Beginning next month, Chicago residents will be able to check out wireless Internet hotspots from three public library branches.
The Internet to Go pilot program will eventually be expanded to at least six locations in a push to shrink the digital divide.
The city says barely 50 percent of homes in Chicago's lowest-income neighborhoods have broadband service.
The three library branches will each have 100 Wi-Fi hotspots to lend for up to three weeks at a time.
Each location will also have 10 tablets available to borrow.
The program is supported by a $400,000 grant from the Knight Foundation. Google is providing $175,000. Similar programs have recently begun in New York and other cities.