YinzCam sells equity stake to NBA, gets deal to re-do 22 NBA team apps

Screen shot of new NBA app under development. Photo: NBA

Screen shot of new NBA app under development. Photo: NBA

Stadium and team app developer YinzCam announced a big deal with the NBA Monday, a partnership that calls for YinzCam to redesign 22 NBA team apps during the 2015-16 season, adding features like location-based awareness, in-seat food ordering and delivery and seat upgrades. According to the company and the league, the NBA will also get an equity stake in the privately held YinzCam, a Pittsburgh-based business that has more than 140 clients, including teams from the NFL, the NHL, the NCAA and the National Rugby League.

Though YinzCam previously listed 23 NBA teams as current clients, including all 22 it will redesign apps for, under the new deal it appears that the team apps will have access to much deeper NBA content, including direct access to watch or listen to live games. Here is one of two very interesting paragraphs from the press release:

The new apps will personalize the home screen experience based on the fan’s location. Core game information, such as stats, play-by-play and box score, will remain accessible, however, the most relevant features, based on a fan’s location and game status, will be delivered to the home screen. Features such as seat upgrades and in-seat delivery will be surfaced within the app for fans at the game, while fans outside of the venue will be exposed to more extensive game coverage, video and news.

Treading on VenueNext’s turf

The most significant part of the above paragraph is the mention of features like seat upgrades and in-seat concession delivery, services that have not been a standard part of the YinzCam stadium/venue app offering, which in the past focused mainly on delivering content, like stats, live video and instant replays. We have an interview scheduled soon with YinzCam CEO Priya Narasimhan to find out whether or not YinzCam is building the software behind these features itself, or whether it is drafting a third party to supply the code.

Screen shot of Super Bowl app developed by YinzCam.

Screen shot of Super Bowl app developed by YinzCam.

Either way, having such features puts YinzCam in more direct competition with VenueNext, the company that built the Levi’s Stadium app and is also now building an app for the NBA’s Orlando Magic. Though VenueNext’s offering also includes content, at its core its focus is on supporting fan services like food ordering and digital ticketing.

On the content side, the new NBA team apps will have “watch” and “listen” features that will let fans listen to or watch live games. According to the NBA, the watch/listen features will deep-link fans to either a regional sports network broadcast, or national games via the WatchESPN app or the Watch TNT app, or to the NBA’s League Pass broadcast via the NBA app. To watch the games fans would need a qualifying cable contract for the RSN games, and would need a League Pass subscription ($199.99) for those broadcasts.

The NBA and YinzCam also said that the new apps would include support for Twitter’s mobile development platform, Fabric, which will allow fans who are logged into Twitter on their devices to “tweet, retweet and favorite directly from the team app.” Direct integration of Twitter activity is an interesting twist, since in most cases fans at games spend far more time using apps like Twitter, Facebook and Instagram than team or venue apps.

According to the release YinzCam will redesign team apps for the Atlanta Hawks, Brooklyn Nets, Charlotte Hornets, Chicago Bulls, Cleveland Cavaliers, Denver Nuggets, Golden State Warriors, Houston Rockets, Indiana Pacers, Los Angeles Clippers, Los Angeles Lakers, Memphis Grizzlies, Milwaukee Bucks, Minnesota Timberwolves, New Orleans Pelicans, New York Knicks, Oklahoma City Thunder, Philadelphia 76ers, Phoenix Suns, Portland Trail Blazers, San Antonio Spurs, and Utah Jazz. Though the Washington Wizards are listed as a YinzCam client on YinzCam’s website, they are not included in the new-app redesign list.

Equity for content rights

Though the terms of the NBA’s equity investment in YinzCam aren’t described, our guess is that the deal is similar to the one YinzCam struck with the NFL, where YinzCam provided a slice of equity in exchange for content broadcast rights via its team and venue apps. YinzCam founder Narasimhan, who has historically eschewed venture capital in building her 30-person company, said exchanging equity for access to content was a smart deal especially for a firm that couldn’t afford to pay rights fees like the $1 billion Verizon paid the NFL for the right to show live content via its NFL Mobile app. YinzCam has a great relationship with the NFL, and was the provider of the Super Bowl stadium app at Feburary’s Super Bowl XLIX in Glendale, Ariz.

