Princeton Area Wi-Fi Cafes

Om Malik has started a new blog called Web Worker Daily. One of his postings is a short list of Wi-Fi enabled cafes on the west coast of the USA. I decided to start a similar list for the Princeton, NJ area where I live.

Local cafes can provide a strong dose of caffeine, free WiFi, and power to help you write, code, or troubleshoot. The best cafes have comfortable tables, quality coffee and espresso, and talented baristas. - Om Malik

I am listing the free one's only.

  • Princeton University, Firestone Library

    • One Washington Road Princeton NJ 08544

  • Panera Bread Princeton

    • 136 Nassau Street Princeton NJ 08542

  • Whole Foods Market

    • US Route 1 South Princeton NJ 08540

  • Panera Bread West Windsor

    • 510 Nassau Park Boulevard Princeton NJ 08540

  • Orpha's Coffee Shop

    • 1330 Us Highway 206, Skillman, NJ 08558

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Office 2.0 - Desktop

My employer has decided to initiate a work from home program starting in October of this year. I am very excited as this is something I have wanted for years. Back in 1998 when I started working as a consultant developing web sites I had thought for sure I would be working from home most of the time. The reality was that none of my clients liked the idea. They were still under the impression that people were more productive when they were being watched. So finally I will get my opportunity.

My employer is in the process of revitalising its core business (pharmaceuticals) and has hired so many scientists that IT folks were asked to leave the campus to make space. Of course, our budget was also cut and like all of IT these days we are asked to do more with less. Back in 2004, our CIO made the decision to outsource the corporate network and some SAP application development as a cost-saving measure. It's now been two years and the business (which is finally making a turnaround) is asking again, "What have you done for me lately?". Our CIO is under pressure to reduce cost and consolidate into a building that can not hold all her staff. Reducing staff would hurt morale so she has opted for a compromise.

I am not sure what the arrangements would be in October. Unsubstantiated rumours abound but I expect that we will have three days from home, two in the office schedule. Come in on Monday, talk with your manager about the week's priorities and hold in-person meetings; come in on Friday to recap.

I also expect that we will all be issued company laptops. My employer is becoming more and more Windows-centric each day. The only computer in the house that is mine exclusively is a mac mini. Of course, none of the corporate desktop apps (Oracle calendar, Internet Explorer, McAfee Anti-virus, Office 2003, etc.) exists on my mac mini. If the company is willing to purchase those things...But I expect it would be cheaper to issue a corporate laptop. I have the Cisco VPN client for OS X and so far it has worked well.

So until October, I am spending my time searching the web for cool home office setups like the one in the photos.

Small Business Idea

I have been for over 3 years) of acting on some of my small business ideas. There are a growing number of people with home offices in my neighbourhood. I do not know the exact number, but in the Montgomery, Montgomery Wood, and Montgomery Walk developments, we have close to 500 homes. Most of these homes have wireless.

Within a block of units (8 homes) there, at least half have wireless, and most likely all have a home computer with DSL or cable broadband. I based this assumption on my own block. I pick up at least 6 wireless signals from my family room. Most wireless signals have no security; almost all use the default router settings. There are many people like Mukesh and Nilima.

There is money to be made offering an in-home setup service for small offices/home offices. I can use my neighbourhood as a launching point for the business. I can place a small ad in the association newsletter or a posting on the website. Word of mouth will initially provide enough marketing to get from one gig to another. Hopefully, some home clients would refer me to small business clients. But first, baby steps.

I have thought up a short list of services I could provide.

  • Home networking
  • Wireless networking
  • Security
    • Patching
    • Anti-spyware
    • Anti-virus
    • Adware removal
  • PC tuneup (defrag, temp file removal)
  • Software installation and configuration
  • Hardware installation and configuration
  • Blogging and website hosting

I have yet to think much about how much to charge. Should it be an hourly or fixed price for a defined service (a la carte)? Should I have the clients sign off when work is complete? Should I incorporate or do a sole proprietorship until the business gets larger? Can I manage the workload? How do I limit this to weekends only at first?