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Organizations could use Linkr in different ways depending on their goals. These are illustrative patterns for the intended model.
This is roadmap. These use cases describe how organizations could use Linkr once organizational deployment is available. None are live deployments today. See Product status.

Universities and campuses

Campuses often have extensive Wi-Fi that is underused outside academic hours. They could share campus connectivity publicly or for students, and extend coverage to adjacent areas like sidewalks and parking lots.

Municipalities and public spaces

Cities could make public connectivity discoverable — in parks, libraries, and community centers — and coordinate coverage across departments, so residents can find connectivity without hunting for passwords.

Venues and events

Concert halls, convention centers, and stadiums could share event-specific connectivity that appears during events and is removed afterward, giving attendees a way to find access before they arrive.

Retail and hospitality

Cafes, hotels, and shops could make their existing customer Wi-Fi discoverable beyond their immediate foot traffic, attracting nearby people searching for connectivity.

Corporate campuses

Employers with distributed offices could coordinate guest connectivity across locations, so employees traveling between offices and visitors can find access easily.

Transit and transportation

Airports, train stations, and bus terminals could offer discoverable connectivity throughout terminals and waiting areas, which travelers could check before arriving.

Underserved areas

Organizations working in underserved areas could share hotspots at community facilities, building local knowledge of where connectivity exists. Even a single hotspot in such an area is valuable.
Your organization’s model may differ from these. The intended system is flexible: if you have connectivity and a reason to share it, Linkr aims to accommodate it. Reach out at support@linkrmap.com.