McDonald's
has announced that it will offer free Wi-Fi in its 1,200 UK outlets by the end
of the year.
The fast food giant reckons that the roll-out will make it the country's
largest public hotspot provider, overtaking
Starbucks'
pay-as-you-go
T-Mobile
service which recently announced a deal with
Apple to
provide
free
access to iTunes.
McDonald's boasts more than 15,000 Wi-Fi enabled restaurants around the
globe, around 8,000 of which are in the US. Not all the services are free,
however.
"We hope that this will give greater choice for Wi-Fi hotspot users who have
had little choice but to pay by the month or hour to access the internet on the
move," said Steve Easterbrook, president and chief executive at McDonald's.
The company also said that there will be no restrictions to customers using
the service, regardless of the purchase made.
McDonald's already offers Wi-Fi in some UK restaurants through
BT
Openzone. It will be retaining its partnership with
BT, but has also
signed up
The
Cloud as a hotspot access provider.
BT and FON
have also recently teamed up to launch the
world's largest
Wi-Fi community, offering free Wi-Fi hotspots to Total Broadband customers
who sign up for the service and are prepared to share a portion of their own
bandwidth.
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