Showing posts with label Free Wi-Fi when traveling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Free Wi-Fi when traveling. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Free WiFi Services Launched In Over 200 Locations In Dubai

Free WiFi services launched in over 200 locations in Dubai

Telecom operator du has rolled out free WiFi services in more than 200 locations in Dubai and aims to offer it across more than 300 locations in Dubai and Abu Dhabi by the end of the year, Othman Sultan, CEO of the company, said.
Du is the “official WiFi UAE partner” for Dubai Smart City.
The service will empower residents by enabling seamless, reliable and secure connectivity to access the internet, browse government websites and apps, pay bills, get updates about applications and avail eServices, among other benefits.
Du is offering WiFi in three options — free unlimited and fast access to all the government websites and apps, free WiFi at low bandwidth and the premium speed at a nominal price.
He said that customers have options to choose from. Within the complimentary free WiFi, customers have the option of tasting the premium WiFi for five minutes during the day.
As a launch promotion for three months, premium users can avail six hours of high-speed internet that can be used over three days for just Dh20.
A Dh50 recharge will buy 20 hours of high-speed internet access that can be used over seven days.
Users can just recharge with a du WOW recharge card or use their UAE or GCC-issued credit card to buy credit.
“We are ready to roll it out in Abu Dhabi and in some places it will be rolled out in June. We are working on the plan to roll it out in the northern emirates. We are currently receiving requests and processing those, and hoping to launch by the end of this year,” Sultan said.
He said the WiFi UAE initiative is fully sponsored by du and partners have to just ensure the location in order for them to install the equipment.
Dr Aisha Bin Bishr, Assistant Director of The Executive office of His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, said that the focus is on Dubai for free WiFi access in the first phase, followed by Abu Dhabi and other emirates.
It has been rolled out in the Dubai Metro, Dubai Tram, Dubai International Financial Centre, Knowledge Village, Dubai Media City, Emaar Boulevard, Global Village and du shops.
Aisha, who is also a member of the Executive Office of the Smart Dubai Initiative, said that all parks and beaches of Dubai Municipality will have WiFi access by the end of the year.
“We started with du under the WiFi UAE and have a platform for the smart infrastructure of the city. We are looking to establish a larger partnership base within the ICT private sector to transform Dubai into the smartest city in the world,” she said.
She said that many government entities have already launched many smart services and the next step is to develop the platform for the city and open the data.
“Our idea is to make available to the public all unclassified data that is not personal or sensitive to anybody as well as provides instructions and guidelines on what to share and what not to share,” she said.
In November, Shaikh Hamdan Bin Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Crown Prince of Dubai and Chairman of Dubai Executive Council, issued a decree to establish a committee called ‘Dubai Open Data Committee’ and their mandate is to draft the law for data in the city, framework, classification and roadmap for implementing the law.
“The deadline is by the end of this week and we will announce the law, classification and regulations related to open data,” she said.

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Hotel WiFi Test Ranks Cities, Countries, And World Regions

