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[Internet]| Friday 25th April 2008 |
Brian Paddick says that he would work with the London boroughs to provide coverage, but only at a speed of 256Kb/sec that would not compete with commercial providers.
"London is a 21st-century city and as mayor I would want to see 21st-century technology accessible to all," Paddick said. "If elected, I pledge to work with the private sector and local boroughs to make London the first Wi-Fied [sic] capital in the world. Access to the internet is access to knowledge, jobs and education and I will do all I can as mayor to close the gap between the digital haves and digital have-nots."
The service would be limited to connections of one hour, after which the user could initiate a new connection. The idea is to prevent downloading of large amounts of data, which the slow connection speed would pretty much prevent anyway.
Paddick says that the scheme would cost £7.5 million to set up and run for five years. That money would come from the scrapping of Transport for London's advertising and communications budgets.
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