Boston airport open WiFi network is NOT open
I am heading back to Amsterdam from Boston after the Muniwireless New England conference. After two days of discussions about the quality of citywide WiFi services, I am confronted with Logan Airport’s absurd WiFi portal which is the epitome of bad service. I am heading back to Amsterdam from Boston after the Muniwireless New England conference. After two days of discussions about the quality of citywide WiFi services, I am confronted with Logan Airport’s absurd WiFi portal.
I am sitting in Logan Airport. When I started my iBook, it detected a WiFi network and asked me “join open WiFi network?”, so I looked on the list and there it was, loganwifi. Except it’s anything but open. You are confronted with a busy web page which is poorly designed, and you have to pay (or be a member of one of their roaming partners — still have to pay).
This is not OPEN. And if I had a Nintendo DS gaming device, I would not have been able to use it. This is exactly what I mean by poor service. It starts already at the login procedure. By contrast, the Continental Airlines lounge about 50 meters away, has great WiFi service. No login at all. You are on the network right away. Busy people in a hurry don’t have time. You’d think airports would get this, but they don’t.
Read my earlier post on browserless access desperately needed.
UPDATE: Bob Frankston pointed out to me after I wrote this piece that Logan had been battling with the airline lounges that do provide free Wi-Fi. Here’s a piece from the Boston Globe (click here).



