NEWS Many of the UK's commercial Wi-Fi hot spots suffer from a lack of trained staff to help users get connected. Despite advertising the presence of a wireless network to potential customers, some companies are failing to follow this up by ensuring that users can get easy access to help and support. Coffee chain Starbucks is at the forefront of the drive to roll out Wi-Fi hot spots in Britain. However, its official policy is that when the network appears to be down, users should call operator T-Mobile to try to discover when it might be back. When asked why there was a distinct lack of Wi-Fi on the premises, despite an advert on the front door a staff member explained: "Sometimes it's up and sometimes it's down. We're only the host company, we can't help at all." A later visit to a second Starbucks store yielded better results, and the fact that Starbucks employees at least know this much puts them ahead of some rivals. Anyone asking about the BT Openzone Wi-Fi network at the Tower Thistle hotel in London is likely to be met by blank faces, and pointed towards the queue at the check-in desk. At other hot spots, though, staff have more of a clue -- with "virtually free" networks providing at least as good a service as one where you pay up to £6 per hour. Wi-Fi should be a simple matter of turning on a laptop and signing up to the network, with minimal assistance needed, say proponents of the technology. Given the vagaries of networks, laptops and operating systems, it won't always be that easy, so users should be aware that at many hot spots they're very much on their own.
London's Wi-Fi welcome is less than helpful
'Look, I'm trained to pour coffee? I do latte, espresso, cappuccino or double mocha-chocca latte - I ain't never even heard of Wi-Fi...'
Post your comment
In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.
You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your silicon.com account below
Get silicon.com's daily newsletter
-

Enter your email to register
Featured white papers
-
Solution Brief: Optimizing Video Delivery with Blue Coat
Hosting and disseminating videos within your business offers a unique challenge to organizations with limitations in...
-
Six iPad tests for multimedia-grade Wi-Fi
Along with most companies, the University of Ottawa has seen a massive increase in the numbers of highly mobile...
-
Solution Brief: Top 5 Reasons to Choose Blue Coat WAN Optimization
There's a pretty good chance your wide area network (WAN) looks like a mess right now. The rapid adoption of new...
Keep in touch with silicon.com
-
Connect with silicon.com on Facebook
Discuss the news of the day with the silicon.com team
-
Follow silicon.com on Twitter
Get regular updates from the silicon.com editors
-
Join the silicon.com LinkedIn networking group
Network with your peers and share expertise
Latest jobs
-
JAVA DEVELOPER - BERKSHIRE - TO £34k PLUS PACKAGE
JAVA DEVELOPER TRANSPORT MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS / TMS - UNIX JAVA (with C# C++ OOP OOD ANDROID)Our client is...
-
Systems Analyst - Project Lead - Chelmsford - £50k-55K+Bens
Systems Analyst - Project Lead - Chelmsford, Essex - £50k-55K+Bens TJC.C37.SAPAn exciting position as a Project Lead...
-
BI Solutions Architect (Major Banking Programme - London)
BI Solutions Architect (Major Banking Programme - London) Are you a Business Intelligence or Data Warehousing...
silicon.com newsletters
-
Stay up to date with silicon.com newsletters
Keep up with the latest news and analysis from silicon.com with our free email newsletters







Comments
There is 1 comment. Join the discussion
1. anonymous
Maybe some off these testers should try using some of the iyzone locations. www.iyzone.net