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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 ‘Mark Ansboury’

Genachowski opens up on Net Neutrality

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

In a recent webcast from the Brookings Institution, Federal Communications Chairman Julius Genachowski opened up on Net Neutrality, proposing new rules that would protect an open Internet on all wired and wireless networks.

The FCC has disciplined home broadband providers for traffic censorship in the past, but has never laid down a set of solid rules until Genachowski’s speech. Specifically, Genachowski spoke on measures that would prohibit discrimination of content or applications by Internet service providers and would ensure network management practices are transparent. His speech also touched on regulating how wireless companies carry Internet traffic to cell phones – an industry first.

Genachowski’s remarks come at a time when both the FCC is becoming more proactive in seeking input for a national broadband plan, and other Net Neutrality issues being discussed at both the private industry and government level. For example, the federal government is currently investigating Apple’s process for approving iPhone applications and the video game industry is going on the offensive against pushback from an AT&T suggestion that real-time gaming is an “aspirational service” and not a core broadband application.

At the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, we support Genachowski’s thoughts on Net Neutrality as it ties in to our ideas on the subject of open network s. (For a more information, read Chief Technology Officer Mark T. Ansboury’s column, “The case for open broadband infrastructure.”) It’s in everyone’s interest to pay close attention to this issue. Net Neutrality can serve as a way for our nation to move our networks further faster.

Stimulus: Where we’ve been, where we (should be) going and predictions

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

future1Now that the first round of broadband stimulus funding applications are in, it’s time to take a breather – and time to consider what might lie ahead in the next two rounds. What were the biggest challenges in Round 1? How can we improve the process? Dusting off our crystal balls – what do we anticipate?

We received answers from our own Knight Center of Digital Excellence expert, Chief Technology Officer Mark T. Ansboury, as well as others closely connected to the application process: Drew Clark, founder of BroadbandCensus.com; Craig Settles, writer and technology consultant; and Jim Baller of Baller Herbst Law Group and the U.S. Broadband Coalition. (More information on each individual is available at the end of this article.)


Q: What were the biggest challenges you identified in getting applications ready and submitted for Round 1 stimulus funding?

Ansboury: The biggest challenge was taking big ideas and expressing them within the constraints mandated by the application process. Under the somewhat rigid guidelines, it was difficult to convey broad ideas. We were very thorough and made sure that we had accurate data for every question posed – so due diligence required a good deal of time and effort.

Clark: The complexity and bureaucracy of the application form was huge. The application process provided considerable advantages to larger entities and didn’t necessarily encourage individuals bringing forth creative and new ideas. Although the NTIA and RUS have been encouraging businesses and nonprofits to bring forth synergistic solutions to the problems of broadband supply and demand, the application form hewed to the bureaucratic and is likely to favor incumbents.

Settles: A number of communities and alliances began planning their broadband networks a year or more ago, so they have much of the raw data needed for an application. However, the type of questions being asked, the level of details required, the confusing or contradictory requests, all made the 45-day window for completing the NOFA applications much too short. NTIA/RUS should have stuck to its originally stated intent to have a 30-day public comment on the rules and then a 30-to-60-day window for submitting applications.

Baller: We worked on several different kinds of projects, and each posed its own challenges. Among the most significant were: designing proposed target areas in ways that would qualify for funding and still be economically viable; getting strong-minded project partners all on the same page; developing workable approaches to demonstrating that an area was “unserved” or “underserved;” organizing, drafting, and checking the massive amounts of information required, which typically ran into the hundreds of pages for our clients; and coping with the problems that the RUS/NTIA had in processing applications.


Q: Do you have recommendations for improvements in the application process for Rounds 2 and 3?

Ansboury: We need an open framework for expressing the goals and objectives of projects. We also should have an opportunity to broadly define the benefits of such projects to communities and individuals. While there is the need to have standardized questions and formats – the desire to compare apples to apples should not stifle creativity… or we’ll just end up with the shiniest apple, not the best solution for our communities.

We would also like to see the definition of “broadband” significantly increased. Broadband as it is defined now is serving the least common denominator rather than creating a platform for innovative applications and solutions.

Clark: The NTIA and RUS need to take a more proactive role in helping to coordinate applicants, and to coordinate information about broadband applicants. Additionally, there will be a strong need for a system to verify the numerous (and likely conflicting) claims about broadband availability. These are the claims about the “unserved” or “underserved” nature of particular census blocks within the data-sets that will emerge from the nearly 2,200 applications that we saw in Round 1. Finally, the NTIA and RUS could do a better job of offering suggested contract sizes for applications: How much are they looking to spend on what sorts of last-mile, middle-mile, sustainable broadband and public computer center projects?

