Payphones have been famously
disappearing from public life; cell phones and other means of communication have made them ever less important in many contexts (and for most people).
Some places, it's hard to find not only payphones, but
usable wireless signal as well. Still, there are a lot of payphones left in the wild (though the
enclosed kind seem to be disappearing faster than on-premises ones), and now there's a plan in New York City to extend payphones' useful life by
outfitting them as public Wi-Fi hotspots,
beginning with a 10-phone trial already underway. It's not the first such project; we mentioned a
similar multi-city wi-phone deployment in Canada 10 years ago. And in Austin, I've spotted at least one payphone fitted out as a solar-powered charging station for cellphones; probably not enough to get much charge, but at least it lets users place an emergency call with a flagging or dead battery. Covering Manhattan and the other boroughs with overlapping free Wi-Fi nodes, though, is a different beast entirely.