Free Wi-Fi Coming To Atlanta's Airport 135
stephendavion (2872091) writes 'Passengers can now access free Wi-Fi at the world's busiest airport. Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport has dropped its $5 fee to access Wi-Fi in its terminals. "Now, Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and airport officials plan to celebrate the long-awaited arrival of the amenity at the airport Wednesday," reports Kelly Yamanouchi of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. ... Interm airport manager Miguel Southwell tells Yamanouchi officials believe dropping the Wi-Fi charge will alleviate a "competitive disadvantage" for Hartsfield-Jackson.' I'm puzzled sometimes that so many airports do not yet offer free Wi-Fi, especially ones loaded with businesses (like Starbucks and McDonalds) that have made this a big draw in their non-airport locations. On the other hand, given a captive audience and the temptation for exclusive contracts, maybe I should be grateful that so many do have at least limited free coverage, and that the trend seems positive.
Better use a VPN (Score:4, Informative)
You are being tracked.
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I love my VPN service ("Private Internet Access" is the name). ~40 bucks a year and the service is good.
No, I'm not an advertisement bot, just a happy customer!
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ISPs hate her! See how local mom tripled her internet speed with this one weird trick!
Has science gone too far?
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You are being tracked.
In an airport, a place with substantive overt security, likely many cameras, and where the government sees passenger manifests before takeoff? Oh noes!
Never use the wifi at an airport (Score:1)
And if you do, make sure you're spoofing everything you can and running your best encryption.
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Why do you say that? There's nowhere to hide your screen there, so you're going to be watched by analog hole tech.
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the NSA
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Not to mention the fact that the Government is free to jail or kill you whenever it wants based on what you think and say.
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The government is managed by Wall Street. Private companies give them a list of who to jail or kill. Stop trying to separate the two. Government simply provides security/collection services.
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point well taken
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Why do you say that? There's nowhere to hide your screen there, so you're going to be watched by analog hole tech.
That's funny, cuz i set up a hotspot 'free_airport_wifi' and just vacuum up everything that goes through. Good thing people don't bother with VPN due to the analog hole!
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I really wish somebody would develop the work/home cell phone where it indicates if they're calling you at your work number or sending to your work e-mail address at the company's expense, or home info to reach you at your home numbers. Yeah, work can interrupt you at home... but you should be able to move that call to the other rate plan within one cell phone minute.
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Because your work number and contact list goes to your employer when you leave, while the home stuff should be yours.
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It creates workplace-must-suck error "Your home cell phone is better than your work cell phone!"
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There's nowhere to hide your screen there, so you're going to be watched by analog hole tech.
Meet the "laptop sock".
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ffcH... [blogspot.com]
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I thought the analog hole techs were all stationed at the security gates?!?
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Used to be billed to the boss... (Score:3, Insightful)
Those who keep good records used to get the $5 back from their boss, just charging it to the card they charge the rest of the trip expenses to. Who did this suck for? The kids who were traveling on vacation... yep, WiFi is the entertainment system that keeps you from getting bored at the airport.
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Still billed back to the boss - generally falls under reasonable expenses.
As for kids - well, they don't NEED WiFi to be entertained. Sure it's easy to stick 'em in front of Netflix or something, but half the time t
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WiFi is the entertainment system that keeps you from getting bored at the airport.
Back in my day, if you wanted internet on your laptop, you needed an actual cable long enough to go from your phone jack to your dial-up modem...and somehow, my parents survived!
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Atlanta's airport used to have lots of vending machines, and lots of Atari-era (which was right for the time) video game machines. Yep, to a kid it was the good parts of the mall. Then, add the newsstand for the out of town adults, and some TVs tuned to CNN.
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horrible of them trying to make money back on what they spent to build the airport
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Isn't that what those "airport improvement fees" are for?
Many many airports already essentially tack on a surcharge for that.
And I'm sure the airlines pay them. And the parking fees.
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Then they try to make money back on what they didn't spend, they try to make money back on the subsidies they got to pay for them to do things, and then they try to make money back on you breathing air that they didn't pollute.
