Wifi hotspot is a term used when a cellular phone has the feature built into the phone. Hotspots allow a person the ability to access the internet through their phone using the hotspot feature for the connection. One may turn the hotspot on via the cellphone and then go to the computer and access the wifi by signing in under the hotspot which was just set up by the cellular phone.
If you google the keywords " "WiFi hot spots" "name of the country" it would give you a list of places and sites for that particular country
Hot spots has more that one meaning. It is commonly used today to mean places where WiFi is available in public areas, called WiFi hotspots. A volcanic hotspot is an area in the mantle where heat rises from deep in the Earth.
You can find a map of the wifi Pittsburgh hot spots here http://www.wifipittsburgh.com/images/map.jpg and the website is here http://www.wifipittsburgh.com/
There are hotspots in Future Shops, and look for hotspots in http://www.jiwire.com/search-hotspot-locations.htm
A hot spot is an area that has the highest level of connection. Most businesses or schools have areas known as hot spots where their free WiFi signal is the strongest.
A hot spot is an area that has the highest level of connection. Most businesses or schools have areas known as hot spots where their free WiFi signal is the strongest.
if you set up your connection at your house it free, but on wifi hot spots you might have to pay
No where will have ALL that stuff. You're asking for WAY TOO MUCH.
Wi-Fi 'hot-spots' and the mobile-phone network are entirely separate systems. It may be that you are out of range of the nearest hot-spot transmitter.
no but yes hot means hot but springs and spots are differ so the answer is no!
No. Hot spots are not associated with plate boundaries.
They aren't necessarily. Several well-known hot spots are in tropical areas, but a number are not. We have the Hawaiian and Galapagos hot spots, but we also have hot spots under Yellowstone, Iceland, and Antarctica.