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Medical equipment heads for Haiti from Global Links' warehouse in Homewood.  Photo by Brian Cohen
Medical equipment heads for Haiti from Global Links' warehouse in Homewood. Photo by Brian Cohen

Innovation

Free Wi-Fi on Walnut honors Shadyside Inn owner

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Jonathan Plesset was looking for a unique way to honor his father, Shadyside Inn owner R. Jeffrey Plesset who passed away in 1999. The late Plesset loved the community, but he would’ve hated a fountain and he didn’t like plaques. But free Wi-Fi on Walnut? Perfect.

“My dad didn’t like to draw attention to himself,” explains Plesset, co-owner of the Inn.  “With this wireless network you get a splash screen and a little description that honors him. Maybe he wouldn’t have liked that either, but he would have overlooked it. Plus, I wanted to give people another reason to come to Shadyside.”

Plesset left Boston eight years ago and returned to Pittsburgh to start a tech business that didn’t pan out. Now Wi-Fi has him intrigued. “It’s a wild success,” he admits. With an initial investment of $10,000, he purchased a deck of “nodes” and placed them strategically along the Walnut Street corridor, from S. Aiken to S. Negley.

 “What’s nice about a retail district is Wi-Fi signals like to go through windows. So the signal stretches into the stores.” There are some dead spots here and there, but nothing another $50 node can’t fix, he adds.

Nearly 500 users logged-on in the first week to Free Wireless Shadyside before Plesset even told anyone it was available. Plesset plans to keep Walnut Wi-Fi free, and is considering expanding into other neighborhoods like Squirrel Hill.

“Now that I've had a taste of it, there’s nothing stopping me. We could make Pittsburgh the Wi-Fi capital of the world. We should make this a priority, we are a such a tech city.”

Writer: Deb Smit
Source: Jonathan Plesset, Shadyside

Photograph copyright © Jonathan Greene