Yeah, it's like going to a used car salesman. They'd charge you for using the sun's light to look at the cars if they could.
Puzzled? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm puzzled sometimes that so many airports do not yet offer free Wi-Fi, especially ones loaded with businesses (like Starbucks and McDonalds) that have made this a big draw in their non-airport locations.
The airport is already a big draw. Nobody is choosing an alternate mode of transportation of driving far out of their way so they can fly out of another airport just because the airport doesn't have free Wi-Fi. If you can afford to do that, you can afford a cellular hotspot.
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This isn't an issue about going to an airport, for that they are a captive audience, it's about going to a specific airport. Often times you have a choice which airport you connect through. I'm not going to connect through the one with crappy chairs, crappy food, and no free wifi if there is an alternative with better amenities. While it's not true on every flight you have those choices, however it is true on a lot of flights.
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With the mergers going on, expect options to drop. After the mergers they drop redundant connections.
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Also, I've used free airport WiFi, it universally sucks. Absolutely not enough bandwidth.
I would gladly pay $5 if that's enough to deter 50% of the users, especially if I had business to do.
I feel the same way about in flight access, the $5.00 on Southwest is practically unusable, but $10.00 on US air seems to be enough to drop usage to the point that it's worth it.
Re:Puzzled? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is about "Well, I can layover in Atlanta, or I can layover in Detroit. Atlanta is a pain in the ass to check my email, so let's go through Detroit".
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This is about "Well, I can layover in Atlanta, or I can layover in Detroit. Atlanta is a pain in the ass to check my email, so let's go through Detroit".
This is why I prefer to go via Singapore than any Australian airport. Not only do you get free WiFi but also a much nicer terminal that has more facilities and is easy to find your way around.
McDonald's loves people who travel.... (Score:1)
There's something odd about a hand-made Big Mac coming out just like the one you get at the hometown location no matter where you are. There's a lot of people making them right now... must be lunchtime.
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McDonald's is consistent. Consistently bad.
Don't know how they stay in business, same as _all_ the yum food brands.
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Excuse me, you're confused... McDonald's is not part of "Yum Brands".
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Didn't say they were; just that I didn't understand how they or the yum brands stay in business.
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1. Food is cheaper than you think some times... if you fund the production seasons, you know where to put it in your pipelines.
2. Too many people love this stuff, so it sells predictably within tolerances of randomness.
3. It doesn't take much more than your home cooking to make these things, just a few specialized machines that work better when serving 40 than 4.. get that?
4. Nobody doesn't like when it's overcrowded there, but if it happens enough new ones spring up!
Because Airport Wi-Fi sucks (Score:5, Insightful)
First, in order for airport wi-fi to not-suck, you'll need a massive subnet with a TTL of no more than 30 minutes. Yes, I've been in airports where a /24 subnet was apparently just dandy...
Second, everyone who's in an airport seems to want to stream Netflix or something like that; I do hope that Netflix throws a peering widget their way, because the thousands of iPads in that airport will strain the pipe pretty efficiently.
Third, you're on a single collision domain, half-duplex, along with everyone else. 5GHz may help matters, but 2.4 will still be needed for compatibility, and if you're stuck on it, you'll probably get useful speed out of a dial-up optimized RDP session an an SSH window, but the only way regular web browsing is ever worth it is if you have some absurdly early flight (5AM takeoff or similar), at which point 'using my computer' plays second fiddle to the better activity: sleep.
Sorry, I've just never seen it worth it. I always load up my hard drive before I go, and I've never regretted it.
The airport: the worst place to be in the cloud.
Re:Because Airport Wi-Fi sucks (Score:5, Interesting)
... but the only way regular web browsing is ever worth it is if you have some absurdly early flight (5AM takeoff or similar)...
I'm not an expert, I have no idea HTF they do it, but Denver manages to have decent performance even when terminal is jammed full with people sitting on the floor because there's no seats left. I'm sure it costs plenty of money to achieve that, but it certainly proves that it can be done.
