You’ll finally be able to more easily post your selfies with Miggy on Facebook from Comerica Park this season.

Ending years of fan frustration, Major League Baseball this offseason paid for the first public wireless data network at Comerica Park. The Wi-Fi will be free and give fans the ability to more easily upload photos, Tweet, etc., and download information on their mobile devices during Detroit Tigers games.

Previously, the ballpark didn’t have a wireless system for the public, but did for the press box. Cellular service also will be upgraded after the season begins, the team said.

Cost of the Wi-Fi and cell projects were not disclosed.

The ballpark now has 600 wireless signal antennas spread throughout the seating bowl, suites, concourse and press box.

The system’s access points, switching gear and networking technology is from San Francisco-based tech giant Cisco Systems Inc., the team said.

Detroit-based Bayview Electric Co. and Professional Communications Services in Jackson provided the installation services and cabling required for the approximately 26 miles of copper and fiber optic cable needed for the project, the Tigers said.

Cellular service also has long been a problem at Comerica Park, but the team said a distributed antenna system (DAS) network of hundreds of small nodes will be built over the course of the season.

The neutral-carrier DAS project will be financed and led by Verizon Wireless, with AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile piggybacking on the system so it’s compatible for all of them, the team said.

The Tigers are encouraging fans to use the free Wi-Fi system during games rather than trying to rely on the current cellular network.

Live testing and data analysis will be done on the new Wi-Fi system as the season opens, and tweaks could be made to the service, said Ron Colangelo, the team’s vice president of communications.

The Wi-Fi network will also be used for Tigers-specific interactivity programmed through MLB’s official app, Ballpark. It’s automated through Apple’s Bluetooth-enabled iBeacon network of 40 nodes installed at ballparks in 2014. It works with Apple iOS 7 devices, but very few Android phones.

The app “personalizes your trip with mobile check-in, social media, offers, rewards and exclusive content,” MLB said.

The Tigers will be able to offer deals, discounts, seat upgrades and loyalty rewards through the app.

The DAS and Wi-Fi is part of a national agreement with Major League Baseball Advanced Media LP (MLBAM) and the four major carriers, the team said.

MLBAM is baseball’s digital arm and is run by Robert Bowman — the former Michigan state treasurer in the 1980s under Gov. James Blanchard. He also was a member of the advisory board monitoring Detroit's budget and fiscal turnaround.

The Tigers are the latest Detroit sports venue to make tech upgrades: Joe Louis Arena, which will be replaced in 2017 by a $535 million arena under construction now in Detroit, added public WiFi last year for Detroit Red Wings games, and the Detroit Lions and Detroit Pistons added it to their respective venues in 2012.

The last major technology upgrade at Comerica Park was the $10 million high-definition video board system installed in 2012. The team also replaced more than 400 televisions throughout the ballpark with HD flatscreens.

Pitch clocks were installed behind home plate and in centerfield as part of baseball’s new pace-of-play rules aimed at speeding up games. Instant replay technology was added last season, along with walk-through security screening scanners at the ballpark entrances.

Detroit's 2015 season opens April 6 against the Minnesota Twins at Comerica Park.