi deployments, from JiWire allowing iPhone users to connect for free at its Ads for Access locations to FreeFi Networks’ addition of video-on-demand rentals to its free, ad-supported Wi-Fi network at Denver International Airport.

Still, the business model has yet to be proven.

Stan Schatt, vice president and research director at ABI Research, says companies in this space have their work cut out for them—particularly when providers like FON are offering low-priced access as an alternative.

“If you can get Wi-Fi for three dollars without any ads, does it make sense to put up with the irritation of advertising?” he asks.

In a white paper entitled Pay TV and the American Consumer, Schatt reports that a very low percentage of consumers expressed interest in receiving access to pay TV at a discount—or even for free—in return for watching ads. Pay TV may not be Wi-Fi, but Schatt says the principle is the same: most people have limited tolerance for advertising.

While there may well be a perfect business model under which ad-supported Wi-Fi will yet prove viable, Schatt says, the number of companies currently battling in the space serves as an indicator of how unproven the market is.

“People just aren’t sure what direction it’s going to take, and everybody’s trying to find traction with a slightly different business model,” he says.

Municipal support

One of those companies, of course, is MetroFi, which runs ad-supported Wi-Fi networks in cities from Concord, California to Portland, Oregon. Lou Pelosi, the company’s vice president of marketing, says MetroFi primarily uses Microsoft’s MSN SideGuide to deliver ads. Despite the need to download an application onto the user’s PC, Pelosi says the company likes SideGuide because it takes up a minimal amount of space in a vertical bar to the left or right of the browser, and because it contains a search box and a news feed in addition to advertisements.

Pelosi says it’s become clear to MetroFi that the only viable business model for municipal Wi-Fi deployments is a mixed-use arrangement under which the city serves as an anchor tenant, using the network for anything from city services to public safety alongside the free, ad-supported offering. Getting the city involved, Pelosi says, is key not only in providing crucial financial backing, but also in promoting the network to end users.

Video on demand

FreeFi Networks, with its deployment at Denver International Airport (DIA), is also looking for additional sources of revenue beyond advertising. The company recently announced a partnership with Disney-ABC Television to provide locally served video-on-demand rentals that can be downloaded via Wi-Fi in minutes by a traveler waiting to board a plane.

Company managing director Richard Bogen says it’s a perfect solution both for users and for the City of Denver, which runs the airport.

“For the City of Denver, it gives them a way of generating revenue not only from ad sales but also from the sale of video content—and from the user’s perspective, it gives them a nice little amenity in the airport,” he says.

FreeFi’s ads are served not only in the browser, but also in the form of a 30-second video that’s played prior to enabling access.

“The time that takes is far less than what it would take for the typical paid user to punch in a credit card number, get approved, and type in all their information,” notes Lawrence J. Laffer, the company’s executive director of sales and marketing.

Laffer says the result is a user experience that’s both streamlined and user-friendly—when DIA switched from $7.95-a-day paid access to FreeFi’s ad-supported offering, the airport saw an increase from about 600 daily connections to as many as 5,000.

“User acceptance is just extraordinarily high,” he says.

And airports, Laffer says, are perfect locations for his company’s business model.

“We know there’s high demand, and we know there’s low tolerance for paying,” he says.

Beyond laptops

JiWire CEO Kevin McKenzie also counts on high demand to make his company’s Ads for Access offering viable. JiWire now reaches about 8 million Wi-Fi users a month on 32 different networks including Boingo, Wayport, and others.

“It’s all about volume,” he says. “If we had 100,000 users, we’d have problems. You don’t get the attention of large advertisers like Charles Schwab and Sony and Microsoft and others without having millions of users that are potentially going to look at these ads.”

And the company’s recent announcement of support for the iPhone and similar devices, McKenzie says, will only increase that number.

“What’s going to happen when everyone has an iPod touch, when all digital cameras are Wi-Fi-enabled so people can upload photos through Wi-Fi as opposed to doing it at their PC?” he asks. “It’s these non-PC Wi-Fi devices, in my mind, that are really going to light this up and make it so it’s economical to offer an ad-based Wi-Fi model.”

Ad targeting

For HypeWifi [sic], though, it’s about quality rather than quantity. The Houston-based company uses an ad model in which the user is simply asked to respond to one question about an advertiser’s product upon authentication—and that’s it. The information from that response, along with anonymous demographic information that’s captured during their session, is then used to improve ad targeting on return visits.

And according to company CEO Tim Heckler, that’s what makes it work—it allows advertisers both to get valuable demographic information about their audience and to target their ads with unique precision. Tracking a user by MAC address, Heckler says, allows HypeWifi to offer that user increasingly targeted advertising on each visit.

“If they’re not answering the questions the way [the advertiser] would like, we can just cut off the advertisement and put another advertiser up instead,” he says. “That really allows you to get more bang for your buck.”

Heckler says it’s that kind of targeting that will ultimately make ad-supported Wi-Fi viable.

“It has to be done intelligently,” he says.

