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The role of collaboration in creating a community vision
When the Knight Center of Digital Excellence prepares to enter one of the 26 Knight Communities, it has a specific methodology to measure a community’s progress as that community works to become a connected one. Regardless of where the community is located, what its population size is, or what its needs are, the steps followed to reach its end point do not change much.
Basically, every community map points to the same spot. It’s the route and mode of transportation that’s different.
Knight Center Community Program Manager Lynda Goff provided an example of this by comparing two of her Knight Communities: Lexington, Ky., and Aberdeen, S.D. Communities such as Lexington already realize what benefits broadband technology can bring and may already have a few projects in the works. Communities such as the more rural Aberdeen may realize their needs, but aren’t fully aware of what the benefits of a broadband network may be.
Solid research is key to a successful broadband initiative
When we read about a groundbreaking surgical procedure, we picture the surgeon using the scapel, not the hundreds of tests and years of clinical study that guided his incisions. When we watch an exciting football game, we see the elite quarterback dismantling a defense, not the days he spent watching film with a DVD remote in his hand instead of a ball.
We see the success, not the research that drove it.
However, at the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, we view research a little differently than most. Research data has proven itself to be invaluable to our cause of creating connected communities. Solid research serves as the backbone for any successful broadband initiative and ensures we don’t enter a community “blind.”
Coalition inspires greater broadband adoption and use through new report
In any national broadband strategy, adoption and use need to play a major role. We’ve seen numerous examples of broadband driving future applications that will enhance lives. Advances in education, health care and economic development are out there, and many Americans are going to need to increase their technological competencies in order to realize the benefits.
While the U.S. Broadband Coalition submitted a report on a national broadband strategy to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Sept. 24, it recently submitted another that offers more detailed policy suggestions.
The Broadband Adoption and Use Working Group, chaired by Charles Benton, of the Benton Foundation; Link Hoewing, of Verizon; Karen Archer Perry, of the Knight Center of Digital Excellence; and Kenneth Peres of Communications Workers of America, collaborated with more than 30 authors representing over 25 different firms to create a new report that was delivered to the FCC Oct. 29 and will be showcased in a public forum at the FCC Hearing Room in Washington D.C. Nov. 13 at 1 p.m. EST.
My Broadband Life
By Doug Adams, Knight Center of Digital Excellence My life is not that different from most men in their early 40s. Weekends are hectic, filled with kids’ games, events and errands – all while never straying too far from “work mode” as I am connected via Blackberry and laptop seven days a week. Was life this crazy for my father when I was young?
My father might not have had three soccer leagues plus football to juggle, or a workday that extended beyond nine-to-five to deal with, but I can manage my responsibilities and take advantage of so many new opportunities thanks to broadband. In many ways, my life is very different from what I envisioned it would be as a kid – or even what I envisioned five years ago. While the substance of my life is much as I would have anticipated, I never imagined being able to watch my beloved Indianapolis Colts via an iPhone application at the same time as my son Jack is scoring a goal at his soccer game. Being a supportive father in 2009 may require more work – but it is also a whole lot easier.
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