In an interview with Narasimhan earlier this summer, she spoke of the growing importance of fans using apps both inside and outside the arenas; in the press release with the NBA some of that thinking apparently surfaced, in a description about having automated location-based content surface in each app:

The new apps will personalize the home screen experience based on the fan’s location. Core game information, such as stats, play-by-play and box score, will remain accessible, however, the most relevant features, based on a fan’s location and game status, will be delivered to the home screen. Features such as seat upgrades and in-seat delivery will be surfaced within the app for fans at the game, while fans outside of the venue will be exposed to more extensive game coverage, video and news.

The NBA deal follows YinzCam’s deal last year to become the preferred supplier of mobile apps for Learfield Sports, a partnership that Narasimhan said has already resulted in 30 new clients.

One final YinzCam nugget for now:

— Where did the company name come from? Narasimhan says YinzCam is a mashup of the Pittsburgh term “You ones” (a linguistic equivalent of the Southern “y’all”), which when pronounced quickly in a Pittsburgh accent sounds like “Yinz” and “camera” for the personal video the app supplies.

Nokia deal part of new wholesale/white-label strategy for Artemis Networks

Artemis Networks founder Steve Perlman. Credit all photos: Artemis Networks

Artemis Networks founder Steve Perlman. Credit all photos: Artemis Networks

A deal by startup Artemis Networks to provide test deployments of its pCell wireless networking technology to select Tier 1 phone-network customers of telecom equipment giant Nokia Networks is both a “coming out party” as well as a significant shift in the Artemis business strategy, from a consumer and end-user focus to a wholesale, business-to-business plan.

Though no actual customers, users or live pCell networks have yet been announced, Artemis founder and CEO Steve Perlman said he can see the end to the “long and winding road” toward real-world deployments that officially started when Artemis went public with its ideas back in February of 2014. “We look at this [the Nokia announcement] as our coming-out party,” said Perlman in a phone interview with Mobile Sports Report. “You’ll be seeing [customer] announcements soon.”

In addition to the Nokia “memorandum of understanding,” which says that Nokia and Artemis will “jointly test Artemis pCell wireless technology in 2016 with wireless operators, initially in large indoor venues and other high density areas,” Artemis also announced a shift in its plans for its expected commercial network in its home town of San Francisco, which was originally supposed to launch this past summer. (For a detailed explanation of Artemis technology, scroll to the end of this post and its links.)

From consumer network to wholesale provider

Instead of operating its own network as originally planned and selling access to consumers, Perlman said Artemis will sell LTE capacity wholesale to any interested network provider as soon as the now-approved network is completed. Artemis, which obtained a lease of spectrum from satellite provider DISH, is now setting up antennas on 58 rooftops in San Francisco, Perlman said, after finally getting FCC approval for its plans a little later than expected.

pCell antenna from Artemis Networking

pCell antenna from Artemis Networking

And instead of having to outsource or build its own customer-facing signup, billing and other back-end systems, the 12-person Artemis will instead sell capacity on its San Francisco network to any interested provider. According to Perlman, there are customers ready to buy, even though none are yet named. Potential customers could include MVNOs (mobile virtual network operators) like TracPhone, who don’t own their own networks, or other larger providers looking for roaming capacity or cheap LTE in the crowded city by the Bay.

While it’s less cool than having its own branded devices and network, being a wholesale provider makes sense for the small-size Artemis, instead of trying to compete with wireless giants like Verizon Wireless and AT&T. “Wholesale [capacity] was a market we really didn’t know existed,” said Perlman. “And when they [potential customers] told us what they would pay, it was easy to see B2B as being the way for us.”