Re:Because Airport Wi-Fi sucks (Score:5, Informative)
They use segmented AP's designed for heavy use. My company installs Cisco Meraki in arenas that will have 10,000-40,000 people in them and they can handle the load if you set it all up right.
I am betting Atlanta has Cisco Meraki Installed.
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Wifi only has about 10 channels right? So at least a couple thousand devices per channel at one time. A stadium (including seating) is only about 600 feet long
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First, in order for airport wi-fi to not-suck, you'll need a massive subnet with a TTL of no more than 30 minutes. Yes, I've been in airports where a /24 subnet was apparently just dandy...
Second, everyone who's in an airport seems to want to stream Netflix or something like that; I do hope that Netflix throws a peering widget their way, because the thousands of iPads in that airport will strain the pipe pretty efficiently.
Third, you're on a single collision domain, half-duplex, along with everyone else. 5GHz may help matters, but 2.4 will still be needed for compatibility, and if you're stuck on it, you'll probably get useful speed out of a dial-up optimized RDP session an an SSH window, but the only way regular web browsing is ever worth it is if you have some absurdly early flight (5AM takeoff or similar), at which point 'using my computer' plays second fiddle to the better activity: sleep.
Sorry, I've just never seen it worth it. I always load up my hard drive before I go, and I've never regretted it.
The airport: the worst place to be in the cloud.
It's an oversimplification to say that it's a single collision domain. Any decent enterprise wireless network uses overlapping access points that will automatically select and change channels based on automated detection of congestion and interference. Yes, there is always some level of frequency overlap, but that is easily addressed.
As far as address spacing goes, there's a number of scenarios in which a /24 can be just fine. Perhaps they are backhauling everything to a concentrator that performs NAT on a
Hey, what? $5? (Score:2, Interesting)
I can't remember the last time I was in an airport that didn't have free WiFi. But then I don't travel in the USA much.
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I can't remember the last time I was in an airport that didn't have free WiFi. But then I don't travel in the USA much.
This is my experience as well. I've travelled a lot internationally, and have had free WiFi everywhere. The last time I went through the US, I went through Dulles airport, and I think there was free WiFi there.
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Indeed. Welcome to the 21st century, Atlanta.
I hate free wifi at airports (Score:1)
As a business traveller, I would rather pay, or have some sort of exclusive service.
Once it's "free", every man and his dog connects and stays connected for hours, and the service is inevitably completely unusable.
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As a business traveller, I would rather pay, or have some sort of exclusive service.
Once it's "free", every man and his dog connects and stays connected for hours, and the service is inevitably completely unusable.
Me too, as long as its reasonable. Charging $7 for me to access the internet for the 20 minutes I'm waiting on the plane is too much, even if its a covered expense. If they charged $1 - $2 for a good connection, I would not hesitate. I always wondered if they'd make more money that way.
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Sure they do this NOW... (Score:3)
Not last week when I was sitting there for 4 hours... I am betting my work phone Verizon LTE was faster than their wifi though... Gotta love tethering and making the company pay for it.
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Yes, your Verizon LTE was faster. I've gotten 80 down / 30 up on Verizon from that airport. So whatever wifi they have won't compete. Tethering is free on my plan.
let me explain the puzzle (Score:5, Interesting)
It used to be that most airports paid for certain maintenance operations, in particular the cleaning crews, with the revenue from pay phones. That source seriously dried up about the same time that wifi demand rose, and managers saw charging for wifi as an obvious replacement for pay-phone revenue. Now, long term, as people come to regard wifi as a necessary utility like water or bathrooms, that idea is not sustainable. Also, the FCC helps the push toward free wifi by blocking airports managers' attempts to ban airlines and in-terminal concessionnaires from operating their wifi. (Boston fought the FCC over this for a long time.)
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Is this why airports keep hiking ticket prices, even well past what they'd need to pay for increased fuel costs and still make a profit? Or have they found some other way to subsidize maintenance?
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It doesn't help that paid wi-fi has a tendency to just cause people to switch to tethering now - which potentially causes performance problems for the paid users.
