> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.linkrmap.com/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# The Linkr map

> Understanding the connectivity map.

The Linkr map is the primary interface for discovering connectivity. It shows hotspots
as markers you can browse, filter, and tap for details.

<Note>
  The public map is a curated **New York City preview** of 78 hotspots. It is a static
  dataset, open to everyone at [linkrmap.com/demo](https://linkrmap.com/demo) with no
  account. See [Product status](/docs/introduction/status).
</Note>

## What the map represents

The map is not a coverage estimate or a prediction of where connectivity might exist. It
is a set of specific hotspots.

Every marker represents:

* A specific physical location
* A hotspot record with a network type, signal, security, speed, and note

In the public preview these are sample records; in the beta app they are hotspots
contributed by beta users.

If a location has no markers, it means no hotspot has been contributed there — not that
connectivity does not exist.

## Map structure

Each marker includes:

* **Position**: the geographic location of the hotspot
* **Network type**: Wi-Fi, mobile data, or router
* **Signal and security**: strength and protection
* **Speed and note**: advertised speed and contributor note

You can interact with the map by panning, zooming, and tapping markers.

## Accessing the map

* **Public web preview**: [linkrmap.com/demo](https://linkrmap.com/demo), no account
* **Beta app**: the **Map** tab, with location and sharing features

## Geographic scope

The current dataset covers New York City — Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx.
Expanding to more places is on the roadmap.

<Note>
  The map is only as complete as the hotspots it contains. Every hotspot contributed makes
  it more useful.
</Note>
