I'll do some reading in that pdf.....but why 1 gigabit?  Why not 100 megabit or 
200 megabit?
Sure, it depends on the number of employees and what they're doing....
I figure you get above that and you pretty much are selling access or you're a 
data center...
I am also from a state that is probably 49 out of 50 in innovation sooooo......

(but we're working to change that!)


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Josh Reynolds 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, March 13, 2016 12:21 AM
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Lack of broadband - impact on economy and decisionmaking


  Okay, quick personal story.

  There's a large area in $town that a certain individual has owned for
  about 15 years or so. It's perfect for several new industrial plants
  or branch offices. The overall economy is kind of stagnant.

  I can think of at least 7 large companies who have inquired about the
  area. They listed 4 things they needed, in no certain order: easy
  highway access, water, electricity, high speed (1Gbps+) internet. It
  took 12 years before water and electricity got there. Now we're
  building fiber to that area. If any of those companies take a second
  look and come back, we're taking about many hundreds of high paying
  new jobs for the area. This will also spur business growth in a dying
  downtown area - as people have jobs and more disposable income, they
  seek to spend it.

  Interesting study here: http://www.ppic.org/content/pubs/report/R_110JKR.pdf

  There also seems to be, on average, a 3% increase in property values
  in areas with "very high speed" (depends on the study) broadband.

  In Kansas City, a new startup-culture was created. Lots of new small
  businesses, many not even technology related. As people come in to
  work and create new businesses they have to eat and find things to do
  as well.

  On Sun, Mar 13, 2016 at 12:09 AM, CBB - Jay Fuller
  <[email protected]> wrote:
  >
  > From Ken:
  >
  >
  > As far as economic growth, gigabit Internet isn't going to magically bring
  > economic growth.  But if you don't have access to basic broadband, you
  > definitely are shut out of part of the economy.  One thing I've seen a lot
  > in my area is the impact of the efficiency requirements of the Affordable
  > Healthcare Act.  Insurance and healthcare companies are moving buildings
  > full of office workers to work from home, in order to cut their overhead
  > costs.  Customers who used to commute 30 miles to the suburbs now need
  > broadband to work from home, and 1M/384K DSL isn't good enough, if they can
  > even get that.  But if they can get reliable 3/1 from a WISP, they still
  > have a job, plus other people out here in the country can get those jobs.
  > And now they have a couple hours they used to spend commuting to spend with
  > their families.  I think this is a real life example of economic impact of
  > broadband, or the flip side, the impact of lack of broadband if you're on
  > the wrong side of the digital divide.
  >
  >
  >
  >
  > I would be very interested to see some kind of report of employment data and
  > what projects have
  > succeeded in "gigabit" markets vs. standard internet markets.  Is there
  > really that much of a difference...
  > Yes, like many of you, I know most people use the internet for netflix
  > (among other things).
  >
  > What else is out there and more importantly, what does gigabit enable?
  >
  >

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