Hotel WiFi Test ranks cities, countries, and world regions



NEW YORK, NY Hotel WiFi Test has released a new report that ranks cities, countries, and world regions by WiFi quality. Two characteristics of hotel WiFi are considered: the quality of the WiFi and whether in-room WiFi is free.
WiFi Quality is expressed by the percentage of hotels that offer adequate WiFi quality in a given geographical area. This type of ranking is easy to understand, and it makes perfect sense from a practical standpoint. For most travelers, having super-fast and consistently stable WiFi is a great bonus, but their first priority is ensuring that basic quality expectations for Internet access are met.
In this report, a hotel judged as having adequate WiFi must provide an expected download speed of at least 3 Mbps (the Netflix recommendation for SD-quality streaming) and an upload speed of 500 kbps (the Skype recommendation for high-quality non-HD video calling).
The Free WiFi percentage is calculated as a ratio of hotels that offer free in-room WiFi to all hotels for which the WiFi price structure and availability is known. In our view, hotel WiFi is a synonym for in-room WiFi; therefore, hotels that offer free WiFi only in public areas are not counted as hotels with free WiFi.
Key takeaways:
• In Europe, it is 33% more likely that a hotel has adequate WiFi than in the United States; but in the United States, it is 14% more likely that a hotel will offer free in-room WiFi.
• Asia is at the top when it comes to hotel WiFi quality (49.5%), but at the bottom for the percentage of hotels offering free in-room WiFi (61.2%).
• The United States is only in the 21st percentile for WiFi quality; 79% of countries have better hotel WiFi.
• South Korea is the leader in hotel WiFi quality (92%) by a healthy margin in 7.1 percentage points to the second best country (Japan).
• The United States: Portland is in solid first place with a 10 percentage point gap over the second-place city (Seattle) in terms of WiFi quality. It also has one the highest percentages of hotels offering free in-room WiFi (86.7%).
• The United States: The chances of getting a hotel with adequate WiFi are almost three times higher in Portland than in Atlanta.
World Cities:
City - WiFi Qality - Free WiFi
1 Stockholm, Sweden 88.9% 89.5%
2 Budapest, Hungary 84.4% 75.8%
3 Tokyo, Japan 81.9% 51.2%
4 Dublin, Ireland 77.5% 72.3%
5 Montreal, Canada 69.0% 85.8%
6 Portland, United States 66.7% 86.7%
7 Moscow, Russia 63.6% 86.8%
8 Amsterdam, Netherlands 61.9% 84.9%
9 Toronto, Canada 61.5% 76.0%
10 Kowloon, Hong Kong 61.3% 64.4%
11 Vienna, Austria 61.2% 83.1%
12 Singapore, Singapore 58.8% 72.8%
13 Brussels, Belgium 57.1% 72.6%
14 Berlin, Germany 56.9% 75%
15 Munich, Germany 56.7% 64.1%
16 Bengaluru, India 56.7% 61.3%
17 Seattle, United States 56.7% 64.6%
18 Rome, Italy 55.9% 79.8%
19 Barcelona, Spain 53.2% 87.9%
20 Cologne, Germany 52.9% 62.0%
21 London, United Kingdom 52.8% 67.2%
22 Bangkok, Thailand 52.5% 73.1%
23 Frankfurt, Germany 51.7% 68.6%
24 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 48.5% 75.9%
25 Chicago, United States 47.5% 67.4%
26 Dubai, United Arab Emirates 46.8% 40.9%
27 Los Angeles, United States 46.3% 69.3%
28 Orlando, United States 45.9% 75.6%
29 Las Vegas, United States 45.5% 59.1%
30 Madrid, Spain 44.8% 82.8%
31 Hamburg, Germany 44.6% 69.9%
32 New York, United States 44.5% 65.4%
33 Dallas, United States 43.9% 74.8%
34 Washington, United States 43.1% 58.0%
35 Istanbul, Turkey 42.9% 91.5%
36 San Francisco, United States 42.7% 72.2%
37 San Diego, United States 42.4% 71.1%
38 Milan, Italy 41.9% 71.3%
39 Boston, United States 41.0% 56.6%
40 Austin, United States 40% 87.9%
41 Sao Paulo, Brazil 40% 69.4%
42 Houston, United States 37.7% 84.9%
43 Prague, Czech Republic 37.3% 83.6%
44 Denver, United States 37.1% 81.8%
45 Pattaya, Thailand 35.5% 71.1%
46 Paris, France 30.8% 86.4%
47 Jakarta, Indonesia 30% 63.2%
48 San Antonio, United States 25.6% 85.2%
49 Atlanta, United States 22.5% 68.4%
50 Albufeira, Portugal 8.8% 37.6%

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Travelore News: Japan To Offer Free Wi-Fi For Tourists

