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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.
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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’
Tuesday, May 26th, 2009
Those of us who have Internet access already know what to do with it. We e-mail. We shop. We search for jobs and information.
But what about the roughly one-third of Americans who don’t have Internet service, and may not have a clue what they’d do with it if they did? The more than $7 billion in federal stimulus money for broadband networks is meant to serve this group.
But what will currently unserved Americans do with all this broadband?
Let’s take the example of Akron, Ohio, where the city, The University of Akron and the Knight Center of Digital Excellence are leading an effort to develop a 12-mile wireless network, the first stretch of which will be up and running in June. Those within the network will have free Internet access.
Knight Center team members are meeting now with various civic leaders, to discuss possibilities of how this broadband network can make a difference.
As we meet with people, ideas start rolling.
Job training could be enhanced, for example, so that current programs are reinforced with practice work online. After-school programs also could be expanded to serve more children through digital classrooms. And even soup kitchens might serve as a place where people can access the Internet.
What if each soup kitchen put up a kiosk, so those who come for meals might also check e-mail, maybe to see if that job interview came through? It will be a long time before everyone has a computer at home. This would give a largely unserved population another point of Internet access, in addition to the public library system and community learning centers being placed in Akron Public Schools.
These are just a few examples of the multiple layers of potential impact. Sure, there are some who will never use the Internet, even if they had it for free. But even these people may need access for health and safety reasons.
Your mother might be among those who wouldn’t use the Internet for any reason. But you’d still want your mother to have access. In an emergency, if she needed an ambulance, you’d want rescue workers to have quick online access to medical information about her.
Or, take a family with no computer in the home. If social workers were called to that home because of suspected child abuse, you’d want them to be able to check online immediately to see if there is a pattern of violence in that home.
We should look at broadband as the new utility service. It impacts how effectively we can participate in the economy, our chances of getting a job, our ability to acquire new skills, and even our health and safety.
America can’t have a third of its population disconnected - and disenfranchised - as a result of no Internet access. The haves and have-nots will be further delineated at a time when we should be narrowing gaps, not widening them.
The question is not, “What will we do with all this broadband?” but “What will we do without it?”
Tags: Akron, American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, bandwidth, broadband, Broadband Expansion, community, digital, digital divide, economy, education, electricity, fiber-to-the-home, healthcare, high-speed, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, KCoDE, Knight Center, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, network, Ohio, OneCommunity, public safety, stimulus, stimulus watch, telemedicine, unserved Americans, utilities Posted in Knight Center of Digital Excellence, OneCommunity, Opinion, Stimulus Package | 8 Comments »
Wednesday, May 6th, 2009
To invest smartly in broadband networks in your community, the key is to plan, plan, plan. And it’s important that entities work together – cities, counties, states, universities, public schools, hospitals and others.
Without substantial planning, you risk wasting money on ineffective projects that you and your community will regret later.
Take Akron, Ohio, as a good example of the power of collaboration: A new broadband network is going live this summer.
While our team at the Knight Center of Digital Excellence initiated the effort, it didn’t take much prodding to get buy-in from Akron Mayor Don Plusquellic’s office, the University of Akron and others. Each had something to contribute, and each would receive a return on investment from the sustainable community network.
As designing began for a 12-square mile wireless network in Akron, stakeholders realized that the university’s existing campus network could be utilized for this project. The city also had some assets it could make available to the project, including buildings, fiber and conduit.
By reconfiguring a few devices controlling the university’s network and allowing public access across the campus, the first part of Akron’s wireless district became a reality with minimal additional investment. It simply took engaging the right stakeholders and undertaking a bit of collaborative planning, starting with people coming together around a table.
Another example: Miami, Fla., where the Elevate Miami program is teaching digital literacy to children and adults of all ages. The project involves Florida International University, the city of Miami and community centers around the city.
At 40 locations across Miami, university students will conduct classes for various groups of people. Small business owners, for instance, will learn how to use technology to advance their businesses. The elderly will learn to use email and other Internet applications to keep in touch with family and friends.
Private enterprise, too, can be part of the collaborative mix.
Xcel Energy is working with public entities in Boulder, Colo.
The state, county and local entities have come together to plan out broadband networks in conjunction with shovel-ready road projects. It’s a simple idea: If you are digging to build roads, why not lay fiber for broadband at the same time? The extra cost of adding conduit pipe for broadband fiber is minimal compared to the cost of digging twice.
In Boulder’s case, Xcel, the state’s largest utility, is wiring a broadband information network into power lines. The utility has laid more than 100 miles of fiber-optic cable so far. The new system will allow residents to manage their power usage, even enabling them to turn down their heat at home via a website that’s accessible anywhere.
