Click here to follow the Knight Center of Digital Excellence on Twitter.
According to a Pew Research Center Internet & American Life Project study, "The Mobile Difference," nearly 40 percent Americans have positive and improving attitudes about their mobile communication devices, thereby further immersing themselves into a more robust digital lifestyle.
Read more
We'll find answers to as many of
your questions as possible and
publish answers in a future issue.
Ask Us
Multimedia:
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.
View Now
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.
View Now
The Knight Center of Digital Excellence held its first Stimulus Webcast Session for Knight communities and program directors July 23. Watch it online now.
View Now
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.
View Now
|
Posts Tagged ‘Obama’
Wednesday, May 20th, 2009
We’re just beginning the second half of our afternoon conference here at the Knight Center of Digital Excellence. Jim Baller, of the Baller Herbst Law Group, has joined us. Baller’s law firm is based in Washington, D.C., and Minneapolis, specializes in communications issues. He is also the founder of the National Broadband Coalition, which includes consumer groups, state and local government entities, utilities, nonprofits and others groups working toward consensus on a national broadband strategy.
Right now we’re talking about definitions that are yet to be determined by the federal government, but that will play a key role in decision-making regarding which projects gain stimulus funding for broadband networks. For funding purposes, certain communities will be designated as “un-served,” in terms of Internet access, and others will be designated as “underserved.” Baller comments that it’s likely these two categories will be considered separately, and that projects for those areas designated as un-served areas will get the higher priority for funding.
Karen Archer Perry, who leads the Knight Center’s Connected Community Team, pointed out that data on Internet penetration is difficult to compile in some communities. Many communities don’t have maps showing where fiber lines exist and without a ready source of information, data must be pulled from various sources which, in some cases, involves guesswork.
Even when you know the extent of, or lack of, broadband infrastructure existing in any one community, that alone can’t be the basis for assessing a community’s needs. Many other factors come into play, such as income and educational attainment, poverty levels and unemployment.
Decisions over details such as these will determine which communities, and which projects, end up with stimulus funding for broadband networks that, in turn, will impact job creation, economic development, the delivery of healthcare and education and public safety in cities and towns across America.
Tags: American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, Baller Herbst Law Group, broadband, Broadband Expansion, community, digital divide, FCC, healthcare, infrastructure, innovation, Jim Baller, Karen Archer Perry, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Minneapolis, Obama, recovery.gov, stimulus, stimulus watch, underserved, unserved, Washington D.C. Posted in Digital news, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, live blogging | No Comments »
Friday, May 15th, 2009

By Karen Archer Perry, director of Community Outreach and Programs, Knight Center of Digital Excellence
With $787 billion in economic stimulus funding trickling into the market, there are more than just school kids studying the workings of government inside the beltway.
My spring trip to our nation’s capital started May 12 at a breakfast sponsored by Broadband Census. The discussion focused on broadband stimulus funding and development of a national broadband policy that will include definitions of un-served and underserved.
U.S. Rep. Rick Boucher (D-Va.), who directs the FCC through his role as chair of the U.S. House Subcommittee on Communications, Technology and the Internet, suggested a very narrow definition of underserved communities. He also made clear a strong inclination to give grant preferences to commercial players over municipal entrants, citing their ability to put people to work and to complete projects on time.
From the Broadband Breakfast, my tour took me to the Media and Democracy Coalition’s annual meeting, where Executive Director Beth McConnell was working to pull common agendas from this fiercely independent and passionate group of local media activists and advocates. After joining Free Press for the Members Meeting of Internet For Everyone, it’s refreshing to see organizations such as these having an active and important voice in the upcoming debates on broadband and media policy.
