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    Thursday, April 18, 2024

    NYC unveils 'payphone' of the future

    This artist's rendering shows the proposed New York City public phone system that will offer not only free phone calls, it will be the largest free municipal WiFi network in the world. The 'pay' will come from advertisers who can target specific city blocks.

    Few pieces of infrastructure in any city are more iconic than the payphone. Clark Kent used it. So did Colin Farrell. And Bill. And Ted. The payphone has been a time travel machine, and a safe haven, and a comedic device.

    It has not, however, for a very long time - for most of us - been used to make phone calls.

    For that reason, cities have been trying to figure out what to do with these outdated assets, and how to re-imagine them as telecom infrastructure for a modern era when most of us have our own cell phones. Now, New York City has unveiled the most ambitious plan yet for the payphone of the future, which will, among other things, require no pay to make domestic phones calls, and function as much more than a phone.

    The city announced Monday that it had selected a consortium of advertising, technology and telecom companies to deploy throughout the city thousands of modern-day payphones that will offer 24-hour, free gigabit WiFi connections, free calls to anywhere in the U.S., touchscreen displays with direct access to city services, maps and directions for tourists, and charging stations (for the cell phones you'd rather use).

    The devices will also be capable of connecting people straight to emergency responders, and broadcasting alerts from the city during emergencies like Hurricane Sandy.

    The whole system, city officials said, will constitute the largest free municipal WiFi network in the world.

    All of it will be funded by what the providers say will be an astonishingly large revenue stream from sophisticated digital advertising - picture different and constantly fine-tuned ads depending on the block - that's projected to generate for the city $500 million over the next 12 years. Scott Goldsmith, the chief commercial officer at the advertising company Titan working on the contract, said the infrastructure will "revolutionize how advertising is delivered in the biggest media market in the world." Fifty percent of that revenue will go to the city.

    The end product, by the way, will no longer be called a "payphone." The city is calling the new devices "links."

    The consortium, called CityBridge, also includes the telecom giant Qualcomm, New York-based user experience design firm Control Group, and the hardware company Comark. Their contract with the city, which will replace New York City's previous 15-year contract to maintain and operate public payphones, calls for construction of the network to begin in 2015. Ultimately, as many as 10,000 of the machines will be installed across New York City, replacing roughly 6,500 old-school payphones.

    The city hopes to make money auctioning off some of the old payphones, which may retain some sentimental value, if not much functional allure. The new contract also calls for preserving three original Superman-style phone booths on the Upper West Side - as, yes, operational phones - for posterity.

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