The value proposition

For Anchorfree COO Mark Smith, on the other hand, the way to make ad-supported Wi-Fi work is simply to give users a choice between paying for access and viewing ads.

“We typically like to demand complete transparency with the user,” he says. “If they don’t want to have an ad-supported online experience, I don’t think they should. They should have a choice: they should be able to pay their nine dollars to check their e-mail.”

And that’s a perfect solution, Smith says, for Anchorfree’s hotel clients: bandwidth hogs can pay the nine dollars, while those who just want to check e-mail can do so for free—and in either case, the value proposition is clear to both user and advertiser. And it’s not just about serving ads: with Anchorfree’s solution in place, he notes, those same hotels now have a new customer touch point for loyalty marketing that they didn’t have before.

Building on that idea, Smith says the next step is to offer targeted content with the ads.

“If alongside that advertising I’m getting free access to Wall Street Journal subscription content that would otherwise be paid, but since I’m staying at the Ritz Carlton it’s free, I find value in that as a guest,” he says. “If I’m at a hotel and alongside a little bit of advertising I find that I can try Netflix for free in my room only because I’m staying at that hotel, then I might find some utility in that.”

The point, Smith says, is that the perfect balance between advertisers’ and consumers’ needs has yet to be found—and there may well be many different ways to find that balance.

“This is much more than science,” Smith says. “It’s going to be a creative art to make this actually work and be universally accepted.”

Jeff Goldman is a frequent contributor to Wi-FiPlanet. He is based in California.

Connecting To NeW Sales

Friday, February 1st, 2008

Connecting To NeW Sales
By Audrey Gray, Dealerscope

If you or someone you know has walked the world with an iPhone, you’ve no doubt encountered the thrill when the phone’s sensors detect an unlocked WiFi connection. The iPhone can browse the Internet without WiFi, via AT&T’s slow-but-adequate EDGE network. But when the iPhone hits a WiFi hotspot, it becomes a mobile broadband machine, allowing users to quickly Safari their way to any Web site.

So imagine if a customer’s iPhone tells them that there’s a free WiFi signal the moment they walk into your store. All of a sudden, that customer can comparison-shop live on the premises. They can check e-mail while they are waiting in a line at your register. If you provide them a comfy chair, they may even pull out their laptop and try to get some work done on the spot. Would these things be good or bad for business?

It’s all good, according to Bob Cole, president of the World Wide Stereo stores in the Philadelphia area. “Everybody should do it,” said Cole, who recently put up a sign advertising free public WiFi access in his showrooms. “That’s a no-brainer.”

Why the enthusiasm? Cole said it’s a way to not only please his mobile-savvy customers, especially the younger ones, but to capture their attention in a critical buy-zone, the store itself. “When you go online in my store, the first thing you see is my happy face,” said Cole, who made sure that the homepage of every browsing session features a bold World Wide Stereo advertisement. Cole and his sales team use the WiFi access to help customers expand their definition of an integrated home network.

“We can look at the guy who’s on his computer while he’s waiting for his car installation and say, ‘Hey, do you have any pictures on that?’ If he says yes, we say, ‘Would you like to see them on this Pioneer Elite TV?’” Cole said. “It demonstrates to a customer all the things he can do. Anything that fosters computer connectivity and literacy, I’m all about.”

Cole is not alone in exploring the retail possibilities of Internet access. A two-year-old Sunnyvale, Calif., company says it can make in-store WiFi connectivity a win-win for retailers and customers. AnchorFree is offering an advertising-supported WiFi service to retailers who have substantial foot-traffic in their stores. “There’s a whole new thread of value here to these retailers,” said AnchorFree VP Mark Smith. “More and more shoppers have wireless devices on them when they walk into a store. In-store WiFi will be an emerging platform for retailers to have a captive, persistent relationship with consumers on these devices.”

Advertising at the point of consumption has been shown to be an effective way to nudge shoppers into a buy decision, Smith said. But as consumers become increasingly savvy about their electronics purchases, he said, they’re more likely to do Internet-based research on mobile devices while they’re shopping. A banner ad suggesting a particular service or add-on can influence customers “while they are absolutely in the buying mode,” Smith said.

Numerous studies have shown that Internet users don’t mind a banner ad or two as long as it doesn’t take up too much of their screen real estate, especially if it means they are getting a free connection, Smith said. Though the number of commercial hotspots has increased (this, despite the failure of many city-wide WiFi projects) over the past couple years, many stores, restaurants and hotels charge consumers for the privilege, often at $10/day. Free WiFi has helped establish the reputation of establishments like the bakery-café chain Panera Bread as an alternative to Starbucks, which has traditionally charged about $6/hour.

According to the Pew Internet Study, 34 percent of U.S. Internet users have logged on using a wireless connection, either at home or in public. About 25 percent of Internet users now own a cellphone that can connect them to the Internet. Of the wireless enthusiasts, 49 percent are between the ages of 30 and 49, a key spending demographic.