Settles: The rules need to be streamlined, eliminating some of the business operations reporting requirements, since community and local-government driven network projects don’t operate on the profit model. If applicants adhere to the requirement to prove the network can be financially sustained, that is sufficient.

Also, raise the speed that defines broadband to at least a minimum of 1.5 Mbps symmetrical, and definitely eliminate “advertised speeds” as any measure for network performance. Only actual speeds received by subscribers, whatever those speeds are that define broadband, should determine broadband coverage or the lack thereof.

Extra points need to be allotted for applicants who articulate the broadband needs of the constituents and stakeholders to be served, and then describe No. 1 – how their area is un- or underserved because current broadband doesn’t meet their needs, and No. 2 – how their proposal will meet the needs stated. To evaluate the merits of any proposal without giving the greatest weight to the needs to be met, the technology to be used, and the speeds it will deliver is a fundamentally flawed process.

Baller: Considering all the challenges that RUS/NTIA had to meet in the first round, I would not judge them too harshly. In Rounds 2 and 3, I would recommend that RUS/NTIA raise the bandwidth requirements in the definition of “broadband” and use minimum actual delivered speeds rather than maximum advertised speeds; give substantial credit for projects that will provide services to “unserved” or “underserved” areas, but do not treat the provision of service to such areas as a precondition to receiving funding for last-mile or middle-infrastructure projects; and make it much easier for applicants to demonstrate that areas are “unserved” or “underserved.” For example, RUS/NTIA could adopt various presumptions or safe harbors based on demographic data, etc. Where there is lots of room for subjectivity, (e.g., estimating the number of jobs that a project will create) applicants that make sound, conservative estimates may be at a disadvantage to applicants who make wild, seat-of-the-pants guesstimates, particularly if reviewers are swamped with work and don’t have time to drill deeply into applications. In such areas, RUS/NTIA should provide better guidance or “rules of thumb” on how such estimates should be made.

In addition, applicants should be given more time to absorb Round 2 NOFAs and guidance materials, while the agencies should be given more time and more resources/reviewers to evaluate applications.


Q: Any predictions on what to expect in Rounds 2 and 3?

Ansboury: The first round focused largely on rural communities. I expect BTOP, where the larger share of money will be allocated, will be broader and open to the needs of urban communities and at-risk populations of underserved people. I hope for and expect more leeway relating to these populations, as this is where the masses are and where there is the greatest need for revitalization.

Clark: I expect to see far more competition than we saw in Round 1. In the first round, the 2,200 applicants sought $27.6 billion in funding, out of $4.3 billion that is available. These numbers were almost certainly depressed by the complexity and bureaucracy of the application process. If the NTIA and RUS do their job right, more competition in the broadband stimulus funding process will be the result.

Settles: Given that the total dollars requested in Round 1 is seven times the amount of funds available, someone should repeat the “cash for clunkers” scenario and find more money the next round than the anticipated $1.5 billion. There may be as many people waiting in the wings to submit proposals in Round 2 as submitted in the first round.

Baller: I hope that NTIA will do what it repeatedly has said that it was going to do before the Round 1 NOFA was released – treat the stimulus process as a test bed for creative new approaches and partnerships, particularly those that will foster the development of high-capacity next generation networks.


We also spoke with David Villano, assistant administrator of the Telecommunications Program at RUS, who lent his perspective:

Q: What were your biggest challenges in Round 1 and what do you see in the coming rounds?

Villano: In Round 1, balancing – getting our first NOFA out on the street as quickly as possible versus being responsive to our all of our potential customers. We believe we met both of these goals, are ready to start the review process and get ready for Round 2. We plan to seek input from the public on how we can improve the process for Round 2 as our strategy for multiple NOFAs was to be dynamic and learn from the experience of the preceding NOFA. We want to hear from the public on how we can improve the process.


Mark T. AnsbouryMark T. Ansboury is chief technology officer of the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, based in Akron, Ohio. The center is operated by Cleveland-based technology nonprofit OneCommunity, in partnership with The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and is dedicated to creating connected communities through strategies that utilize information technologies to drive civic progress and economic development.

Drew ClarkDrew Clark is the founder and executive director of BroadbandCensus.com, which provides an objective and independent measure of local broadband services in addition to allowing consumers to interact with a growing broadband database and share information about their broadband experiences. Clark is a well-respected telecom, media and technology journalist who has covered the industry for more than 15 years.