My final stop was at the Newseum, a 250,000 square-foot museum of news, for the Free Press Summit on Changing Media, sponsored by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. In contrast to what I found in earlier meetings, this group was looking for bold changes in policy to tightly connect democracy with the free flow of information and with pervasive, ubiquitous access. While all of the speakers were excellent, it was a special treat to hear from three generations of FCC Chairmen: Acting Chairman Michael Copps and former chairs Michael Powell and Reed Hundt. Hundt spoke of the need to create an EducationNet, DemocracyNet, HealthNet and EngergyNet. Powell noted that broadband policy was so strategic to the country that it should really be driven from the office of the president and not the FCC.
Copps presented a compelling vision of the need for change. He identified four tenants for the future of media:
1) It’s all about democracy, and democracy requires information and access;
2) Old Media is not dead and must continue to be on the regulatory radar screen;
3) We must apply our lessons from past regulatory experience to the new environment to ensure true openness, nondiscrimination and competition;
4) Community and grassroots activism will be needed to capitalize on this opportunity and actually usher in the change we all desire. Add to their vision, the words from Susan Crawford, a member of President Barack Obama’s National Economic Council, and the trip certainly capped with inspiration.
The real lesson for all of us, including the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, is the same as it is for students learning about our government for the first time: Government serves us best when we pay attention, stay informed and become engaged. We are the people in the democracy, and for our government to be responsive we need to participate at every level. Let the debate be full and robust.
Tags: American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, bandwidth, Beth McConnell, broadband, Broadband Breakfast, Broadband Census, Broadband Expansion, community, Congress, democracy, DemocracyNet, digital, economy, education, EducationNet, EngergyNet, FCC, Free Press, healthcare, HealthNet, infrastructure, innovation, Karen Archer Perry, KCoDE, Knight Center, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, media, Media and Democracy Coalition, Michael Copps, Michael Powell, network, Newseum, Obama, old media, OneCommunity, president, Reed Hundt, stimulus, stimulus watch, Susan Crawford, Technology and the Internet, The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, U.S. House Subcommittee on Communications, U.S. Rep. Rick Boucher, underserved, utilities Posted in Digital news, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Opinion, Stimulus Package, live blogging | No Comments »
Thursday, May 7th, 2009
by Mark Ansboury, VP & CTO OneCommunity and The Knight Center of Digital Excellence
2:15
Just finished my talk about how through OneCommunity and The Knight Center of Digital Excellence are creating sustainable networks and what we, as the broadband community, need to aim for in creating the universal broadband that President Obama is championing.
To view my slide deck go to: national-press-club_
2:25
Dr. Kate Williams, University of Illinois is focusing on measuring success. Individual level metrics are only part of the picture-we need to look at GIS mapping in correlation with community level metrics. She also discussed measuring sustainability for the projects for public computing and training or applications through bonding social capital, local leadership and deep outreach. Additionally, projects are more sustainable if they train local leaders and then empower them.
Tags: broadband, community, digital, digital divide, Dr. Kate Williams, infrastructure, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Mark Ansboury, Obama, OneCommunity, stimulus, University of Illinois Posted in Knight Center of Digital Excellence, OneCommunity, Stimulus Package, live blogging | 1 Comment »
Wednesday, May 6th, 2009
Guest viewpoint by Charles Benton, The Benton Foundation

The Benton Foundation is rooted in the notion that communications technology is essential to addressing social issues and challenges. This ideal dates back to our founding by my father, William Benton, a public servant who championed free speech and civil liberties.
Like the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, the Benton Foundation believes that all communities in this nation will benefit greatly when everyone has universal, affordable and robust Internet access. We are gratified to see that our vision is embraced by President Obama and his administration. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) provides significant funds to start the journey toward universal broadband for all Americans.
The ARRA’s Broadband Technology Opportunity Program (BTOP) builds on the first major federal investments specifically for the application of communications technology to addressing community needs. During the Clinton Administration, the National Telecommunications and Information Applications (NTIA) in the U.S. Department of Commerce, administered the Technology Opportunities Program (TOP) to use the newly-accessible Information Highway to, in the words of former Vice President Al Gore, “pave over the digital divide.”
