Dark
Light

Free public Wi-Fi system to be rolled out in Dublin city

1 min read
334 views

The OpenRoaming Wi-Fi system is expected to be expanded to more than 150 access points in Dublin.

Following a fruitful proof-of-concept trial, Dublin city will soon see the launch of an unrestricted free people Wi-Fi system.

By logging in once and immediately switching to various common Wi-Fi hotspots, the fresh OpenRoaming system aims to enable residents and visitors to maintain smooth connectivity across their devices.

Dame Street, Barnardo Square, and the vicinity of the Dublin City Council (DCC ) amphitheatre were the initial locations for the system’s deployment. More than 150 access points across the city are expected to then be covered by OpenRoaming.

The Wireless Broadband Alliance ( WBA ), Virgin Media, and CommScope all participated in the trial, which was started by the DCC’s Smart Dublin program.

According to Tiago Rodrigues, CEO of WBA, which has its OpenRoaming system available at more than 1 million hotspots worldwide,” Wi-Fi is the foundation for clever cities.”

” This successful proof-of-concept trial demonstrates that Dublin and its citizens, businesses, and visitors can all rely on the WBA OpenRoaming standard to ensure that they often have easy access to flawless, safe, carrier-grade Wi-Fi connectivity.”

According to DCC smart city leader Jamie Cudden, Dublin is “at the forefront of a modern transformation” that is setting an example for another cities worldwide.

In order to achieve our smart city goals, such as closing the digital divide and making sure that government is adaptable to the needs of citizens and businesses, collaborations like this are essential.

This WBA OpenRoaming trial’s success is a significant step toward achieving all of those objectives.

By testing technology solutions to address a variety of native challenges, Smart Dublin, which was established by the four Dublin native authorities, aims to future-proof the Dublin regions.

Dublin’s latest smart city objectives include ensuring broadband connectivity for engaging engaging learning, research, and hybrid study, as well as giving tourists and other visitors complimentary, secure, high-performance Wi-Fi access.

The new system was unveiled today, June 20, as part of World Wi-Fi Day, which honors the importance of WiFi in connecting cities and communities all over the world.

With initiatives in 2013 and 2018, various plans to roll out completely Wi-Fi in Dublin City have already been made public.

Leo Portal

Leo is an expert in the field of smart city research and an overall tech-enthusiast with an emphasis on smart energy, IOT, smart homes and governance. After a master degree in international administration at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, and a master in public management at Fudan University in China, he pursued research studies in the field of smart cities at the European University Institute. This led him to publish multiple articles on smart cities. Among them “Using Smart People to Build Smarter: How Smart Cities Attract and Retain Highly Skilled Workers to Drive Innovation (Belgium, Denmark, the Netherlands, Poland)” published in the Smart Cities and Regional Development Journal (SCRD) and “Establishing Participative Smart Cities: Theory and Practice”, also published in the SCRD Journal. He regularly audits and advises municipalities and regional governments on their smart city strategies. He is currently writing a chapter for Springer on smart mobility in French smart cities.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

How Conflict of interest concerns raised over CMA's use of AWS UK public sector discount scheme the internet of things is monitoring the Earth’s resources
Previous Story

Conflict of interest concerns raised over CMA’s use of AWS UK public sector discount scheme

Next Story

Assessing the smart city: A review of metrics for performance assessment, risk assessment and construction ability assessment – An Academic Review

Latest from Governance

Don't Miss