How I became a walking hot spot
ASPEN, Colo.--One thing I love is finding uses for things that perhaps no one has thought of before.
I'd already been on Road Trip 2009 for several days when I arrived in this tony Colorado mountain town known best as a playground for the rich and famous. I was hoping to go for a walk and find something good to eat.
It had been a long day of driving, starting in Colorado Springs, and traveling over Independence Pass, a 12,095 "Top of the Rockies" spot just on the Continental Divide. I had planned to stroll around Aspen for a bit and then use my iPhone to get online and find something inexpensive for dinner.
But I had neglected to charge the iPhone, and by the time I got to town, the battery was more or less dead. This is Road Trip, however, and as someone carting around a car full of high-tech gear, I was determined to find a workaround.
Though it is designed to provide a hot-spot for as many as five people in one place, the Verizon MiFi 2200 allowed CNET News reporter Daniel Terdiman to create a mobile Wi-Fi connection for an iPod Touch as he walked around Aspen, Colo.
(Credit: Verizon)One of the gadgets I am road-testing is a 32GB iPod Touch, a device that, if it has access to a Wi-Fi connection, can do much of what the iPhone can do. But on a walk around a town you don't know, it's hard to count on finding such a connection, especially these days when most people password-protect their Wi-Fi.
However, I also am carrying Verizon's MiFi 2200 mobile hot spot, which converts the carrier's EV-DO signal into a Wi-Fi connection that up to five people can share. I had already used the MiFi to provide a signal for the iPod Touch at the very beginning of the trip so that, while sitting on a boarding airplane, I could download a large file from iTunes.
Now, I realized that by turning the MiFi on and sticking it in my back pocket, I could become, in essence, a walking hot spot, allowing me to get online on the iPod Touch, no matter where I was in town. That meant that I could use the Skype app to make a phone call, run several other apps for one reason or another, and look up good places to eat using the device's browser.
Of course, this is the kind of workaround that isn't going to make sense for most people. If you're going to bother paying for an iPod Touch and a MiFi, you might as well just get an iPhone. But if you're road-testing a number of tech gadgets and you see a way to jerry-rig something to solve a problem, why not do it?
It turns out that it's hard to find decent, inexpensive food in Aspen. But thanks to being able to get online while I walked around, I did end up at a terrific place where I had a good, moderately healthy meal for under $20.
And, since I became a walking hot spot, I was also able to get online on my computer, as well, meaning that I was able to actually do some work while I ate, despite the fact that the restaurant where I found that inexpensive meal didn't offer Wi-Fi.
In the end, one thing puzzled me, though. When I first linked the iPod Touch to the MiFi connection, I tried to locate myself using the device's map feature. But instead of pinpointing where I was in Aspen, it told me I was somewhere in Virginia. I thought that was odd, but I chalked it up to the fact that without a GPS chip, it figures out its location relative to the Wi-Fi signals it finds. Given that the MiFi is a loaner, I thought that maybe it had come from Virginia.
Later, however, when I returned to my car and got ready to head out, I plugged in my iPhone and again, with some power, tried to see if it, with GPS, it could locate me. Oddly, though, the iPhone also told me I was in Virginia.
My only conclusion for the fact that both devices told me this: that the folks in Aspen have figured out some way to trick Google Maps so as to keep out the hoi-polloi. But maybe it was something else. If you have any thoughts, I'd love to hear them.
For the next several weeks, Geek Gestalt will be on Road Trip 2009. After driving more than 12,000 miles in the Pacific Northwest, the Southwest and the Southeast over the last three years, I'll be writing about and photographing the best in technology, science, military, nature, aviation and more in Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, Montana, South Dakota and Colorado. If you have a suggestion for someplace to visit, drop me a line. And in the meantime, join the Road Trip 2009 Facebook page and follow my Twitter feed.
Daniel Terdiman is a staff writer at CNET News covering games, Net culture, and everything in between. E-mail Daniel. 




You use your ipod touch 24 hours a day?
I would *guess* that you're seeing the same sort of anomaly with the MiFi. You may be in Colorado, but the traffic you're creating/receiving from the Internet may be routed to/from somewhere in Virginia, and so that's where external websites think your traffic is coming from.
If your signal was coming from a tower located somewhere else, wouldn't the device show up on that part of the system instead of a local one? I would think, for example, that if your mobile hot-spot was actually getting its information from a tower a hundred miles away it wouldn't register on a local switch until that switch or device reconnects.
And I have to say, way to use your iPod! I have an 8gb first-gen, and I love the thing to death. It's taken the place of my giant 17" laptop, and I use the laptop as storage space and as a TV to put me to sleep, because I like the bigger screen while I'm lying down. Atlanta's restaurants are typically wi-fi hotspots, but there are times I wish I could have used it in, say, a movie theater or the Aquarium.
I live in the SF Bay Area, and yet a couple of times, I've been incorrectly mapped to someplace in Kansas (or another Midwest state).
GPS/online mapping isn't perfect. I've run into several bad data over the years: address not locatable, wrong town, driving directions through fire roads, cul-de-sacs, roads that don't connect, etc.
BTW- I went to search for your article & ran across a Windows & S60 application that's actually called www.WalkingHotspot.com. Also, I've been using www.joiku.com on my Nokia S60 3rd gen phone for a while now. It really drains the battery, but it's awesome to have it right on one's phone rather than have to have another device! (I've also found it to have a speedier connection than bluetooth tethering.)
Cheers,
@ggroovin
Not mentioned in the article is that it also comes with a little application (Mac/PC) that tracks your usage megabytes so that you don't go over your plan. Also not mentioned is that the unit is rechargable (either with an AC adaptor or, more slowly, when plugged into a USB port) for about 2-3 hours of untethered use.
BTW- it really is a HOT spot in another sense: it puts out some real HEAT in one's pocket! It gets very warm... almost uncomfortably so. This might be advantageous in the winter, but in the summertime, I've learned to keep it in my "man bag" or the wife's purse instead!!
I already pay for unlimited plan for my Verizon 3G card and my Apple MAC is a WIFI Hotpsot with 3 clicks. What is the limit of the MIFI - I'm curious.
And $20 for a meal is inexpensive?
who the heck would want to pay $60 for 5 gb. I use 15 gb a day. This hotwpot is a joke. What if I wanted to watch videos all day, over caps. I don't think so about buying this thing until its unlimited. Then we'll talk.
The MiFi is definitely NOT meant to be one's sole source of Internet connectivity; it's a targeted device. I do agree that it'd be great if the plan were unlimited, but the reality here is that you become free from dependence on increasingly-rare free WiFi hotspots when away from home, or when your online access at work is limited/restricted. The MiFi allows me to create my own WiFi bubble wherever I go and share it with friends and family; no more, no less, and that makes it perfect for ME.
Yeah, it sucks that stuff costs money... I can only dream of day when I have the free time to consume 15Gb of content every day! ;-)
- by mvarel02 June 30, 2009 4:34 PM PDT
- You can get the same Device on the Sprint network.
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- by June 30, 2009 7:34 PM PDT
- The Sprint device is IMHO better. It has built-in (accurate) SIRF III GPS with an app that plugs GPS coordinates into Google for mapping or searching. Also, you don't need to attach it first (by USB cable!!) to a computer to activate. It already comes activated! It also works better in rural OK (S of Tulsa) than the Verizon. (I tested both.) Chalk another one up to under-rated and unjustly maligned Sprint.
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