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About Marc Budie

During my day job, I am technology director at Quadriga, the trusted partner to many of the world’s leading hotels. I am charged with...

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Posts Tagged ‘Wi-fi’

Sky high Wi-Fi

Source: www.wired.com

Source: www.wired.com

I have discussed before now how internet access is considered to be the new fourth utility. And to keep up with consumer lifestyles – the need to be always available and access what they want, when they want it, at a click of a button – airlines have begun offering internet services to their customers. Oman Air is the next to do this, from this month it will offer in-flight web access to its customers.

As a consumer, I can look at this from two different perspectives:

As a frequent flyer I travel a lot, for both work and pleasure. And what I enjoy about flying is the ability to switch off. No one can contact you, leaving you to sit back and relax to enjoy a few hours’ peace. On the other hand I am also a businessman and I know those few hours in the air can really eat into a working day. This new development will allow me to carry on working even when I am 30,000 feet up in the clouds.

It is encouraging to see airlines responding to the changing demands that consumers are making with regard to technology – hotels have been doing this for years. However, it will be interesting to see, as the market matures, how airlines cope with the challenges that hotels have historically faced with the implementation of internet services: bandwidth availability, the ‘paid-for or free internet access’ debate, managing varying levels of demand and the level of investment required to support high usage. Only time will tell.

Three for the price of one – could your hotel benefit from a single network?

Source: www.omc.net.au/

Source: www.omc.net.au

During my visits to customer sites, I frequently come across hotels that are running three separate networks to accommodate their telephone, back office system and entertainment, including Wi-fi.

Although the concept of running a singular IP network is being adopted within new build hotels, a large number of European establishments are still running separate networks, often as a result of having several legacy systems in an older property. Although many hoteliers realise the benefits to be had by combining networks, some perceive that network consolidation is expensive and can incur long periods of downtime which may negatively impact the guest experience.

However, when you compare the nominal disruption caused through undertaking the process and consider the increased efficiency and positive Capex saving that operating a single network could have on the profit line of a hotel, the decision should be straightforward. How long can hotels afford to keep running multiple networks?

Is Britain falling behind in the wi-fi revolution?

Source: www.confederatemercantile.com

Source: www.confederatemercantile.com

I spotted an interesting piece on TravelMail yesterday that explores the current thinking that Britain is falling behind in the wi-fi revolution. Reporter Tim Clark has just come back from South America, and – technologically, at least – he felt like he’d never been away from the office:

I have just come back from a short trip to Latin America, Ecuador to be precise, and while I was away for two weeks the office didn’t really miss me that much. This was mainly because I was never really away.

Taking my battered laptop with me, I was able to watch as the latest travel news unfolded with glee, and file back any interesting anecdote I could find.

But I didn’t have to head to a net café or connect a satellite phone to keep haranguing my work colleagues with the wonders of Ecuador, I simply took advantage of the free Wi-Fi at my hotel.

And, as I moved around I found the same service offered as often as I found chocolates on the pillow or an extra towel.

For a UK traveller it was a real eye-opener.

It did get me thinking about the vastly different requirements of travellers – whether they are on business or on holiday. Many of us would like to cut ourselves off from the world of work when we’re on annual leave with our partners and children; but, when on business in this day and age, being out of touch is absolutely out of the question.

Perhaps hotels should be considering that dilemma when they’re reviewing pricing structures? I, like many business travellers, would be happy to pay a small premium for a room that was equipped with fast internet access and other gadgets that would make my life easier – such as the use of a netbook or mobile phone charger. But holidaymakers are more likely to see those things as expensive and unnecessary on a get-away-from-it-all break.

Hotels must anticipate these different preferences and offer scaled services accordingly. Quadriga offers a tiered bandwidth service, for example, meaning that hotel customers can choose from 24 different time and bandwidth combinations to suit the various needs of their guests.