Big customers more comfortable with big suppliers

On the networking gear sales side, Perlman said that teaming up with a big equipment provider like Nokia was a necessity to get any traction in the world of LTE cellular networks. As we said before, though pCell’s projected promise of using cellular interference to produce targeted, powerful cellular connectivity could be a boon to builders of large public-venue networks like those found in sports stadiums, owners and operators of those venues are loath to build expensive networks on untested, unproven technology. And big metro wireless providers are even more so.

“We had a lot of Tier 1 operators tell us ‘we love this [pCell technology], we really need this, but we’re not buying from a 12-person startup,’ ” said Perlman. So even while Artemis’ radio technology — which promises huge leaps in performance compared to current gear — was attractive, the company’s lack of any kind of integration with the boring but necessary part of telecom infrastructure, including billing and authentication systems, held it back, Perlman said.

“We were told we could get things done more instantly if we partnered with a large infrastructure company,” Perlman said.

And while real customers from the Nokia deal will probably surface first in a stadium or other large public venue — since such a deployment would be easier to test and install than a new metro network — one team that won’t be using pCell technology any time soon is VenueNext, the app provider for the San Francisco 49ers’ Levi’s Stadium. Though VenueNext was publicly listed as a testing partner last spring, VenueNext has not commented on any results of any testing, and according to multiple sources there was no testing of Artemis equipment at Levi’s Stadium this summer. Though it develops the application and backend systems only, VenueNext does need to work closely with equipment providers, like Aruba Networks at Levi’s Stadium, to integrate its app functionality with the network.

Perlman, who also confirmed there was nothing brewing anymore with VenueNext (“but we’re still friends with VenueNext”), said the app developer also preferred to work with a larger-size developer than the short-bench Artemis. VenueNext, which recently announced the NBA’s Orlando Magic as its second stadium-app customer, has said publicly it would announce an additional 29 new customers before the end of the calendar year.

“We [Artemis] could probably go and do one stadium,” said Perlman about his company’s deployment abilities.

Wi-Fi thrown in for free

And while the main business for Artemis out of the gate will probably be in adding capacity to LTE networks that are running out of spectrum, Perlman said that having Wi-Fi support built into the pCell equipment could make the technology attractive to venues who need or want to bring Wi-Fi services to fans. The Wi-Fi version of pCell technology was also an after-the-fact idea that surfaced after the original pCell announcements.

“The pWave radio heads have [support for] all LTE bands and both Wi-Fi bands,” Perlman said. “So everything that Nokia does [with pCell deployments] can also do Wi-Fi. That’s pretty exciting.”

What’s yet unknown is how the ongoing acquisition of Alcatel-Lucent by Nokia may affect any potential pCell deployments. In the best possible scenario for Artemis, the acquisition could provide more entry points if the pCell technology gets integrated with Alcatel-Lucent telecom gear.

Levi’s Stadium sees another 2+TB of Wi-Fi during Ravens vs. Niners

Levi's Stadium during Sunday's game against the Baltimore Ravens. Photos: Levi's Stadium

Levi’s Stadium during Sunday’s game against the Baltimore Ravens. Photos: Levi’s Stadium

Another Sunday, another 2+ terabytes of data used on the Levi’s Stadium Wi-Fi network, as fans at the Ravens vs. the Niners game this past week used 2.18 TB of Wi-Fi data, according to figures from the San Francisco 49ers.

As the team and its stadium are gearing up to host Super Bowl 50 later this season, it appears that the Levi’s Stadium Wi-Fi network is continuing to perform in fine fashion, handling 16,840 unique Wi-Fi users during Sunday’s 25-20 victory by the Niners over the visiting Ravens. Statistics provided by Roger Hacker, senior manager of corporate communications for the Niners, also show a maximum concurrent Wi-Fi user number of 10,848 and a peak Wi-Fi bandwidth of 1.543 Gbps.