Craig SettlesBroadband business strategist, marketing expert, author and internationally renowned speaker, Craig Settles helps organizations use broadband technologies to improve government and stakeholders’ operating efficiency, as well as local economic development. His numerous published works and in-depth analyses have established him as a prominent thought leader on appropriate business strategies for municipal broadband network deployments.

Jim Baller Jim Baller is president of the Baller Herbst Law Group and the founder of the U.S. Broadband Coalition, a consortium of organizations working toward the development of a comprehensive national broadband strategy. Among many commendations, The Fiber to the Home Council has recognized Baller as “the nation’s most experienced and knowledgeable attorney on public broadband matters.”

David Villano In January 2008, David Villano was named Assistant Administrator of the Telecommunications Program, where he manages the Telecommunications Program’s loan and grant programs, with an annual budget of $873 million and a $4 billion loan portfolio. Previously, he served as Deputy Administrator, Single Family Housing, responsible for administering the direct and guaranteed homeownership programs and several housing grant programs.

Go for gigabit speeds: America should expect nothing less

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Mark AnsbouryBy Mark T. Ansboury, the Knight Center of Digital Excellence

As federal officials begin reviewing 2,200 detailed proposals requesting more than seven times the $4 billion in broadband investment in this round of stimulus funding, it’s a good time to revisit the big-picture and ask what outcomes are we looking for and what should drive funding decisions. With the government investing ambitiously in economic recovery, Americans should be equally bold in expecting a return on our nation’s investment.

And to ensure the long-term benefits - particularly given this is our infrastructure for innovation and global competitiveness for years to come - we all should be thinking years and decades out. To quote the “Great One,” Wayne Gretzky, you should “go to where the puck’s going, not where it is.”

So, as the Federal Communications Commission is charged with establishing our nation’s first broadband policy, we should focus not only where we fall short today, but also where we will entirely miss opportunities - and the puck. We need to know where our broadband strategy is going and what happens to our nation’s future without a bold one.

We need to follow the lead of other countries and start aiming (including investing and incentivizing) for gigabit Internet speeds for all. Gigabit-speed networks would provide Americans with hundreds of times the Internet speeds broadband households currently have.

Only a broadband policy striving for gigabit speeds will put us on par with our world competitors and provide the infrastructure America will need to compete for years to come. Right now, the U.S. government and the stimulus package are allowing the bar to be set so low, we are certain to fund initiatives that are, by international standards, already obsolete, while other countries such as Australia and Korea are committing even greater funds than the U.S. to upgrade networks. Quite simply, tomorrow’s innovation will come from whatever parts of the world have the platforms to foster it.

Gigabit broadband can also drive sweeping transformation in our communities and across sectors that affect us all, such as health care, education, government and public safety, and get our economy moving in the right direction again.

If the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act is truly going to help, today’s investment needs to continue once the shovels are put back in the shed. That means investing in technologies that will continue to have impact and empower businesses individuals while creating new opportunities and sustainable growth. As our economy changes, business and individuals are looking for new ways to engage their future workforce. On the home front, it’s about addressing the future needs of a connected household, providing high-bandwidth networks to manage household services, access to sensors for environmental and health management, availability of real-time access to the workplace, school, public safety and community services and numerous applications that have not been invented yet.

What do we know? Internet service has become more and more a necessity of daily life. It was only 15 years ago when phone companies said the Internet was a fad. The world has changed and will keep changing. Enabling gigabit access throughout the community will foster economic development and enable citizens to have access to new applications where they live, work and play. We should be thinking about incentivizing investment and innovation enabling new markets, new consumers and new services so as a nation and as individual citizens, we have a choice on the type and level of services we can access. Such access will determine whether we can actively conduct business from a home office, participate in a class discussion remotely, or access top quality health care regardless how far we live from the best hospitals.

What don’t we know? The opportunities, services, efficiencies and competitive advantage that having a true platform for innovation - a gigabit national network - would provide.

Take the example of health care, and what gigabit speed - or lack of it - would mean to you. With gigabit speeds, you could live in a remote town, yet be “seen” by a top doctor any distance away via video, through your home television screen, use local sensors to provide environmental information, statistics regarding your condition or state of health, monitor the trends in regards to chronic conditions. Gigabit speed means you can be monitored daily from your home by nurses and technicians at your local caregiver or doctor’s office. This, too, is possible with medical devices available on the market and is already happening in pockets of our country, where broadband capacity is available.

Close monitoring of this kind can mean life or death to many individuals. Simultaneously, it can help shift the focus of health care to wellness and prevention, to avoid as many high-cost emergencies as possible.

Looking similarly at government, education and other key sectors of our economy, there are equally transforming possibilities that will result from gigabit speeds.

