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 ‘The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation’
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.”
Tags: Akron, bandwidth, broadband, Broadband Expansion, community, Connect Akron, Connect Akron Wireless Network, David Lieberth, digital, high-speed, infrastructure, Internet, Internet cafe, KCoDE, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, Lock 3 Park, Mark Ansboury, network, Ohio, OneCommunity, stimulus, The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation Posted in Digital news, Knight Center, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, OneCommunity | 4 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 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.
Tags: Alberto Ibarguen, broadband, Changing Media, digital, digital economy, Free Press, Free Press Changing Media Summit, internet policies, Josh Silver, Mark Ansboury, The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, The Knight Center of Digital Excellence, The Knight Foundation Posted in Knight Center, Knight Center of Digital Excellence, live blogging | No Comments »
|
|