Simple clear advice in plain English

BT names first six Wireless Cities

Birmingham, Leeds and Liverpool among first to get city-wide networks

BT has named the first six cities that will benefit from its Wireless Cities project which links up whole cities through the air.

The six are Birmingham, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Leeds, Liverpool, and the City of Westminster in London. The wireless networks will give residents and visitors access to information on local amenities, parking, public services, health, traffic and safety.

In Cardiff and Westminster, part of the wireless network is already in place, as BT Openzone wireless hotspots have already been installed across both cities.

In both cases, the scheme will see the initial work being extended, and in the other four the project will start from scratch.

Another six cities will be named later on, once work has begun on the first six, and the telecoms giant says it is in negotiations with further urban centres.

For each of the cities, BT will be working with the local authority to find out how best the network couldĀ benefit residents, visitors and businesses. "How it looks and what it does is a question of choice for the cities," a BT spokesman said.

Once the Wireless City is open, anyone with a Wi-Fi connection will be able to access the network by connecting to a hotspot. The networks are expected to be in place in each of the first six cities by the end of 2006, according to BT.

Reader Comments

   

Add your comment

All fields must be completed. Your email address will not be displayed or used to send marketing messages.

All messages will be checked by moderators before appearing on the site.

See our Privacy Policy for more information.

Related articles

Wireless router settings

Is your PC security up to scratch?

Follow our 20 hints and tips to help you keep your valuable personal information safe

BlackBerry Bold 9790 video

BT develops BT Fon Wifi app for Blackberry smartphone users

App will make it easier for users of RIM's smartphone to log on to BT's Wifi hotspots

jargon invaders illustration

What is mobile broadband?

Accessing the internet from a mobile device is an incredibly useful tool but trying to understand what all the various acronyms and words mean leads to confusion

Question & Answer

Q.Can I switch boot drives so that I can work on older...

> Read the answer

Q.Can I open my old genealogy files or have they gone...

> Read the answer

Q.Why are odd patterns appearing on my monitors shortly...

> Read the answer

Best deals on the web

img

Apple iMac 21.5" (MC309)

£927.29- Buy it now

img

Dell Inspiron 620 ST Intel Core i3-2100 3.10GHz / 3GB / 500GB / DVDRW / Win 7 Home Premium

£329.00- Buy it now

img

ZooStorm 7877-1023

£386.38- Buy it now

Latest issue & subscription deals

Poll

Are you concerned about viruses that target mobile phones?

Jargon Buster

Computing terms explained in plain English

Router

A device used to connect more than one computer or other device to the internet.

Great shopping deals from Computeractive