Efficient use of networks can happen only through very substantial planning. It means that mayor’s offices, city and county planning departments, state agencies, and others need to work together toward large goals in the public interest.
This is a key recommendation from our team members at the Knight Center of Digital Excellence: Smart planning is the way for communities to get the most return from investments in infrastructure.
Tags: Akron, bandwidth, Boulder, broadband, Broadband Expansion, Colorado, community, digital, digital divide, Don Plusquellic, Elevate Miami, Florida, Florida International University, high-speed, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Miami, Ohio, OneCommunity, small business, smart planning, University of Akron, wireless district, wireless network, Xcel Energy Posted in Digital news, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, OneCommunity | No Comments »
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.
Tags: Akron, Akron Art Museum, arts and culture, bandwidth, blog, broadband, Broadband Expansion, broadband network, community, ConnectAkron, digital, East Akron, economy, education, Highland Square, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, North Hill, Ohio, OneCommunity, public safety, University of Akron, utilities, website, wireless router Posted in Digital news, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, OneCommunity | No Comments »
Monday, February 2nd, 2009
We know we need to put people back to work. We also know that a key component of the Obama Plan is to stimulate our economy through the development of a next-generation broadband infrastructure.
Key to this goal is making Americans see – giving them that “Aha” moment – so that there is a clear understanding how broadband can advance our economy in the same radical way that telephone service and electricity did a century ago. As an essential utility service of the future, broadband can change how we do business, deliver health care, educate our children, provide safety services in our communities, and in short, how we conduct our daily lives. This is why broadband (more…)
Tags: Akron, bandwidth, broadband, digital, gigabit, infrastructure, Internet, Knight, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Obama Posted in Digital news, Knight Center, Obama notes, OneCommunity | No Comments »
Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
With the economy in turmoil, it’s not surprising that U.S. mayors are looking for fresh ideas to jump-start local economies. It was in that spirit that the U.S. Conference of Mayors invited the Knight Center of Digital Excellence to deliver a keynote address on the potential of broadband and the promise of a “connected community” at its 2009 winter conference on Jan. 18 in Washington, D.C. (See video from Conference of Mayors broadband discussion)
One person who knows how the Knight Center can help communities is Manny Diaz, mayor of Miami, and president of the conference of mayors. The Knight Center has been working with Mayor Diaz and other Miami leaders to develop a community broadband strategy, so he asked the Knight Center to explain the tangible impact broadband infrastructure would have on creating jobs and helping local economies. (more…)
Tags: Add new tag, Akron, broadband, digital, infrastructure, Internet, Knight, Knight Center, Knight Center of Digital Excellence Posted in Digital news, Knight Center, OneCommunity | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
Akron, Ohio, is developing a strategy for sustaining its new broadband infrastructure that spreads costs across a wide spectrum of services. The city’s model can serve as a guide for other communities looking to implement broadband and drive down the cost for delivery of city services.
An example of how Akron is achieving cost efficiencies is the city’s utilization of funds from its public safety budget for building broadband infrastructure. By installing surveillance equipment in conjunction with the construction of a free public wireless Internet corridor, Akron will be able to deliver enhanced public safety services at reduced costs.
Akron’s progress can be largely attributed to (more…)
Tags: Akron, broadband, infrastructure, Internet, Knight, Knight Center, Knight Center of Digital Excellence Posted in Digital news, Knight Center, OneCommunity | No Comments »
Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
By Mark T. Ansboury, the Knight Center of Digital Excellence
So we need new jobs? To understand what a fully developed, mega-speed
communications system can do for our economy, think of what an Interstate
highway system did for commerce in the 1950s. Today, leadership in building out an “Internet highway” could create jobs now and for decades to come.
Americans are poorer than they were a year ago. Unemployment is about 8 percent and climbing. Numerous reports, including one from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), show the United States falling to 15th among developed countries in high-speed Internet penetration.
As President-Elect Barack Obama recognizes, technology and broadband can be a means to stimulate the economy, put many Americans back to work and help us reclaim a position of world leadership through the development of broadband networks that enable high-speed communications throughout our nation.
In a recent speech, Obama held out a vision of the future in which every child has Internet access, and all schools and libraries have the technological resources necessary to prepare tomorrow’s work force for high-skilled, well-paying jobs.
High-level research and main street anecdotes support his assumptions and demonstrate that broadband access and utilization will increase construction jobs and employment across multiple industries including government, manufacturing, finance, education, health care, information services and new industries yet to be identified. The new administration recognizes that broadband will create jobs for today and will have a multiplier effect that will create new jobs for years to come. (more…)
Tags: Akron, broadband, digital, infrastructure, Internet, Knight, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Obama Posted in Digital news, Knight Center, OneCommunity, Opinion | 7 Comments »
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