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Road warrior
connectivity
By Scott Bradner
I know I travel far too
much. Getting to 100K miles on United Airlines by July, as it looks like will
happen this year, should indicate something is wrong with my priorities. But,
for many reasons, the travel continues. I also get far too much email (and far
too much of that is spam). The combination of these two excesses means that I
spend long hours dialed-in from hotel rooms. Somehow the glamour of this
lifestyle has eluded me so far.
There is now some
potential for things to get better. Internet access in hotels and airports has
been becoming more common, but there are some rather basic problems with what
is being offered. Strangely enough, the systems themselves seem to have been
designed by people who do not actually use the Internet. The features of the
in-room TV-based systems are strange at best and marginally useful as a norm.
And it must have taken quite a bit of research to find a keyboard as bad as the
one used on many of the in-airport Internet carrels.
Business hotels are
beginning to get a hint of a clue about the need for connectivity but most
still need a lot of help. Just having a second phone line that can be used to
dial out on is a good start. At least you do not get taken off the air when the
hotel's call waiting signal comes on. But it would help if the data jack were
on a phone near a desk to put the laptop on. It also helps if there is a power
outlet within 30 feet of the data jack that does not get switched off when you
turn out the room lights.
What I would really like
to see more of is Ethernet-based Internet access in hotel rooms. Ethernet-based
means there is no need for special interfaces or drivers, as was the case with
a wireless system I ran into in some, it seems now, random hotel in a random
city. If the hotel has a reasonable speed connection to a reasonable ISP the
performance can be quite good. But there can be significant configuration
changes required when plugging into someone else's LAN. The image of the
average traveling corporate executive trying to reconfigure their laptop is
amusing as long as you do not run the help desk back at their office.
I saw a neat service
offering the other day from Elastic
Networks.
It is designed to go into places such as hotel rooms where many different
people may want to plug in. It listens to the Ethernet and automatically
configures itself to do address translation so that your laptop just works with
no reconfiguration required. I was even able to use the secure shell (ssh) from
my Mac back to my home machine by just trying it. I expect there are problems
dealing with some sites with firewalls but since we do not have an external
firewall at Harvard, I'd change hotels if I could get this service in my room.
disclaimer: Harvard
hardly ever travels so the above observations and wishes must be mine.