From: www.itworld.com
May 1, 2008 —
AT&T Inc. is offering free wireless access to iPhone owners at several
thousand of its public hot spots, including those it recently acquired in a
deal with the high-end coffee shop chain Starbucks, users in the U.S. reported
Thursday.
Fueled by an initial report on MacRumors.com that described the free hot spot
access, numerous users on Apple Inc.'s own iPhone support forum related their
experiences at Starbucks, which boasts wireless at more then 7,000 of its U.S.
stores.
According to the reports, iPhone owners are presented with a specially formatted
page when they launch the Safari browser. The form asks them to enter their
iPhone phone number. Once the number is verified, users can browse using the
hot spot rather than the much slower EDGE-based data network that AT&T also
operates.
Computerworld confirmed the free iPhone Wi-Fi at a Starbucks location in Eugene,
Ore., this morning.
Details about the wireless access, however, are sketchy, as AT&T refused
to comment. It is unknown, for example, if Wi-Fi access is unlimited or available
at all of AT&T's 71,000 hot spots, which include those at bookseller Barnes
& Noble and throughout the McDonald's fast food chain.
In mid-February, Starbucks announced that it was dropping T-Mobile USA as its
in-store wireless provider and had instead made a deal with AT&T. At the
time, Starbucks said the service would give two hours of free access a day to
the coffee company's cardholders, while AT&T broadband users would have
unlimited use. There was no mention of the iPhone in February.
AT&T is Apple's exclusive iPhone network partner in the U.S.
Some users and bloggers Thursday also speculated that because AT&T asks
iPhone users to enter their telephone number, it may not offer free access to
people who have hacked their iPhones to make calls on other mobile service providers.
AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel would not confirm or deny that such was the case,
saying only that the iPhone is intended to be used on AT&T's network.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Computerworld