From 1994 to 2005 TOP awarded grants to 606 projects nationwide. Dr. Kate Williams, Assistant Professor at the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library and Information Science, began a serious analysis of the TOP projects in collaboration with NTIA in 2004. She focuses on local communities in the information revolution: how people and organizations adopt and use digital tools, and what sustains that use. Theories of “social capital” are central to Kate’s research. She defines social capital as those resources that are available through social networks.
In my discussions with Kate, I realized that her approach to researching the TOP projects, let alone her findings on what worked and what didn’t, would be invaluable to BTOP. How then, could NTIA benefit from this work?
In comments jointly filed by Benton and the University of Illinois in response to NTIA’s request for information on ARRA’s Broadband Initiatives, we noted the following from Kate’s TOP findings:
1. A digital repository should be established at the onset to enable useful, timely research to inform practice and help guarantee success.
2. The sustainability of broadband use in unserved, underserved, and vulnerable populations depends on mobilizing local social capital (which includes local leaders, local networks, and community members trained in the technology).
We also noted that BTOP research would be enriched if NTIA requires applicants to answer the right questions. We suggested the following:
1. What are the critical resources for sustainability of broadband use in unserved, underserved, and vulnerable communities? What social capital is involved? Is the social capital internal or external to the community?
• Does the project rely on social ties within a community to accomplish its goals rather than ties between communities?
• Does the project identify and train local leaders who can then reach and teach others?
• Does the project provide technology directly to community members themselves rather than to people who serve the community?
2. How will NTIA and BTOP grantees measure how the population is advancing in the use of broadband? The Current Population Survey measures individual and household IT use. Other surveys measure institutional IT use. But to regain international leadership as a digital society, we need community-level IT use data. To start such trend data collection, we need a set of community-level metrics.
• Does the project involve social places to use broadband and related technologies?
• Does the project focus on training and/or applications, or just on building broadband infrastructure? TOP findings indicate that just providing infrastructure or equipment is insufficient for use. It’s important also to know how many subscribers in a given location are signed up for broadband service.
• What are the outcomes for broadband use in communities? BTOP data should be combined with other data sets in order to assess the impact of broadband access on such things as the labor markets, eGovernment, quality of life issues, etc.
As we navigate this exciting and essential journey, we must rely on the best, most nuanced community-level data to help determine the next step in transforming our communications, our work places, our communities and ourselves.
Tags: American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, bandwidth, broadband, Broadband Expansion, Broadband Technology Opportunity Program, Charles Benton, community, digital, digital divide, economy, education, high-speed, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, Kate Williams, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, network, NTIA, Obama, stimulus, Technology Opportunities Program, The Benton Foundation, University of Illinois Posted in Digital news, Knight Center, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, NTIA, Obama notes, OneCommunity, Opinion | No Comments »
Friday, April 10th, 2009
We’ve said it before, and we’ll keep saying it as time approaches to submit proposals for federal stimulus money: Communities that work together on broad-minded proposals will have a big advantage. Organizations that go it alone risk getting lost in the mix.
Collaboration within communities is critical for many reasons, including the credibility it lends to proposals. As they review proposals, government agencies will want to see well-developed strategies that advance large, sustainable goals. This means individual organizations may need to set aside some of their special interests to stay focused on grander-scale local and regional efforts. The question to ask is: How can my organization contribute to a bigger project?
MuniWireless writer Craig Settles went as far as to say that for rural communities, the only option for getting stimulus money is by working together.
In his commentary, “Will Broadband Projects Dodge the Missteps of Municipal Wireless?”, Settles called attention to communities around Heppner, Ore., that are working toward a shared network to improve emergency services. By collaborating, these communities can build a better network for less money while simultaneously planning solutions for similar issues they all face.
If you’re not sure whether you’re heading in the right direction, we at the Knight Center of Digital Excellence will try to help answer your questions.