We still don’t have any numbers, however, on how well the Levi’s Stadium app is performing this season, specifically when it comes to fan use of innovative services like ordering food and drink to be delivered to the seat or even to someone else’s seat, features that are unique to Levi’s Stadium and its namesake app. VenueNext, the developer of the app for Levi’s Stadium, has not released any performance numbers for the specific services, including parking ticket purchases, food ordering and instant replay, so far this season.

If any Niners fans are out there and can comment about using the send-a-beer-to-someone-else service, we’re all beers. Or ears. The Levi’s Stadium network will get another workout Thursday when the Niners host the Seattle Seahawks, a game sure to bring lots of network use.

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Niners fans celebrate during Sunday's win over the Ravens

Niners fans celebrate during Sunday’s win over the Ravens

Report excerpt part 2: App updates part of Levi’s Stadium prep for Super Bowl 50

New outward-facing TV screen at Dignity Health gate. Photos: Paul Kapustka / MSR

New outward-facing TV screen at Dignity Health gate. Photos: Paul Kapustka / MSR

Other than the Wi-Fi network, the other “tech” thing that really set Levi’s Stadium apart in its debut season last fall was the stadium app and its revolutionary services, like instant replay and in-seat food and beverage ordering to every seat in the stadium.

While those two services garnered most of the headlines, the Niners are also high on other less-heralded services the app also enabled, such as digital ticketing and directional info, both en route to the facility as well as wayfinding once inside the building.

If there was one thing that never really took off, it was use of the app’s instant replay services, which were stunning in their ability to have plays available for viewing on mobile devices just seconds after they had concluded on the field. With never more than a few thousand replays watched per game, the service team officials thought would be a real “wow” turned out to be one largely ignored.

(Editor’s note: This story is the second part of an excerpt from our most recent Stadium Tech Report, the PRO FOOTBALL ISSUE, which is available for FREE DOWNLOAD right now from our site. In the report our editorial coverage includes a profile of the new Wi-Fi network at Green Bay’s Lambeau Field, a profile of Wi-Fi concealment techniques at AT&T Stadium, and team-by-team profiles of Wi-Fi and DAS deployments at all 31 NFL stadiums. Get your copy today!)

The stadium app everyone’s still talking about

From personal visits to Levi’s Stadium, we can attest that another stadium technology – the two huge, crystal-clear video boards above each end zone – may have been the app-replay killers, because of their ability to be seen from anywhere in the stadium, along with the decision to offer up replays there in the same fast fashion fans are used to from television broadcasts. (Perhaps team officials remembered the deficiencies of Candlestick Park too well, where fans used to leave their seats to watch TVs mounted in the concession stands for replay video.)

Levi's Stadium app screenshot. Photo: VenueNext

Levi’s Stadium app screenshot. Photo: VenueNext

And while the food ordering services – which included both the in-seat delivery options as well as an “express pickup” service, where food could be ordered and paid for online, then picked up at a nearby stand without waiting in the regular line – didn’t garner more than a couple thousand orders per game, app developer VenueNext and the Niners said the app ordering did account for nearly a million dollars in concession revenue, a number that should only grow as fans become more familiar with the feature and the Levi’s Stadium team gets better at delivering.

Niners COO Al Guido said that delivery times for the in-seat service started out around 20 minutes, which he said “wouldn’t cut it” in the real world of a fan.

“If I can walk to a stand and get the order myself faster than delivery, what’s the point?” Guido asked.

But by the last six games of the season, Guido said the app team had figured out how to “bundle” deliveries to specific section areas, cutting the average delivery time down to 7 minutes. Even with the $5 extra delivery charge, Guido thinks the in-seat option delivers value along with your beer and hot dog. Especially if the app team and food runners are in sync.

“I do think we nailed it at the end of the year,” Guido said.

Better ticketing support, and more stadium customers?

VenueNext, the app development company that was started by the Niners for the express purpose of building the Levi’s Stadium app, will soon be spreading its wings with plans to announce at least 30 new customers (including the Orlando Magic) for its app development, measurement and deployment services. It might not be widely known that VenueNext also developed the innovative “Kezar” devices that scan tickets (or phones showing ticket codes) outside the stadium gates.

