From: John Navas on
To stimulate sales, coffeehouses are pulling the plug on the Net.

Housed in an old San Francisco warehouse, Four Barrel Coffee � with its
vintage record player, 53-year-old coffee roasting machine, tables hewn
from recycled wood and wall of mounted boar heads � calls one of the
world's most wired cities home.

But don't expect to get an Internet connection there.

Coffee connoisseurs hooked on this roaster's beans won't find a working
signal � or even a power outlet. The uninitiated often try to plug into
a fake one that owner Jeremy Tooker spray painted on the wall as a gag.

"There are lots of marks on the drywall," Tooker said, laughing.

About 30 miles south in Palo Alto, the heart of Silicon Valley's
technology industry, the Coupa Cafe offers some of the fastest Internet
service in town. But even this popular hangout for entrepreneurs and
venture capitalists bans Wi-Fi on weekends to make room for customers
sans laptops.

"We had big parties or family groups who wanted to eat but had no room,"
said Jean Paul Coupal, who runs the cafe with his mother, Nancy. "They
were getting upset about it. They felt the whole place was being taken
over by techies."

Coffee shops were the retail pioneers of Wi-Fi, flipping the switch to
lure customers. But now some owners are pulling the plug. They're
finding that Wi-Fi freeloaders who camp out all day nursing a single cup
of coffee are a drain on the bottom line. Others want to preserve a
friendly vibe and keep their establishments from turning into
"Matrix"-like zombie shacks where people type and don't talk.

That shift could gather steam now that free Wi-Fi is less of a perk
after coffee giant Starbucks stopped charging for it last month.

MORE:
<http://articles.latimes.com/2010/aug/08/business/la-fi-cafe-wifi-20100808>