Tags: American Recovery & Reinvestment Act 2009, broadband, Broadband Expansion, collaboration, community, Craig Settles, digital, economy, Heppner, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, MuniWireless, network, Obama, OneCommunity, Oregon, public safety, rural, rural communities, stimulus, stimulus watch Posted in Digital news, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, OneCommunity, Opinion, Stimulus Package | No Comments »
Wednesday, April 1st, 2009
By Doug Adams
“I believe that America should lead the world in broadband penetration and Internet access. Full broadband penetration can enrich democratic discourse, enhance competition, provide economic growth, and bring significant consumer benefits.”
– President Barack Obama, January, 2008
Our nation’s economy is poised for transformation and broadband can be a key component to the nation’s innovation and growth. As we work on expanding and improving broadband, we can envision the potential impact on our economy by looking at how new technologies have changed our lives thus far.
The entertainment and consumer electronics industries underwent a transformation when broadband’s initial adoption changed the Internet – and the computer – forever.
In 2001, Apple visionary Steve Jobs predicted the computer would evolve to be the “digital hub” of the home – driving applications and electronics that were just emerging.
In coming years, the electronics world boomed as iPods and digital cameras flew off the shelves. This happened in conjunction with broadband’s initial expansion.
Much as computers and other devices have changed the way we live our lives, broadband and the digital applications it enables have already begun to change the way America does business. Digital platforms continue to gain popularity because they open up new choices for consumers. And with these choices come new opportunities for industries to develop new markets and revenue streams.
Consider the Hollywood writers’ strike of 2008. While studio executives initially bemoaned the Internet as an “advertising killer,” this labor dispute was based in large part over how to share online revenue.
Just this month, CBS’ “March Madness on Demand,” an online platform to view NCAA tournament basketball games, is expected to generate over $30 million during the 10-day tournament. That’s 15 to 20 percent more revenue than last year. Online advertising is supplementing, not replacing traditional TV advertising.
So much for the Internet being the death of advertising.
The economic impact of broadband and the Internet doesn’t stop there. Consider Facebook, YouTube, eBay, Amazon and countless other online applications that help drive a significant portion of our nation’s economy.
What’s the next iPod or Amazon? We may never know our full potential if the U.S. fails to make a serious commitment to further increase broadband penetration and speeds.
The fundamental first step is to create the platform for innovation. From there, we can accelerate a process that is already beginning, with initiatives, for example, that enable people to seek medical diagnoses from a doctor through online videoconferencing.
This is why Obama sees broadband as such a vital part of our nation’s recovery. His objective is to take Jobs’ vision to the next level, so that beyond having digital hubs within our homes, we create a digital America.
Jobs understood that America stood at the precipice of broadband’s initial growth. Obama understands it today. Enhanced broadband penetration and speed is key to our nation’s ability to innovate and compete in the global economy.
Jobs once said, “A lot of times, people don’t know what they want until you show it to them.”
And that’s part of our job at the Knight Center of Digital Excellence. We’re here to show people the possibilities – those on the drawing board and those we can’t yet imagine.
Doug Adams oversees public information efforts for the Knight Center of Digital Excellence, serving 26 U.S. communities served. 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.
Tags: advertising, Amazon, Apple, broadband, Broadband Expansion, CBS, community, digital, digital camera, digital divide, digital hub, Doug Adams, eBay, economy, education, Facebook, healthcare, Hollywood, infrastructure, innovation, Internet, iPod, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, March Madness, March Madness on Demand, NCAA, Obama, OneCommunity, online advertising, Steve Jobs, telemedicine, TV advertising, videoconferencing, writer's strike, YouTube Posted in Digital news, Knight Center, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, OneCommunity, Opinion | No Comments »
Friday, March 6th, 2009
On Friday both President Obama and Vice President Biden spoke at police academy graduation ceremonies – Obama in Columbus, Ohio, and Biden in Miami. Both focused on how the stimulus package will benefit both public safety and law enforcement.