According to VenueNext CEO John Paul, the Kezar devices will in the future support near-field wireless technologies that could allow fans to just walk in the stadium without “showing” anything, as the radio waves perform the authentication process on their own by communicating with devices in pockets or purses.

The magical "rainbow" at June 27 Grateful Dead concert at Levi's Stadium. Photo: Levi's Stadium

The magical “rainbow” at June 27 Grateful Dead concert at Levi’s Stadium. Photo: Levi’s Stadium

The team and VenueNext are also improving the ticket-access technology for this season, adding the ability to buy parking passes online and be directed to that spot via the app. The Levi’s Stadium app, which previously had the ability to direct fans around the stadium, will later this year add the ability for fans to find each other via technology supported by the 2,000+ Bluetooth beacons installed throughout the venue.

Along with maintaining and supporting the app at games, VenueNext’s staff as well as Niners executives played host to numerous other team and stadium reps during the season (in five visits to Levi’s Stadium last year we saw such folks in attendance at every game). The parade was so strong it got Guido to joke about becoming “a master tour guide” for the facility.

While unconfirmed rumors surfaced this summer saying that VenueNext’s app services were going to appear soon at other NFL facilities, the company and the Niners have said they are also targeting other sports and even other types of venues, like shopping malls and concert facilities.

“A lot of people wanted to learn more about it,” said Guido of the app infrastructure, which also includes detailed marketing reporting and analytics of network and app usage, things important to any team or large venue that is seeking to improve the marketing knowledge it has of the people who come inside their buildings.

“Data was the first buzzword, and now everyone is trying to figure out how to improve the fan experience,” Guido said. Like on the Wi-Fi front, Levi’s Stadium’s app and app infrastructure are already ahead of the curve.

Outside operations and looking past Super Bowl 50

Compared to the polished jewel that is Levi’s Stadium, the geography directly surrounding the building is still somewhat of an unpolished gem. Because of the complicated parking situation – the stadium sits in the middle of a heavily built-up commercial zone with many tech-company buildings nearby, limiting available space for parking – getting to and from Levi’s Stadium was perhaps the biggest headache for fans last year, and will probably still be a challenge up to and beyond the Super Bowl in February.

VTA train line at late 2014 season Niners game. Only took 15 minutes from here to get on bus. Photo: Paul Kapustka / MSR

VTA train line at late 2014 season Niners game. Only took 15 minutes from here to get on bus. Photo: Paul Kapustka / MSR

According to Guido, the Niners spent more than $5 million in capital expenditures this offseason just on parking and transportation items around the stadium, including additional exit spots in the parking lots, which last year often became hellish traffic jams after games. He also said the team is working closely with the city of Santa Clara to draft new traffic plans for game days, and continues to work with the Valley Transportation Authority, which runs the light rail trains that stop right outside the Levi’s Stadium gates, to improve fan flow to and from the trains.

The Niners and DAS provider DGP also improved cellular coverage in the parking lots this offseason, addressing what Guido said was a top fan concern. And though the team currently offers some fan entertainment areas outside the stadium for pregame times, he said the league’s planned Super Bowl setups in the areas adjacent to the stadium – which in the past at Super Bowls have included areas for bands, food and other entertainment – will be watched closely to see how such amenities might become regular offerings.

“We’re going to take a real hard look at what the Super Bowl will do there,” in the areas outside the stadium for the official tailgate operations, Guido said. “They will get a lot of sponsors to activate in that area, and we can learn from them.” Guido also said the team is looking at possibly expanding its relationship with the next-door Great America theme park, perhaps using facilities like the park’s amphitheater for football-related events.

On the easy-to-see scale of improvements are two new video boards that face outside the stadium from the Intel and Dignity Health concourses. Guido said the boards will be used for social media engagement (the Levi’s Stadium app is encouraging fans to post pictures that may show up on the big screen), as well as possibly for showing live video like the NFL Network’s RedZone channel during pregame tailgating time.