Japan: Free wi-fi for tourists
 A group of 17 local governments and companies in Japan yesterday said it will start a free wi-fi service aimed at foreigners visiting Japan, Jiji Press reported.
The Travel Japan wi-fi project will make the service available through a smartphone app and accessible at up to 240,000 locations across the country.
The app will provide sightseeing and other information in English, Chinese, Korean and Thai.
The group includes Wire and Wireless Co, a subsidiary of KDDI Corp, Okinawa Prefecture, Kyoto, Kobe, Japan Airlines, JCB Co, Bic Camera Inc and Matsumoto Kiyoshi Holdings Co.
Calls for free wi-fi in Japan are growing as the number of visitors to the country has been increasing. The number topped 10 million for the first time last year.

Follow us on Twitter: @TraveloreReport

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Take A Peek Inside The New Virgin Hotels




Hotel Launches Official Website and Animated Video Showcasing Hotel Offerings
Looking to get a peek inside Virgin Hotels? Today, the four-star lifestyle
 brand launches its website and introduces, in true Virgin fashion, a fun animated video, highlighting traveler pain
 points and demonstrating in stark contrast the ways Virgin Hotels will eliminate those frustrations. 
Guests can now make reservations at virginhotels.com for stays starting January 15, 2015. The website uses
 responsive web design, creating an optimal user experience that's interactive, content rich and sparks curiosity.
 Whether guests are browsing the website using their desktop, smart phone or tablet, the site is tailored to the
 device, making all the
 important information easy to reach. 
"Our goal in the creation of Virgin Hotel's website was to clearly differentiate the entire experience from what
 typical hotel websites have been offering up, while also improving upon ease of use," said Doug Carrillo, vice
 president of sales & marketing for Virgin Hotels. "Guests will no longer have to sift through unnecessary or
 irrelevant information. The site will show exactly what guests want to know and helps them find it effortlessly."
Virgin Hotels takes viewers on a playful and humorous journey, illustrating guest obstacles and how the new
 hotel brand will lead the charge by putting guests' comfort, productivity, pockets and needs as top priority. 
Through the video, guests will learn about some of the resolutions Virgin Hotels is bringing to the market,
 including:
  • An end to 'nickel and diming.' Free Wi-Fi with no bandwidth restrictions, street level minibar pricing and
  •  no hidden fees at check-out
  • A pied-a-terre style room that's divided into two chambers allowing for maximum privacy and function
  • An app* that controls the room environment, entertainment, service and check-in/out
  • Chamber amenities that cater to the female business traveler
"The video goes beyond just a tour of the two chamber concept, it's our anthem for rebellion in the name of the 
guest," said Carrillo. "For too long, guests have put up with hidden or absurd fees for common services,
 outrageous minibar prices and slow Wi-Fi at ridiculous prices. And they've settled for a room that's focused on
 form, rather than function. Virgin Hotels is here to change that and set a new standard."
Virgin Hotels Chicago will be located in the heart of Chicago's Loop district in the historic Old Dearborn Bank
 Building at 203 N. Wabash Avenue. The 27-story Art Deco building, a Chicago landmark designed by C.W. and 
George L. Rapp Architects in 1928, will offer 250 guest rooms, 40 one-bedroom suites and two rock star suites.
 Additionally, the hotel will feature meeting spaces, restaurants, lounges and other public areas that reflect the
 Virgin brand's stylish and functional legacy. 
*The mobile app is slated to launch in late fall of 2014 and will put guests in the captain's chair using their

 personal mobile. Guests will have access via their mobile device to check-in and out of the hotel, order room
 service, control the TV and room setting, plus much more.
ABOUT VIRGIN HOTELS:
Virgin Hotels is a lifestyle hospitality brand that combines heartfelt service, straightforward value and a seamless,
 personalized hotel experience with the track record of innovation and smart disruption that Sir Richard Branson's
 global Virgin Group has pioneered for over 40 years. Each property will intermix a passion for food and beverage
 with music and culture, fusing with the local landscape and providing a vibrant and inclusive environment for
 travelers and locals alike. Chicago will open in December 2014, with New York, Nashville and others to follow.
 For more information, please visit www.virginhotels.com.
Stay connected on all the latest news by following Virgin Hotels on FacebookTwitterInstagramGoogle+ and
 more.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Travelore Tips: How Not To Pay the Price For Free Wi-Fi