What does that mean for the new cadets? More importantly, what does this represent for increased security and safety in our communities?
Project MESA (Arizona) predicts that the impact will be significant as it plans to utilize a cooperative process that develops revolutionary wireless platforms (more…)
Tags: bandwidth, Biden, broadband, Columbus, community, digital, FCC, Fla., Florida, infrastructure, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Miami, NTIA, Obama, Ohio, OneCommunity, police, Project MESA, recovery.gov, rural utilities, safety Posted in Digital news, Knight Center, Obama notes, OneCommunity, Stimulus Package | No Comments »
Thursday, March 5th, 2009
Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) recently introduced the “Advanced Broadband Infrastructure Bond Initiative of 2009.” The bill would amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide an income tax credit to allow a tax credit for investment in qualified advanced broadband infrastructure bonds.
Quick highlights of what the bill does:
• Limits the issuance authority for such bonds in 2009, 2010 and 2011 to $1 billion for state and local government issuers and $10 billion for all other issuers;
• Requires the use of bond proceeds to finance broadband infrastructure projects to provide residential or small business consumers with high-speed access to the Internet;
• Amends the National Telecommunications and Information Administration Organization Act to require the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Department of Commerce to approve requests for qualified advanced broadband infrastructure projects, monitor the implementation of such projects and make determinations regarding increases in the transmission speed requirements of the advanced broadband infrastructure bond program.
At KCoDE, we’ll be keeping track of the progress on our blog. So keep checking.
Read the entire bill.
Tags: Anna Eshoo, broadband, Congress, digital, HR Bill 760, infrastructure, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, National Telecommunications and Information Administration, NTIA, Obama, stimulus, stimulus watch Posted in Digital news, Knight Center, Stimulus Package | No Comments »
Wednesday, March 4th, 2009
If you’re not writing grant proposals for stimulus dollars, you’re leaving money on the table; it’s as simple as that.
Communities across the U.S. stand to lose significant money when it comes to building a broadband infrastructure. There is no national game plan, which means regions must craft their own – and the regions that strike first are likely to win.
Here’s what’s at stake: $7 billion in stimulus funding earmarked for broadband expansion.
And that is not counting other initiatives that could affect broadband projects. Business interests such as Intel, Google and Qwest are planning accordingly. Public interests should do no less.
Partnerships are critical. (more…)
Tags: bandwidth, broadband, digital, grant money, infrastructure, Internet, Knight Center, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Obama, president, recovery.gov, stimulus, utilities Posted in Digital news, Knight Center, Obama notes, OneCommunity, Opinion, Stimulus Package | 2 Comments »
Wednesday, March 4th, 2009
By Scot Rourke
If there is a 21st Century Gold Rush, it’s now. And you really must rush if you want any chance at the nearly $800 billion in federally approved economic stimulus money.
Be sure of this: The most sophisticated communities and organizations have teams of grant writers at work. If you don’t, you need to get in the game quickly or lose your opportunity.
Here is a step-by-step process on what to do:
For simplicity’s sake, let’s focus on the roughly $100 billion in stimulus money set aside for technology-related projects, much of which will be awarded by federal agencies in the form of competitive grants. Examples include $7 billion for broadband. Nearly anyone can apply. Remember the goal is jobs – and jobs fast – and that means you need to have your plans and even your contractors lined up quickly.
Here’s what to do to begin the application process:
1. Go to the federal government’s Web site at www.Recovery.gov. ; you can also go directly to download from here: American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.
2. Don’t be overwhelmed. The language is straightforward enough. (more…)
Tags: bandwidth, broadband, CEO, community, Congress, digital, infrastructure, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Obama, recovery.gov Posted in Digital news, Knight Center, Obama notes, OneCommunity, Opinion, Stimulus Package | 3 Comments »
|
|