Collectively across sectors, the effect of gigabit speeds will be not just economic recovery, but also improved quality of life and sustained competitiveness. Today’s spending choices and public policy decisions amount to an incentive and investment into the business plan for America’s future. Good planning requires that we learn from the past while keeping our eye on a greater future. Our American tradition is one of reaching for the highest goals, whether, in our past, via the Oregon Trail or an Apollo mission to the moon. Today, in the 21st century, why wouldn’t we go for gigabit speeds?

Mark T. Ansboury is chief technology officer of the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, based in Akron, Ohio. The center is operated by Cleveland-based technology nonprofit OneCommunity, in partnership with The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and is dedicated to creating connected communities through strategies that utilize information technologies to drive civic progress and economic development. To learn more about the Knight Center, go to www.knightcenter.org or e-mail info@knightcenter.org.

OneCommunity, Knight Center leaders receive award

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Scot RourkeMark AnsbouryOneCommunity and Knight Center of Digital Excellence CEO Scot Rourke and CTO and Senior Vice President Mark Ansboury recently received the 2009 Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year award in the Supporter of Entrepreneurship category in Northeast Ohio. Rourke and Ansboury were two of only ten winners selected.

An independent judging panel made up of regional business, academic and community leaders selected Rourke and Ansboury for the award, which recognizes outstanding entrepreneurs who are building and leading dynamic, growing businesses. According to Ernst & Young, winners demonstrated exceptional performance in areas such as innovation, financial performance and personal commitment to their businesses and communities.

The Entrepreneur of the Year awards program recognizes business leaders in over 135 cities in 50 countries throughout the world. As regional award winners, Rourke and Ansboury are eligible for consideration for the Ernst & Young 2009 Entrepreneur of the Year national award program. National award winners will be announced at the annual awards gala in Palm Springs, Calif., Nov. 14.

More information on the award can be found here.

Attention communities: Akron rolls out first phase of wireless network

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Communities looking for a real-life example of community broadband access need look no further than Akron, Ohio, where the city recently launched the first phase of its Connect Akron Wireless Network.

The launch is the beginning of a build out that reflects two years of planning and partnership between the City of Akron and OneCommunity, a nonprofit organization that serves Northern Ohio by connecting public and nonprofit institutions to its next-generation fiber-optic network. OneCommunity also operates the Knight Center of Digital Excellence through a grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

The city showed off its new wireless capability to the public by hosting a small Internet café at Lock 3 Park. The first phase of the network covers one mile of the city, which includes the Cascade Plaza, the neighboring museums and library, as well as all three downtown hospitals and neighborhoods in three adjoining areas.

The Connect Akron Wireless Network is schedule to be fully built out and live by October and when completed, the 10-square-mile network will serve between 80,000 and 90,000 Akron residents and over 30,000 downtown workers. All 10 of Akron’s wards are able to participate in the demonstration over the next year. Residents and businesses have open Internet access with a robust download speed of five to 10 Mbps.

But keep in mind the initial build out is, well, initial.

City officials are hoping federal stimulus money will be available to extend wireless to the other 52 square miles of the city. Deputy Mayor David Lieberth estimated a full city build out could cost $7 to $9 million. OneCommunity is assisting Akron in its bid for broadband stimulus funds.

Overall, it’s a big step for a city that has been very active in trying to get connected. In addition, Akron’s current build out serves as an example of not only what’s possible, but what’s in the pipeline for communities just as committed as Akron.

“This network will act as a nationwide model,” said Mark Ansboury, vice president and chief technical officer of OneCommunity. “We’re hoping that Akron will be a showcase for how cities might create sustainable systems, provide better services to residents and streamline government.”

Charles Benton shares views at The Knight Center of Digital Excellence

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Charles Benton is with us here at the Knight Center of Digital Excellence this afternoon. Besides heading up the Benton Foundation, which is focused on communications in the public interest, he is co-chairman of the National Broadband Coalition. He formerly worked in audio/visual publishing.

Benton is here to learn more about the work of the Knight Center.
For openers, he talked about the unprecedented spending as a result of the $787 billion stimulus plan.

As a part of the $7.2 billion for broadband networks, Congress charged the FCC with developing a plan for broadband deployment. The deadline for filing comments on a national broadband policy is June 8th. The FCC under Chairman Copp is demonstrating a new commitment to openness, and Benton cited examples to show “it’s not just talk.”

One could think of the stimulus package, in its focus on un-served and underserved, as an opportunity to build models that will be beneficial in the future. This is a time to talk about best practices and how to identify them. We should look to build from the models that are successful.