Without a doubt, there will be more enhancements and features added to the Levi’s Stadium package before the big game rolls into town. But for now, Guido and the 49ers are confident they have a winning venue that will only keep getting better.
“Overall, we’re really happy how it all shook out,” Guido said. “We’re looking forward to kicking off year two.”

Report excerpt: Levi’s Stadium gets ready for Super Bowl 50

Niners fans at the Levi's Stadium United Club during a 2014 game. Photos: Paul Kapustka / MSR

Niners fans at the Levi’s Stadium United Club during a 2014 game. Photos: Paul Kapustka / MSR

After a largely successful debut season, Levi’s Stadium and its owners the San Francisco 49ers don’t have much time to rest, as their venue’s hosting of Super Bowl 50 on Feb. 7, 2016, looms in the near future.

But before looking ahead to the big game, it’s a worthwhile time to take a look back at the first year of one of the most anticipated new sports venues, to assess what worked, what didn’t, and what the Niners are doing to make Levi’s Stadium even better in its second year on earth.

In an exclusive interview with Niners COO Al Guido, Mobile Sports Report found that overall the team is extremely pleased with both the stadium’s wireless networks and its ground-breaking stadium mobile app, which supported innovative services like in-seat delivery of food and beverage to every seat in the house, as well as electronic ticket access and instant replays of action on the field.

(Editor’s note: This story is an excerpt from our most recent Stadium Tech Report, the PRO FOOTBALL ISSUE, which is available for FREE DOWNLOAD right now from our site. In the report our editorial coverage includes a profile of the new Wi-Fi network at Green Bay’s Lambeau Field, a profile of Wi-Fi concealment techniques at AT&T Stadium, and team-by-team profiles of Wi-Fi and DAS deployments at all 31 NFL stadiums. Get your copy today!)

VenueNext CEO John Paul, left, and Niners COO Al Guido discuss Levi's Stadium at a ticketing conference this past spring.

VenueNext CEO John Paul, left, and Niners COO Al Guido discuss Levi’s Stadium at a ticketing conference this past spring.

Other than a complete overhaul of the stadium’s DAS network, Guido said the plans for the 2015 NFL season and Super Bowl 50 mainly are of the fine-tuning nature, with an emphasis on fan-experience improvements in areas like ticket management, and simply getting in and out of the facility. Here is a feature-by-feature look at Levi’s Stadium performance during its first year, and what immediate improvements and long-term outlooks have in store.

Wi-Fi and DAS: Great, and getting better

Prior to the official opening of Levi’s Stadium, executives from the Niners were blunt and brash in their public statements about how awesome they expected the stadium’s Wi-Fi network to be. But as anyone who’s launched a large public venue network knows, the proof only comes after you fill the house with users who test the system in ways nobody can ever really imagine.

“Lots of people were skeptical about some of the things we had planned, like food ordering to every seat,” Guido said. “We knew the app would perform fine, but a lot of [what was planned] was based on whether the network could pull off the bandwidth needed. The biggest question [before opening] was what the network would look like.”

End of game view from skydeck (2014 season)

End of game view from skydeck (2014 season)

Given the high expectations, it would be easy to fall flat, but the Levi’s Stadium Wi-Fi network – with Brocade equipment at its core, Aruba Networks gear for the Wi-Fi infrastructure and Com- cast Xfinity services for bandwidth – was solid from the get-go, recording 3.3 terabytes of data for its regular-season opener, a mark that surpassed the Wi-Fi total from the previous Super Bowl.

Though it wasn’t perfect – the network team originally hadn’t provided enough bandwidth for older devices that only supported Wi-Fi communications at the 2.4 GHz frequency – the Wi-Fi network started strong and remained that way throughout the year. Designed and deployed by former vice president of technology Dan Williams – and overseen by Chuck Lukaszewski, very high density architect in the CTO Office of Aruba Networks – the Wi-Fi network allowed the Levi’s Stadium app to shine, particularly in the high-bandwidth areas of Internet application access, in-stadium video replays, and the all-important food and beverage ordering.

