We stayed at a Holiday Inn Express after needing to make a short notice overnight stay at the other end of the country. My wife's 19 year old cousin had suddenly died and we attended his funeral.
Anyway the HIE advertise 'free high speed wifi', so although not expecting wonders I took along my MBP for the night time. I'm a night owl and hate sleeping away from home, so I knew I'd be glad of the distraction.
On getting to our room and opening a wifi analyser I was pleased to see there were half a dozen repeaters on channels 1, 6 and 11 and the signal was very strong. Excellent. They were all 2.4GHz but with building penetration being the goal I didn't think anything of it.
Then i connected. Oh dear. Wireless G with 20MHz channel widths, and a connection tx rate of 11Mbps. It then fell to 1Mbps and didn't pick up. Speed tests came back at 0.5Mbps down and 0.6Mbps up.
I would never use a shared/public wifi 'naked', so after testing I connected to my VPN which actually improved things slightly (0.x Mbps extra only though).
I noticed at the captive portal login that they offered an 'enhanced' service for £5. A bit miffed at being advertised free 'high speed' wifi and actually having to pay for proper access, I paid the £5. I logged out, then back in, selecting the now-available 'enhanced access' button instead of the 'free wifi' button.
Um... no difference. At all. I even tried the various other repeaters just to be safe, but no joy. Web pages timed out, nothing would load, YouTube was just a big fat 'nope' and... well I went to sleep. I did happen to notice also (more worryingly) that the wifi users weren't segregated from each other. Hell even pfSense lets me do this for free so it should be enabled on a corporate public wifi. Every PC on the network was open to me, and thus mine to them (yay strict pf firewall filtering on my machine).
I emailed the chain owner (HG) and got a reply back that completely ignored the wifi issue. I replied and pressed them, and got a 'Oh, sorry about that we don't know why that's the case. We can give you free points if you sign up for our rewards card and let us share your details with third parties globally' (seriously!).
Rather annoyed at their attitude tbh. It's not like they're cheap either compared to the alternatives. Anyway, I wondered if anyone could shed any light or had more insight?
Their wifi services are run by these guys and their rather meagre spamtastic looking website. I was particularly pleased to see that they advise companies to use their wifi service to 'Harvest Email and contact information for mailshots'.
Unfortunately mobile signal was a no-go (for 4G tethering) and the next day, despite a four hour drive home, I was never so glad to get back to my lovely 160/12 service lol.
Anyway the HIE advertise 'free high speed wifi', so although not expecting wonders I took along my MBP for the night time. I'm a night owl and hate sleeping away from home, so I knew I'd be glad of the distraction.
On getting to our room and opening a wifi analyser I was pleased to see there were half a dozen repeaters on channels 1, 6 and 11 and the signal was very strong. Excellent. They were all 2.4GHz but with building penetration being the goal I didn't think anything of it.
Then i connected. Oh dear. Wireless G with 20MHz channel widths, and a connection tx rate of 11Mbps. It then fell to 1Mbps and didn't pick up. Speed tests came back at 0.5Mbps down and 0.6Mbps up.


I noticed at the captive portal login that they offered an 'enhanced' service for £5. A bit miffed at being advertised free 'high speed' wifi and actually having to pay for proper access, I paid the £5. I logged out, then back in, selecting the now-available 'enhanced access' button instead of the 'free wifi' button.
Um... no difference. At all. I even tried the various other repeaters just to be safe, but no joy. Web pages timed out, nothing would load, YouTube was just a big fat 'nope' and... well I went to sleep. I did happen to notice also (more worryingly) that the wifi users weren't segregated from each other. Hell even pfSense lets me do this for free so it should be enabled on a corporate public wifi. Every PC on the network was open to me, and thus mine to them (yay strict pf firewall filtering on my machine).

I emailed the chain owner (HG) and got a reply back that completely ignored the wifi issue. I replied and pressed them, and got a 'Oh, sorry about that we don't know why that's the case. We can give you free points if you sign up for our rewards card and let us share your details with third parties globally' (seriously!).
Rather annoyed at their attitude tbh. It's not like they're cheap either compared to the alternatives. Anyway, I wondered if anyone could shed any light or had more insight?
Their wifi services are run by these guys and their rather meagre spamtastic looking website. I was particularly pleased to see that they advise companies to use their wifi service to 'Harvest Email and contact information for mailshots'.
Unfortunately mobile signal was a no-go (for 4G tethering) and the next day, despite a four hour drive home, I was never so glad to get back to my lovely 160/12 service lol.