Fred, I picked Aroostook, Washington, and Lincoln counties for a 4g wireless with backhaul infrastructure proposal. A wireline infrastructure proposal for these counties (BIP) would, for some arbitrary amount of capital expense, serve some of the population in towns, but leave the non-in-town populations with no change in infrastructure. I thought about adding a western (mountainous) county to the mix, but for a proof-of-concept those three are representative of most of rural Maine. All qualify as "rural remote", being more than 50 miles from a city of 20,000, or a suburban area of 50,000 (USDA RUS definition of "rural remote"). Not many of either of those in Maine anyway. As I wrote yesterday, "triple play" simply hasn't sold "broadband" (source: USDA stats and Maine ISP experience), therefore uptake and post-stimulus subscriber retention are wicked important. The BTOP vehicle provides two additional non-infrastructure grant opportunities, for "public computer centers" and for "sustainable broadband adoption", so as I wrote those I attempted to make best use of link properties and to-the-centers (not home, or curb) and whatever "sustainable" might mean and the available statutory purposes and therefore services above link to propose something innovative. My guess (its in my proposal so I guess its my proposal writing money bet) is that "rural broadband" means something other than IPv4 DHCP provisioned, fat but flaky pipes allowing access to asymmetric content. That works in the suburban and urban markets, but its failed, according to the USDA and my Maine ISP competitors, in rural USA and Maine. While I share (other hat, we signed our first zone last year and our second zone will be signed this year) the "suggesting special favors for deployment of DNSSEC" discussion with myself, I think this misses the gambled mandatory-to-implement-feature (see "gamble", above) of locality. {Packet|Connection} users in rural areas have some requirement more pressing than parity of access to the service model that meets the requirements of non-rural {Packet|Connection} users. Eric Fred Baker wrote:
If it's about stimulus money, I'm in favor of saying that broadband implies fiber to the home. That would provide all sorts of stimuli to the economy - infrastructure, equipment sales, jobs digging ditches, and so on. I could pretty quickly argue myself into suggesting special favors for deployment of DNSSEC, multicast, and IPv6. As in, use the stimulus money to propel a leap forward, not just waste it.
On Aug 26, 2009, at 9:44 AM, Carlos Alcantar wrote:
I think the big push to get the fcc to define broadband is highly based on the rus/ntia setting definitions of what broadband is. If any anyone has been fallowing the rus/ntia they are the one handing out all the stimulus infrastructure grant loan money. So there are a lot of political reasons to make the definition of broadband a bit slower than one would think. I guess it doesn't hurt that the larger lec's with the older infrastructure are shelling out the money to lobby to make sure the definition stays as low as can be. They don't want to see the gov funding there competition. Just my 2 cents.
-carlos
-----Original Message----- From: Ted Fischer [mailto:ted@fred.net] Sent: Wednesday, August 26, 2009 8:50 AM To: nanog@nanog.org Subject: Re: FCCs RFC for the Definition of Broadband
Paul Timmins wrote:
Fred Baker wrote:
On Aug 24, 2009, at 9:17 AM, Luke Marrott wrote:
What are your thoughts on what the definition of Broadband should be
going forward? I would assume this will be the standard definition for a number of years to come.
Historically, narrowband was circuit switched (ISDN etc) and broadband was packet switched. Narrowband was therefore tied to the digital signaling hierarchy and was in some way a multiple of 64 KBPS. As the
term was used then, broadband delivery options of course included virtual circuits bearing packets, like Frame Relay and ATM. of or relating to or being a communications network in which the bandwidth can be divided and shared by multiple simultaneous signals (as for voice or data or video)
That's my humble opinion. Let them use a new term, like "High Speed Internet".
Seconded