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How will broadband affect burgeoning controversies over health care? The answers to this question and more came courtesy of a Broadband Cenus-hosted, hour-long panel discussion. View a video of the discussion. View Now




President Obama on Innovation and Sustainable Growth. President Barack Obama has new plans to strengthen the economy that will all favor people with hi-tech educations.
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Elevate Miami, a comprehensive Digital Inclusion program launched by the city of Miami, aims to serve youth, low-income families, minorities, seniors and residents facing barriers to digital inclusion.
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The Knight Center of Digital Excellence held its first Stimulus Webcast Session for Knight communities and program directors July 23. Watch it online now.
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By pushing hard on broadband, lawmakers hope to close the "digital divide" that has long separated rural America. In doing so, they hope to give rural consumers access to the same sorts of high-speed services and opportunities - think telemedicine, distance-learning and Web-based commerce - that city dwellers have enjoyed for years.
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Posts Tagged ‘Akron Art Museum’

Downtown Akron Partnership pins hopes on new wireless network

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Kimberlee McKee, president of the Downtown Akron Partnership (DAP), spoke with us about her vision for the new Connect Akron Wireless Network, which will cover a 10-square-mile area of the central city and will serve between 80,000 and 90,000 Akron residents and over 30,000 downtown workers when complete later this year.

Q: DAP refers to this wireless corridor as a “living room.” Can you expand on that?

A: Downtown is the center of the community. It represents the heart and soul of the area. It is often described as the community living room – a place where all people, regardless of income, race, age, gender, etc. – can feel at home.

Q: DAP also anticipates more people downtown as a result of the network. How so?

A: It is our hope that the introduction of the wireless network will encourage businesses and other development, attracting students from the University of Akron. As more students take advantage of residential opportunities downtown in the coming years, we hope they will spend their free time at coffee shops, restaurants, the main library, the Akron Art Museum, Lock 3 Park and all of the resources downtown has to offer. The wireless network is a wonderful feature to help encourage students to incorporate downtown in to their daily lives.

Q: Does DAP have any specific plans at this point for drawing on the wireless network to promote downtown Akron?

A: In June we launched a redesign of our website, www.downtownakron.com, featuring interactive maps, a comprehensive calendar of downtown events and links to our social networking outlets to better serve downtown visitors. Recently Downtown Akron Partnership’s marketing efforts have been more toward email blasts and social networking. With the wireless network in place, more people than ever will have unrestricted access to all of the information DAP provides about downtown Akron.

Q: How might communications change during major downtown events, such as FirstNight?

A: We’ve been approached with ideas on ways to maximize the impact of the wireless network downtown such as digital kiosks and Bluetooth marketing. Moving forward, we will continue to work with the groups that are developing these ideas and possibly market downtown activities through these mediums.

Akron community ready to get connected

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

If you go to www.connectakron.org, you’ll see how Akron, Ohio can be a model for rolling out broadband networks in your community. After all, once you have broadband, your community will need to know about it, and understand what will be possible as a result. This type of website can be your solution to informing your community, which can then be the first step toward adoption of new uses.

By following the new ConnectAkron website, you’ll be able to see how broadband usages develop in one pilot city. The site will showcase ways that average people, and local businesses, do things differently as a result of broadband. A good way to follow Akron’s progress is to sign up to receive updates from a blog at www.connectakron.org/connect-blog.

For Akron, the launch of this blog and website is big.

After two years of planning, the city of Akron, in partnership with OneCommunity (the operator of the Knight Center of Digital Excellence), is now building out a wireless network that will serve between 80,000 and 90,000 Akron residents and over 30,000 downtown workers.

The infrastructure is only the foundation. New opportunities – including jobs and economic development – will come by putting the new network to use.

Some examples of possibilities:

Local arts and cultural organizations will suddenly have higher capabilities in reaching world audiences. A virtual tour of Akron’s acclaimed art museum? No reason why not.

Or what if Akronites wanted to “sit” in on classes at the University of Akron, but do it from their home computers? That will be possible, too.

How about an instant Internet pipeline to safety forces?

Entrepreneurs will have the ability to connect to the Internet at a price a startup can afford.

The city will be able to make enhancements to their public safety efforts.

You get the idea.

The coverage area will include the University of Akron, museums, all three downtown hospitals and neighborhoods in North Hill, East Akron and Highland Square, and may require the purchase of a wireless router/signal booster to achieve maximum signal strength.

Our Knight Center team will spend a lot of time in Akron, to help develop a model for how broadband can transform a community in ways that matter – in terms of jobs, education, healthcare, safety and quality of life.

Visit www.connectakron.org for updates, and see what your community can do as well.