How about improving navigation first? (Score:2)
Given the layout of ATL, going from one concourse to another (especially if you go between a civilized airline and Delta) requires a trip to one people-mover that unnecesarily increases the distance. Perhaps they could take a lesson from somewhere like DFW and fix that.
If I want online access, my phone does it quite well.
KCI has been doing this for years... (Score:2)
As far as I remember KCI has always had free Internet wifi. Combined with the fact that we have Google Fiber, it feels like the rest of America is some third world country.
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As far as I remember KCI has always had free Internet wifi. Combined with the fact that we have Google Fiber, it feels like the rest of America is some third world country.
I think you mean MCI. KCI is the airport in Kon, Indonesia.
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I think you mean MCI. KCI is the airport in Kon, Indonesia.
Nope. I meant to say KCI. Here in Kansas City, we call "Kansas City International" KCI airport. Nobody in Kansas City calls it MCI. Yes, I'm well aware that the official formal designation is MCI as I have flown out of KCI many times.
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You should embrace the actual code designation. Calling it KCI is just misleading for those who rarely travel through that airport. The fact that there is a KCI is worse than just making a different name entirely.
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I take it you were one of those kids who would say, "Tomatoes are really fruits," right? :) When I communicate, I try to communicate to be understood, not to be "right". In Kansas City, we call Kansas City International KCI. Nobody is confused, especially in context of talking about Kansas City. Nobody would wonder how I was going to get to Indonesia if I said, "Hey I'm driving down to KCI to fly out to New York." Sometimes it's just better to be a little less pedantic. ;)
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I think you mean MCI. KCI is the airport in Kon, Indonesia.
Nope. I meant to say KCI. Here in Kansas City, we call "Kansas City International" KCI airport. Nobody in Kansas City calls it MCI. Yes, I'm well aware that the official formal designation is MCI as I have flown out of KCI many times.
And this is why no-one visits Kansas.
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Aw... you're just jealous because we have Google Fiber! :D
Exclusivity Contracts (Score:1)
Those exclusivity contracts also apply to business in the airport. Austin apparently signed an exclusivity contract with AT&T for Austin Bergstrom International Airport citing cost and security as the reasons. Business with existing services through other providers such as Time Warner may continue their service but the only provider change allowed is switching to AT&T. Interestingly, business can still order TV from Time Warner but Time Warner is forbidden from adding any data service.
Free? (Score:2)
How is this wi-fi free if I'm paying for it as part of my ticket price?
Oh, you meany you won't be charged an additional fee to use it. Got it.
Still not free, only a bit cheaper to use.
Good (Score:2)
Remember pay toilets? (Score:3)
Anyone who scratches their heads at the lack of free wifi in airports is obviously too young to remember pay toilets. Talk about a captive audience. But airports eventually moved away from those. Hopefully pay-wifi will disappear too.
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I think pay toilets are bad and am thankful of groups which did away with them. However, even though I avoid using WIFI at the airport because I'm cheap and/or have a hotspot, I don't see a competitive reason not to charge for the wifi at the airport. People are not there that long, it's not like we need a bunch of hipsters hanging out at an airport to use the free wifi. I'm not annoyed by hipsters at the neighborhood starbucks, but bringing more people to the busiest airport in the world who might not b
Especially since they have so much to gain... (Score:2)
SJC (Score:3)
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>Very tempting to get a Ubiquiti Bullet and high gain yagi aimed at SJC airport.
I'm doing that at home. I have a flat roof on my house and I can see the bar from my roof and there's a handy pole supporting the TV antenna. A direct wifi link to the bar, connecting for my fiber internet will let me work from the bar all day.
ATL is my favorite airport (Score:2)
They just opened a Buffalo Wild Wings last September in Terminal/Concourse D. New Belgium Brewery's Fat Tire available (though it was bottle-only last time I was there). There's nothing like a dozen Blazin' (boneless, extra-wet) wings before a long flight to keep things interesting. 45 beers on tap is quite a bit nicer than a "Chilis To Go" or a shitty TGIFridays.
