There is a new revolution brewing along Tallinn's ancient stone streets and inside its charming Gothic buildings.
Published:
6 May 2004 y., Thursday
But it is not political, it is technological. Wireless net access, or wi-fi, is quickly becoming the rule, not exception, in the Estonian capital.
That is due largely to the hard work of Veljo Haamer, editor of the wifi.ee website.
Mr Haamer, a former computer science student and tutor, got turned on to wireless internet access a few years ago, after reading about projects in America. He visited friends in the United States, learned more about wi-fi, and then decided to start his own project in Estonia.
Working with local net providers, Mr Haamer started pushing wi-fi as a cheap, effective way for Estonians to get online.
The first wi-fi hotspots launched in the spring of 2001. Today, there are more than 280 throughout the country.
You can find access points in many of Estonia's cafes and pubs and two-thirds of them are free to use. Those that charge usually offer slightly faster connection speeds.
Šaltinis:
BBC News
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