Over the course of the football season and a bunch of other events that followed, including concerts, the WrestleMania 31 event and an outdoor hockey game, the Levi’s Stadium Wi-Fi network recorded around 415,000 unique users, who consumed more than 45 TB of data, according to the team.

“Dan and his team did a hell of a job” on the network, Guido said. “We felt very good about the performance of the network – we’re able to do things with data and video that no other teams could do.”

On the DAS side, deployment partner DAS Group Professionals said that the cellular network inside the stadium also performed as designed, hitting goals for near-perfect availability the first game out and not dipping below that mark during subsequent events. Because of higher than expected traffic increases for the upcoming Super Bowl, the carriers using the DAS asked for (and paid for) a complete overhaul of the DAS system, which is expected to be completed during the first part of the 2015 NFL season.

On-field APs and more APs for concourses

One twist to the Wi-Fi network added during the course of the first 12 months is the deployment of a temporary on-field Wi-Fi network for concerts and other events that have seating on the stadium floor, where the football turf is.

“We didn’t think about the field at first because there’s not a lot of tech allowed on the field by the NFL,” said Guido, referring to the league’s exclusive control of on-field wireless technology on game days. By placing APs under the temporary field flooring and adding others to temporary-seat railings, the network team was able to deliver connectivity to the premium seating there, a key hurdle that will allow Levi’s Stadium to continue to attract marquee events that demand such features.

The temporary-network lessons learned during concerts will also be applied during the Super Bowl, when the stadium will add a couple thousand temporary seats in the large open concourse areas in the stadium’s corners. Other small tweaks to the Wi-Fi network include more APs installed this offseason in and around the corner concourse concession stands, structures that were added to the design after the stadium opened; and more overhead APs in the standing-room-only areas of the lower concourses above each sideline, where lots of human bodies last year blocked signals coming from APs pointing up from the last row of seats.

According to Aruba’s Lukaszewski, the Wi-Fi network at Levi’s Stadium “did what it was supposed to do” last season, carrying high loads of wireless traffic. One stat the Levi’s team invented for its own network was “amount of time the network spent carrying more than 1 Gbps” – a total that Lukaszewski said reached 21 hours and 30 minutes across the 10 NFL events, and 31 hours 40 minutes across all 20 events.

Unlike other stadiums, which have needed massive Wi-Fi upgrades before hosting the Super Bowl, Levi’s Stadium appears to be ready for game day right now, at least when it comes to Wi-Fi.

(See part 2 of this excerpt tomorrow)

Niners-Packers registers 2.12 Terabytes on the Levi’s Stadium Wi-Fi scale

App-Store_In Seat_6Given that Niners fans didn’t have much to cheer about during Sunday’s 17-3 loss to the visiting Green Bay Packers, perhaps it’s understandable that they used “just” 2.12 terabytes of data on the Wi-Fi network at Levi’s Stadium that day.

According to stats sent to us by Roger Hacker, senior manager for corporate communications for the Niners, there were 17,876 unique users on the Wi-Fi network during Sunday’s game, with a peak maximum connection of 11,801 users. Though the stats (see more in chart below) were far off any Levi’s Stadium record, they seem pretty solid for an “average” NFL season game that isn’t a playoff event or an extra-special matchup.

One new thing that was available to users of the Levi’s Stadium app Sunday was the “send food to a friend” option, where fans can purchase and send food and beverage orders to someone else in the stadium, provided they know the seat and phone number of the intended gift recipient. Though we think this is one of the cooler things to emerge on the stadium-app front, the Niners and app developer VenueNext are somewhat quiet about this option so far, and are not providing any user numbers for the service from the first game it was available.

Of course, if any MSR readers out there used it or got food sent to them, let us know and let us know how it went! Seems like that feature could be really fun at Super Bowl 50 if it’s working well by February. (Stats below courtesy of San Francisco 49ers and Levi’s Stadium.)

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