Smoking lounges. Seven smoking lounge
I presume you fly Delta? (Score:1)
Excellent/efficient airport layout/design
Try having to go from one concourse to another, then you'll find out that it's not so good.
As I've said upthread, ATL could learn from DFW on how to do a large airport while minimizing travel between gates.
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I've only transfered at DFW, so I don't feel qualified to say much about it. However, consider that ATL handles a
The single tunnel is the problem. (Score:1)
As opposed to a hub-like arrangement (DFW), ATL has a series of long concourses linked by that tunnel. If you manage to have one flight on one concourse, and it's clear on the end of the other one, you'll see the problem as clear as day.
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DFW looks terrible. Separate buildings and across the street from each other. Plus the terminals are curved. So you have to walk a long way around and then over a bridge.
They have a bidirectional train line that links them all. For all the concourses they have, it makes things quite well.
ATL is all perfectly straight. You can go between opposite ends of the airport in like 10 minutes. Going from B to C is like 30 seconds by train, or like 2 minutes by walking fast on the moving sidewalks.
That helps if you're flying Delta, but doesn't help if you're not.
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Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport is my favorite airport, and this news just made it even better.
You need to travel to Singapore.
Singapore Changi is consistently rated as the best airport in the world for very good reasons and something that is pretty odd, it's fairly cheap for an airport. Changi has had free wifi for some time now. The biggest problem with Changi is the taxi times, due to the way the airport was built, the gates are often not near the runway.
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If you ask me, they should have a two door system for all self-righteous asshole lounges. That way people like y
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And it's people like you who are actually forcing these laws.
You're trying to turn it into a "us vs them" issue and when you think this is a good idea you will find there are always more of "them" than "us", you alienate people who sit on the fence and this forces them to the join the "them" crowd.
This is how outdoor smoking bans came about in Australia, non-smokers (who are in the majority) wanted smokers to move
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non-smokers (who are in the majority) wanted smokers to move away from doors and windows when smoking, it was a simple request and smokers could have complied out of courtesy... but did they?
You're missing the context. Yes, there was originally
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I've only stopped in CLT once, though it was somewhat recently, and I don't think I tried to look for WiF
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Agreed, LHR makes no sense to me. I never know where I am or how to get where I'm going. The only place that comes close is Japan's NRT, but that's only a maze in the 4th floor shopping area.
LHR (except T5, and possibly the new T2 but that only opened this week) is like one of these intelligence testing devices for mice, but for people. You just have to follow the signs and hope. I find that FRA and ZRH are pretty bad that way too, at least for transit passengers, and BRU was managing to hide where the gates were at all earlier this year. (Past the bar and hidden behind some large advertising stands promoting an anonymous sports-car that were also covering up the signs saying where the gates we
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At least a dozen franchise chains are headquartered in Atlanta so they all have operations at the airport as well, as turf markers if not showplaces. And Atlanta likes to eat. A lot.
You will never starve at ATL unless you are broke.
Other airports are fine with a Sbarro and Starbucks, and an on-your-way. oh boy. Yum yum.
SJC and PHX do a pretty good job (Score:3)
SJC and the much bigger PHX are the airports I frequent and both do a pretty good job. $5 may not be much to a business traveler, but in a few years we'll look back at it the same way we'd think of a $5 charge to turn the lights on.
Live in ATL... (Score:2)
Just root your android and tether for free (Score:2)
Wifi hotspots are not really needed anymore. Most everyone has (nearly) unlimited cell data.
Toronto's Pearson (Score:2)
Meanwhile in the north, we have had Wifi for many years at Toronto's Pearson airport ...
Free WiFi is a basic human right! :-) (Score:1)
(As quoted from a German friend.) And in my small sampling, their airports seem to uphold that motto. And they don't bother you with pathetic forms requiring you to enter your home address (are you listening Heathrow!?!)
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You mean you have to PAY for public WiFi access in your country??
Yeah, just so we can get some money from visiting arrogant foreigners who think everything should be a free entitlement.
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Atlanta airport has the competitive disadvantage of being in Atlanta.
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