Part of globe-trotting nowadays is flitting from one free Wi-Fi network to the next. From hotel lobby to coffee shop to subway platform to park, each time we join a public network we put our personal information and privacy at risk. Yet few travelers are concerned enough to turn down free Wi-Fi. Rather, many of us hastily give away an email address in exchange for 15 minutes of free airport Internet access. 
So how to feed your addiction while also safeguarding your passwords and privacy? If you’re not going to abstain (and who is these days?), here are four rules for staying connected and (reasonably) safe while traveling. 
1. MAKE SURE THAT ANY SITE YOU VISIT HAS ‘HTTPS’ IN FRONT OF THE URL. Those five letters indicate that the page is encrypted, which prevents others from seeing what you’re doing. If you’re browsing the web in a Starbucks or any place with an open network and you do not see “https,” it’s possible that someone there with nefarious intentions can see the site you’re visiting and the exact pages you request on that site. 
“They can see that you’re connecting to Amazon and that you’re looking for remedial algebra books,” said Nadia Heninger, an assistant professor of computer and information science at the University of Pennsylvania. Indeed, the only part of an e-commerce site that may be encrypted is the page where you access your account information or enter your credit card number.
Sites like Gmail.com and Yahoo.com use “https” by default, but type your password into a web-based email site that does not use it and a third party could see (and steal) that password. This sort of eavesdropping is easier than you might think. There are a number of tools that allow anyone who downloads them to see all the data that flies back and forth between a browser and a web server, said Jason Hong, an associate professor at the Human Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University. 
Moreover, anyone can set up a Wi-Fi network for criminal purposes and give it a legitimate-sounding name. Say, for example, you’re in the Paris Métro and you join a free network that looks like an official city initiative. “You have no idea what Wi-Fi network that is,” Professor Heninger said. “It could be set up by a hacker.” And if he or she has malicious intentions, when you go to a popular site like Facebook you may actually be logging into a fake page that allows the hacker to steal your password. “It is surprisingly common,” Professor Heninger said.
But surely, using Wi-Fi at a hotel is safe, right? “That’s only marginally better,” Professor Hong said. On the bright side, he said it’s unlikely that a criminal would bother monitoring the hotel’s traffic for a few passwords because the cost-benefit is simply not there. That person would get a bigger payoff from phishing emails, Professor Hong said, in which the sender masquerades as a known source like your bank or credit card company to get sensitive information like your banking passwords.
Even so, protect your computer by ensuring that your web browsers are up-to-date. Turn on your firewall and turn off file sharing.
Continue reading the main story2. USE A VIRTUAL PRIVATE NETWORK, OR VPN. If you work for a corporation, chances are you either already have one or have a technology department that can give you one. Using a VPN essentially encrypts all your online traffic, ensuring that no one can eavesdrop. It also routes that activity through whoever owns the VPN (your employer). So if, for example, I’m in a hotel in Japan using my VPN, all of my traffic gets sent to The New York Times’s servers and is then redirected again so it appears as if it is coming from The Times rather than from a hotel room in Japan. To access the VPN, users are typically given a name and a password and often also a constantly changing set of numbers on a fob that must be entered to access the network. Don’t have a VPN? There’s Tor, software that prevents third parties from seeing your location or the sites you visit. “It’s totally free and fairly easy to use,” said Professor Heninger, who uses Tor. The software can be downloaded at Torproject.org.
3. SIGN UP FOR TWO-STEP VERIFICATION. More and more sites — Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo, WordPress — allow users to set up their accounts so that signing in requires two ways of proving who they are. The most common method requires a password you create plus a code that is sent to you — via text message or through a special app — each time you wish to sign in.
For instance, let’s say you logged onto a fake Facebook page and hackers captured your user name and password. If that happened without two-step verification (known on Facebook as “login approvals”), the hackers could access your account when you log off. If, however, you had enabled login approvals, even though your user name and password were captured, the hackers would not be able to log into your account because they wouldn’t receive the requisite code. Now, if you’re someone who uses the same password for everything, this is where you still run into trouble. Here’s why: If your user name and password for Facebook are the same as those for another website that does not have two-step verification, hackers might figure that out and break into your other accounts. Yes, I know, you can’t keep all your passwords straight. That’s why there are password managers like 1Password and LastPass, which can create and store long, unique passwords. 
4. BRING ONLY WHAT YOU NEED AND TURN OFF WHAT YOU’RE NOT USING. The latter goes for Wi-Fi and for Bluetooth. “It’s just another way to be compromised,” Professor Heninger said.
And don’t give away your email address or download an app in exchange for free Wi-Fi.
“Think about the recipient of that information,” she said. “You have no idea who set up that Wi-Fi network,” she continued, adding “You might have just downloaded an app that will download all your contacts.”  
When it comes to travel booking and organization apps, one security concern is how much of your personal information the app is sharing, and with whom. Professor Hong said that, in general, apps that charge a fee are better because they have a revenue model. Those that do not are more likely to sell your information. He added that whether they are free or not, apps are also a potential security risk because they do not always encrypt your data when communicating to Web servers.
If you’re seriously concerned about security, Professor Heninger suggests creating a special travel email address and password. And she recommends buying a “travel laptop” that you load with only the information you need.

