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Douglas County Courthouse First in Metro Atlanta to Provide Wi-Fi

Mar 23, 2007, News Report

Found in: E-Government / Serving the Citizen

The Douglas County, Ga., Board of Commissioners announced that the Douglas County Courthouse is now the first courthouse in the metro Atlanta area -- and possibly in the state of Georgia -- to be completely Wi-Fi.

Wi-Fi is a wireless communications network that allows the public to access the Internet anywhere inside the courthouse building using a laptop computer with wireless capability. This service is provided free of charge to the public as a courtesy and to assist attorneys who need Internet access in the courtrooms to help with their cases; businesspersons who made need to access information when they apply for occupational tax/business licenses, building permits, etc.; individuals who need to be back in touch with their offices while conducting business in the courthouse; and many other individuals.

The Wi-Fi system was designed and installed by the staff of the county Information Services Department for a fraction of the cost and time it would have taken an outside contractor to perform this service, according to a release from the county.

"Our staff is proud to have been able to provide this state-of-the-art technology to our citizens and install it economically," said Information Services Director Mike Amato. "Another benefit to our citizens." The Aironet/Cisco system can accommodate up to 75 users at the same time.

Comments

By Anonymous on Mar 25, 2007

It is tough to get anything done in Atlanta. I am back in the private sector. I could not take the politics. How you beat the big boys with a shoe string budget is commendable. Rural open your eyes.

By Anonymous on Mar 23, 2007

Issues are much different when dealing with a city environment. Agencies may be less then cooperative and add another layer to the OSI model.

By Anonymous on Mar 23, 2007

You may not be aware but the Metro Area of Atlanta has issues that add to the complexity of any technology deployments.

By Anonymous on Mar 23, 2007

Uh, we've had this capability in our courthouse (in rural Indiana, no less) for almost 18 months. Is this really news?

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