Mark T. Ansboury, Knight Center’s Vice President and Chief Technology Officer, took the floor to say that our nation needs to build good policy, so we have a strategy going forward that serves the public interest. There is a need for transformation at multiple levels. States, for example, need to have policies in place. Without such policies and organized plans, there is no model for consistent broadband infrastructure. Laying such groundwork requires political will.

In terms of winning stimulus money, larger projects that have broad support will stand out. Small projects need to be a beacon of light in order to get noticed.

Back to Charles Benton: There needs to be an opportunity for small innovation as well as big innovation. An innovation fund for smaller projects is one option.

Knight Center has a network that includes the 26 Knight communities. Speaking of best practices, there is an opportunity here to look at best practices within the Knight communities. This would push others nationally to come up with models that demonstrate best practices.

Free Press Changing Media Summit Part 3

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

by Mark Ansboury

As soon as Susan Crawford, of President Obama’s National Economic Council, took the stage she noted the way that information - which used to be centralized - is now radically dispersed. “Information is everywhere,” she said.

However, we can’t be excited about that news if we don’t address who is being left offline in America. “Broadband does not guarantee economic success, but a lack of broadband guarantees stagnation,” Crawford said.

As more of our media move online, we have a key choice to make–will our new media system and broadband be an engine for economic growth, a platform for innovation for new forms of art, education and information? Or will we let the digital divide grow, expanding the information gap and cutting more people off from the benefits of the Web?

Live from Free Press Changing Media Summit Part 2

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

by Mark Ansboury

Acting chairman for FCC expounds on three core principles

Michael Copps cited three principles regarding the America’s broadband policy. These principles shed light on the media’s role in democracy.

1)      Democracy is important. We must change our thinking that consolidation is good because it destroys freedom of choice and eliminates jobs.

2)      Old media may fade away slower than expected, but is not dead.

3)      Ensure old sins once permitted in the old media are not thrust upon new media.

Change is on the horizon, but how do we promote society’s interests and goals? The FCC is looking ahead to tackling these changes for public interest. However, we must recognize the hurdles we’ve encounters and the lessons we’ve learned. The national broadband policy will empower the FCC to impact our nation’s democracy.

Live from the Free Press Changing Media Summit in Washington, DC.

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

by Mark Ansboury

At the Free Press Changing Media Summit in Washington DC. Alberto Ibarguen, President of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and Josh Silver, Executive Director of The Free Press are welcoming attendees and discussing the need for change and creating access to information.

Ibarguen highlighted the digital media investments the Knight Foundation has made and focused on The Knight Center of Digital Excellence as an example of bridging the commercial and public interest for broadband.  He also shared a quote from Thomas Jefferson stating that “every man should have access to a newspaper and the ability to read it.” Now apply that to the new age of digital media.  Are we not dealing with the same issues nearly three centuries later? Now it’s about broadband access and the ability to use it.

Josh Silver then went on to describe the need to reinvest in our broadband future and for the Internet to serve as our gateway to democracy. We need a fair regulatory approach that ensures that the public interests are served. Government should have a role in rewriting new policies that creates a new marketplace of ideas and ensures the public has a voice in the new digital economy.

What is clear based upon both of these gentlemen’s observations is that there is consensus that the new media revolution also requires a revolution of ideas around broadband to be successful. There is a resounding call for a national broadband policy that ensures every citizen has the access and the ability to use it.

‘Best in Breed’ stimulus discussion wrap-up

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Participating in today’s panel was an amazing opportunity to learn what some of the top minds in the broadband stimulus discussion are thinking

The cities of Seattle and San Francisco are examples of communities that have stepped up in a big way regarding community-based broadband solutions. But it isn’t simply because their leaders focus exclusively on the technical side of broadband – they emphasize the community aspect of being connected. The quality-of-life improvements that service-oriented programs brought in these cities are directly influencing the thought processes behind broadband investment.

As we expand our broadband networks, our cities get smarter and life improves for everyone. Seattle and San Francisco are demonstrating that technology can solve a number of our social problems. They’re using technology to reach people and create change.

It’s that “connect” ideal Chris Vein spoke on.

However, the fact that struck me throughout the discussion is that no matter how well connected different communities may be, our nation as a whole is well behind the rest of the industrialized world.

Rural, urban - we all have challenges.

As each panelist pointed out in his or her presentation, we need to use stimulus funding wisely to create sustainable networks. Examples are out there, and as each panelist demonstrated, there are number of committed individuals out there working towards the same goals we strive towards at the Knight Center of Digital Excellence.

Now is the time to create connected communities.