Indeed, Professor Hong said he would worry more about the theft of your computer than your various passwords. He cited an incident in 2000 in which the laptop of the Qualcomm chief executive at the time, Irwin Jacobs, disappeared at a conference in Irvine, Calif. “He turned his back and the laptop was gone,” Professor Hong said.
Average travelers, he continued, should be just as mindful, if not more, of having their smartphone plucked from their hand by a thief on the street. 
“Attackers usually go for the easiest thing,” he said. “Don’t ever underestimate the power of snatch and grab.” 

Friday, May 24, 2013

How To Get Free Wi-Fi On A Cruise


Aruba Cruise Wi-Fi
In Aruba I found free Wi-Fi at the Renaissance Marina Hotel, a ten-minute walk from the cruise terminal. I could see my ship from the hotel’s pool.

Contributed by Wendy Perrin
Internet access on cruise ships can be expensive—often $1 per minute—and excruciatingly slow. So when ships pull into port, passengers often go in search of cheap or free Wi-Fi. Because it's not always easy to suss out in advance where in port the Wi-Fi will be, I thought it would help to share the story of how I found free Wi-Fi in Aruba last week.
I watched for crew members leaving the ship carrying laptops and followed them. They ended up in the Renaissance Mall at a Starbucks just below the lobby of theRenaissance Aruba Resort & Casino. The free Wi-Fi extended beyond the Starbucks to the hotel's open-air lobby, bar, and pool. More free Wi-Fi could be found across the street at Renaissance Marketplace, a set of shops with plenty of outdoor seating with a harbor view.
There was Wi-Fi inside the cruise terminal building too—a convenience that is not the norm for most cruise piers—but it cost $5 an hour. Since I had to spend the whole day on my laptop, and I liked the idea of drinks with a view, I opted for the Renaissance complex.
When you’re headed on a cruise and you'll need Internet access, do your homework and research in advance where there’s convenient Wi-Fi, either free or affordable, in each port on your itinerary. Although it's normally good source for sussing out Wi-Fi spots, JiWire’s global Wi-Fi finder is often not so good for Wi-Fi options near cruise piers. Cruise Critic’s Ports of Call boards sometimes have this information. When all else fails, in the Caribbean the local Margaritaville usually has free Wi-Fi and plenty of electrical outlets.