Monday 23 April 2007

Unwired

There seems to be an unreasonable degree of nervousness setting in amongst my younger colleagues, now that the Barclays-ABN merger is official. They all fear the move will send a tsunami of consolidation through the industry, leading to mass-redundancy and the end of our glorious summer of bonuses and expense accounts.

I have a different kind of worry. I was walking along Cornhill this afternoon when I felt an unusual prickling sensation in my scalp. I know I will only confirm my standing as a technological ignoramus if I try to connect this with today's launch of the City-wide Wi-Fi network, but intuitively I know this to be the cause. Has anyone seriously studied the health implications of bombarding us all with yet more radio waves (or whatever the hell they are)?

What I don't understand is why they had to do this here. Can there be a square mile anywhere else in the country with as many broadband connections as the City of London? Why not start in a place with no existing broadband - somewhere French perhaps. Who on earth do they think needs the extra connectivity around here? Are there City workers who take their laptops into McDonalds and run analyses of public companies with a Big Mac in one hand? These are not film students with nowhere else to keep warm, or a desperate yearning for the company of Starbucks staff to save them from lonely oblivion. If they honestly can't do without email in the taxi home, their Blackberrys will function all the way to Notting Hill - unlike The Cloud's offering. Skype, you say? Don't make me laugh. Have you ever met a banker who worried about the cost of his calls? No one's going to lug their laptop over to the Royal Exchange just to save their bank a few quid when phoning home.

I wish The Cloud every success, speaking as a kind-hearted capitalist, but I don't expect they'll find their silver lining in the City.

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