Arab Times

Homeless avid users of free Web kiosks

Wi-Fi program keeps people connected to rest of reality Taiwan police grapple for control of Pokemon swarms

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Gamers play Pokemon Go at the Quezon City Memorial Circle in Manila on Aug 23. A Philippine city councillor has sought to stop Pokemon Go players in government from losing ‘productivi­ty’ by filing

a resolution to ban the hunt for digital monsters in state offices. (AFP)

NEW YORK, Aug 24, (AP): An effort to replace obsolete pay phones with Wi-Fi kiosks that offer free web surfing and phone calls has been a hit with panhandler­s and the homeless, the least wired people in the city.

The city doesn’t track who’s using the new LinkNYC terminals, but anecdotal evidence suggests many users are living on the streets. On several recent weekdays, people wearing plastic garbage bags or hauling dented shopping carts were hunkered down at terminals.

“It’s free. That’s the best part about it,” said a tall man drinking a soda out of a paper bag as he watched an R. Kelly video at a terminal in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborho­od.

The man, who would give only his street name, Beef Stew, said that besides listening to music he uses the sidewalk kiosks to charge his phone.

Matthew Kane was sitting in front of a LinkNYC kiosk last week charging his phone and holding a cardboard sign that said, “She Had a Better Lawyer.” The sign was effective: One man gave Kane a $20 bill and another gave him a slice of pizza during the space of a fiveminute conversati­on.

Kane, who said he was staying with acquaintan­ces “here and there,” guessed about half of the people he sees using the kiosks are homeless.

“It keeps people connected to the rest of reality,” he said.

The Wi-Fi program is a publicpriv­ate initiative run by CityBridge, a consortium of tech companies.

Installed

The first units were installed in January. There are now about 350, mainly in Manhattan, with plans for 7,500 or more throughout the city.

Two sides of the narrow kiosks are digital billboards that display paid

“When we set out to bring Wi-Fi to sidewalks at no cost to taxpayers, we aimed not just to replace outdated pay phones with something more useful but to provide free services to all residents, including the one in five New Yorkers who don’t have broadband access at home,” said Natalie Grybauskas, a spokeswoma­n for Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio.

Some 350,000 people have signed up for and have used the Wi-Fi alone, and tablets have been used 60,000 times per week, according to a spokeswoma­n for the program.

At least a few down-and-out users of the terminals said they were using them to try to find work.

Michael Klein, who said he has been staying with different people since his father kicked him out for substance abuse, said he has used LinkNYC to look up informatio­n on Google, to make phone calls and to post “a half-assed resume” on Craigslist.

Feature

“I panhandle, and I’m looking for a job,” he said. “But when you’re dressed like this you can’t go in for an interview.”

The kiosks have a feature that aims to deter people who set up camp and use them for extended periods. About every three minutes, the attached tablet asks if you want to continue your session, which annoyed user Rene Angelique.

Angelique, who’s from Egypt but came to New York two weeks ago via Boston, has been sleeping on park benches or at a LinkNYC kiosk in Manhattan.

“They’re a great help to me because I lost my phone and my passport and a lot of my resources,” he said. “So to me, it’s essentiall­y a free laptop on the street.”

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