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 20080701 Tuesday July 01, 2008

Bike to Work Day...via Wi-Fi Hotspots

Last Wednesday (25 June) for the 11th year in a row (yes, that's right -- it's been 11 years!) I had the pleasure of participating in the Denver Area Bike to Work Day sponsored by the Denver Regional Council of Governments.  In order to keep it interesting, after all there's nothing worse than a boring 37-mile bike ride to get to work, I've tried to look for new and different ways to spruce up the event for me every year -- like searching out the free LaMar's donuts, or capturing the event as a photo essay from ground level.

Since last year's Bike to Work Day I have become a full-time work-from-home, or "Sun Open Work," employee. [An aside: Sun calls its flexible work program, "Open Work."  It is one of the best programs of its kind in the industry and makes it much easier for me to work with my globally-dispersed team.  Basically, as long as I have network access and a phone, I can work anytime, anywhere.]  Given my change of status -- now as a WFHer -- which meant I did not have to go all the way to Sun's Broomfield, CO campus on Bike to Work Day, I, instead, decided upon more of an Open Work alternative.  Rather than biking to my basement office (Rich Brown beat me to that idea -- see the photo in his "Life as a Telecommuter, Part 1" blog entry), I decided upon a slightly more ambitious adventure.  All I needed was a network link, this was to be my 11th Bike to Work Day -- why not combine those two thoughts and create: "Bike to Work Day from 11 Different Wi-Fi Hotspots."  Crazy?  Well...

To prepare, I found the locations of various restaurants, coffee shops, and bookstores I knew had free Wi-Fi in the area.  The Panera Bread chain was first on my list because they are seemingly everywhere and they have a good, reliable Wi-Fi setup.  Similar to Panera, next on my list was the Paradise Bakery and Cafe chain.  Not as ubiquitous as Panera, they have several locations here in the Denver area and they, too, have free Wi-Fi.  For coffee shops, I went with Peaberry Coffee -- a local chain with several stores in the south Denver area where I live.  Finally, there was the Tattered Cover -- Denver's premier independent book-seller.

After superimposing the locations of the Paneras, Paradises, Peaberrys, and Tattered Covers on a Denver Area Bicycle route map, I decided to ride east from my home through the communities south of Denver, head north through the Denver Technology Center (the area to the southeast of Denver), work my way into Denver along the Cherry Creek bikeway, then finally head back home down the South Platte River bike trail.  I mapped out a route that looked like this:


View Larger Map

The blue pushpins mark the Wi-Fi hotspots I decided to visit.  The blue line signifies my route.  I started at the Panera at Aspen Grove in Littleton (the blue pushpin on the southwest side of the map), then traversed the marked locations cyclonically (or counter-clockwise here in the northern hemisphere) due east through Highlands Ranch (along the bottom of the map) then up to Tattered Cover's main store on Colfax Avenue in Denver before returning down the South Platte River (the western side of the map) and back home.

And just what did these hotspots look like?  Well, I took a digital pic of each as I went along.  The facades follow:

B2WD Stop #1
Stop #1: Panera Bread, Littleton (Aspen Grove)
B2WD Stop #2
Stop #2: Tattered Cover Bookstore, Highlands Ranch
B2WD Stop #2.5
Stop #2.5: Thundershowers Developing to the West, Highlands Ranch
B2WD Stop #3
Stop #3: Panera Bread, Highlands Ranch
B2WD Stop #4
Stop #4: Panera Bread, Highlands Ranch (near Park Meadows) -- with a dry thunderstorm overhead
B2WD Stop #5
Stop #5: Peaberry Coffee (north of Park Meadows)
B2WD Stop #6
Stop #6: Peaberry Coffee, Greenwood Village
B2WD Stop #7
Stop #7: Panera Bread, Greenwood Village (with a loud truck out front)
B2WD Stop #8
Stop #8: Panera Bread, Denver Tech Center
B2WD Stop #9
Stop #9: Paradise Bakery and Cafe, Cherry Creek North
B2WD Stop #10
Stop #10: Panera Bread, Cherry Creek North
B2WD Stop #11
Stop #11: Tattered Cover Bookstore, Main Store, Colfax Ave., Denver

In the end, I managed to travel a total of 57.5 miles, a bit less than what a round-trip ride to Broomfield would have been for me.  The total ride time was about 4 hours.  However, with the various con-calls I attended at some stops and email storms I responded to at other stops, my "Bike to Work Day from 11 Different Wi-Fi Hotspots" took about 12 hours to accomplish.  In addition, I learned a few things about the Wi-Fi services these establishments sponsor:

Last, but never least, this year's artwork on the t-shirt was colorful, modern, and, depending on your preference, either cutely stylish or stylishly cute.  I have added it to my ever-growing collection of B2WD T-Shirts.

Eleven years, eleven mostly successful Bike to Work days.  I'm thinking next year I'll try really something different... :)

[General] ( July 01, 2008 06:33 AM ) Permalink Comments [1]
Comments:

Awesome expose of WiFi hot spots, Dave! Next year you can try something similar for bustling Kremmling!

Posted by Joanie Walker on July 01, 2008 at 03:26 PM MDT #

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