Title
Community and social interaction in the wireless city: wi-fi use in public and semi-public spaces
Abstract
A significant body of research has addressed whether fixed internet use increases, decreases or supplements the ways in which people engage in residential and workplace settings, but few studies have addressed how wireless internet use in public and semi-public spaces influences social life. Ubiquitous wi-fi adds a new dimension to the debate over how the internet may influence the structure of community. Will wireless internet use facilitate greater engagement with co-located others or encourage a form of 'public privatism'? This article reports the findings of an exploratory ethnographic study of how wi-fi was used and influenced social interactions in four different settings: paid and free wi-fi cafes in Boston, MA and Seattle, WA. This study found contrasting uses for wireless internet and competing implications for community. Two types of practices, typified in the behaviors of 'true mobiles' and 'placemakers', offer divergent futures for how wireless internet use may influence social relationships.
Year
DOI
Venue
2008
10.1177/1461444808096247
NEW MEDIA & SOCIETY
Keywords
Field
DocType
community network,cafes,coffee shops,network,mobile computing,Muni wi-fi,parochial realm,privatism,social neworks,third places
Social science,Wireless network,Internet privacy,Public space,Community network,Wireless broadband,Sociology,Privatism,Mobile phone,Internet access,The Internet
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
10
6
1461-4448
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
15
1.00
7
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Keith N. Hampton118732.19
Neeti Gupta2565.07