University of Georgia: Wireless Cloud Permeates Athens
        
        
        
         A unique technological town-grown collaboration has begun in Athens, 
        Ga., famous as the home of the University of Georgia Bulldogs and birthplace 
        of legendary bands such as REM and the B-52s. Surprisingly innovative 
        and prolific even for a college town, Athens' latest venture combines 
        experimentation with entrepreneurism. The project, dubbed the WAGZone, 
        creates a "cloud" of wireless access over downtown Athens, a 24-square-block 
        area. Under this cloud, anyone with WiFi equipment can access the Internet 
        and more.
A unique technological town-grown collaboration has begun in Athens, 
        Ga., famous as the home of the University of Georgia Bulldogs and birthplace 
        of legendary bands such as REM and the B-52s. Surprisingly innovative 
        and prolific even for a college town, Athens' latest venture combines 
        experimentation with entrepreneurism. The project, dubbed the WAGZone, 
        creates a "cloud" of wireless access over downtown Athens, a 24-square-block 
        area. Under this cloud, anyone with WiFi equipment can access the Internet 
        and more.
      
The WAGZone project (so called because it is the domain of the university's 
        Wireless Athens Group) breaks the mold in many ways. Typically, universities 
        fund the installation of wireless access points and other essential hardware 
        to facilitate the use of wireless on campus. This may be an all-campus 
        initiative or a series of individual access points installed by various 
        users and departments. Until now, there hasn't been a lot of enthusiasm 
        from universities to fund and manage wireless access for those beyond 
        campus walls. What's more, universities that have installed wireless access 
        have done so to enable constituents to access the Internet, campus portals, 
        and specific projects. But the goals of the WAGZone are broader than Internet 
        access. 
      Scott Shamp, director of the New Media Institute (NMI) at the University 
        of Georgia, says the primary goals are research, development, and access. 
        First, according to Shamp, WAG and NMI want to learn more about how people 
        use and live with high-tech tools. "We want to explore the relationship 
        that people might have with wireless technology," he says. "Information 
        has always been a destination—people go to it when they want to learn 
        something. Wireless technology offers the possibility that information 
        can be a companion, something you take along with you." 
      To that end, every course offered with the New Media Institute this fall 
        will ask students to interact with the WAGZone. A usability course will 
        focus on designing interfaces for PDAs that will allow handheld users 
        to make use of the WAGZone. Shamp's lecture course will break into 11 
        teams that will explore what types of services people would like available 
        in a wireless environment. A rich media production course, to focus on 
        Web casting and streaming, will examine how Athens businesses such as 
        nightclubs might interact with the WAGZone. Students will interact extensively 
        with the greater Athens community to find exciting new applications for 
        wireless.
      One outcome of the project could be an influx of innovative, wireless-content 
        development companies to Athens, spurring economic growth. Says Shamp, 
        "here in Athens we have talent and a reasonable cost of living. The WAGZone 
        is an opportunity to showcase what someone might do here." Sharing that 
        goal is the Georgia Research Alliance, a public/private partnership dedicated 
        to improving Georgia's economy. The GRA contributed $75,000 to fund the 
        WAGZone.
But economic development d'esn't have to come from the outside. WAG wants 
        the Zone to be a "sandbox" for ideas, a place where students and researchers 
        can "build prototypes, experiment, and explore." There is an open-ended 
        approach to the Zone that encourages innovation and an entrepreneurial 
        spirit, which Shamp hopes will lead to student-built companies. As he 
        puts it, "It's these 21- and 22-year-olds who are going to come up with 
        the exciting new ideas."
      Finally, the WAGZone is about access. Shamp and his colleagues hope that 
        the development of the cloud will prompt other wireless constituents to 
        adopt compatible standards, establishing interoperability between systems 
        that will lead to near-seamless access as wireless use increases. At the 
        moment, UGA d'esn't have a consistent wireless program in place, and wireless 
        access on campus consists of a series of "scattered clouds." One potential 
        benefit of the WAGZone would be the eventual closing of all those gaps. 
      
      For more information on the Wireless Athens Group, visit www.nmi.uga.edu/research/wag 
        or contact Dr. Scott Shamp at [email protected].