[WISPA] Rural Broadband Remains Spotty

2006-09-21 Thread Dawn DiPietro

 Rural Broadband Remains Spotty
› › › Broadband

By Enid Burns | May 8, 2006

Several factors, including geography and population density, account for 
the 71 percent of American households that either dial-up or don't 
access the Web from home. A telecommunications report to congressional 
committees from the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) details 
barriers to high-speed Internet adoption.


Twenty-eight percent of American households subscribed to broadband 
service in 2005, about 30 million homes. Of the remaining 71 percent of 
households, 30 percent subscribe to dial-up Internet service, and 41 
percent have no home access. Among broadband subscribers, distribution 
between cable modem and DSL was almost evenly split. DSL is less likely 
to serve rural residents; service is only available within a three-mile 
radius of a central office.


Certain household factors make residents more or less likely to 
subscribe to broadband services. Households with high incomes are 39 
percent more likely to subscribe to broadband than lower-income 
households. College-educated heads of households are 12 percent more 
likely to adopt broadband than households headed by someone without a 
college degree.


While price remains a barrier to adoption, the cost of broadband 
services has declined over time. Tax is a barrier to subscribing when it 
equals 10 percent, however when tax amounts to only 5 percent of the 
rate it doesn't affect subscription rates among rural residents and 
lower-income households.


Broadband providers are available for all but 1 percent of the country's 
population. Ninety-nine percent of Americans live in 95 percent of the 
Zip Codes that have at least one ISP offering broadband access. While it 
appears companies continue to build out infrastructure for broadband 
access, geography and population density deter providers from further 
deployment.


Federal programs like the Universal Service Fund (USF) and the 
Department of Agriculture's Rural Utilities Service (RUS) have increased 
the uptake of broadband service in rural areas.


Due to rugged terrain, it's more expensive to deploy land-based 
broadband in rural areas. The same areas are less populated and return 
smaller revenues. Broadband providers are more likely to enter a 
particular market if there's no existing competition, though the land 
grab appears to be over. By contrast, incumbent telecom and cable 
providers are likely to roll out or enhance services in markets with new 
competition.


The GAO conducts data collection using Form 477, a government-mandated 
survey of telecommunications competition and deployment of broadband 
services. At a Zip Code level, the FCC collects data based on where 
subscribers are served, not where providers have deployed broadband 
infrastructure for the report.


http://www.clickz.com/showPage.html?page=3604581

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Re: [WISPA] Rural Broadband Remains Spotty

2006-05-09 Thread Marlon K. Schafer (509) 982-2181
Please notice that at the bottom it specifies another reason why the 477 is 
so important!


laters,
Marlon
(509) 982-2181   Equipment sales
(408) 907-6910 (Vonage)Consulting services
42846865 (icq)And I run my own wisp!
64.146.146.12 (net meeting)
www.odessaoffice.com/wireless
www.odessaoffice.com/marlon/cam



- Original Message - 
From: "Dawn DiPietro" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "WISPA General List" ; 


Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2006 3:48 AM
Subject: [WISPA] Rural Broadband Remains Spotty



All,

This article seems to sum it up pretty well.

Regards,
Dawn DiPietro

Rural Broadband Remains Spotty
› › › Broadband

By Enid Burns | May 8, 2006

Several factors, including geography and population density, account for 
the 71 percent of American households that either dial-up or don't access 
the Web from home. A telecommunications report to congressional committees 
from the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) details barriers to 
high-speed Internet adoption.


Twenty-eight percent of American households subscribed to broadband 
service in 2005, about 30 million homes. Of the remaining 71 percent of 
households, 30 percent subscribe to dial-up Internet service, and 41 
percent have no home access. Among broadband subscribers, distribution 
between cable modem and DSL was almost evenly split. DSL is less likely to 
serve rural residents; service is only available within a three-mile 
radius of a central office.


Certain household factors make residents more or less likely to subscribe 
to broadband services. Households with high incomes are 39 percent more 
likely to subscribe to broadband than lower-income households. 
College-educated heads of households are 12 percent more likely to adopt 
broadband than households headed by someone without a college degree.


While price remains a barrier to adoption, the cost of broadband services 
has declined over time. Tax is a barrier to subscribing when it equals 10 
percent, however when tax amounts to only 5 percent of the rate it doesn't 
affect subscription rates among rural residents and lower-income 
households.


Broadband providers are available for all but 1 percent of the country's 
population. Ninety-nine percent of Americans live in 95 percent of the Zip 
Codes that have at least one ISP offering broadband access. While it 
appears companies continue to build out infrastructure for broadband 
access, geography and population density deter providers from further 
deployment.


Federal programs like the Universal Service Fund (USF) and the Department 
of Agriculture's Rural Utilities Service (RUS) have increased the uptake 
of broadband service in rural areas.


Due to rugged terrain, it's more expensive to deploy land-based broadband 
in rural areas. The same areas are less populated and return smaller 
revenues. Broadband providers are more likely to enter a particular market 
if there's no existing competition, though the land grab appears to be 
over. By contrast, incumbent telecom and cable providers are likely to 
roll out or enhance services in markets with new competition.


The GAO conducts data collection using Form 477, a government-mandated 
survey of telecommunications competition and deployment of broadband 
services. At a Zip Code level, the FCC collects data based on where 
subscribers are served, not where providers have deployed broadband 
infrastructure for the report.



http://www.clickz.com/stats/sectors/broadband/article.php/3604581
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[WISPA] Rural Broadband Remains Spotty

2006-05-09 Thread Dawn DiPietro

All,

This article seems to sum it up pretty well.

Regards,
Dawn DiPietro

Rural Broadband Remains Spotty
› › › Broadband

By Enid Burns | May 8, 2006

Several factors, including geography and population density, account for 
the 71 percent of American households that either dial-up or don't 
access the Web from home. A telecommunications report to congressional 
committees from the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) details 
barriers to high-speed Internet adoption.


Twenty-eight percent of American households subscribed to broadband 
service in 2005, about 30 million homes. Of the remaining 71 percent of 
households, 30 percent subscribe to dial-up Internet service, and 41 
percent have no home access. Among broadband subscribers, distribution 
between cable modem and DSL was almost evenly split. DSL is less likely 
to serve rural residents; service is only available within a three-mile 
radius of a central office.


Certain household factors make residents more or less likely to 
subscribe to broadband services. Households with high incomes are 39 
percent more likely to subscribe to broadband than lower-income 
households. College-educated heads of households are 12 percent more 
likely to adopt broadband than households headed by someone without a 
college degree.


While price remains a barrier to adoption, the cost of broadband 
services has declined over time. Tax is a barrier to subscribing when it 
equals 10 percent, however when tax amounts to only 5 percent of the 
rate it doesn't affect subscription rates among rural residents and 
lower-income households.


Broadband providers are available for all but 1 percent of the country's 
population. Ninety-nine percent of Americans live in 95 percent of the 
Zip Codes that have at least one ISP offering broadband access. While it 
appears companies continue to build out infrastructure for broadband 
access, geography and population density deter providers from further 
deployment.


Federal programs like the Universal Service Fund (USF) and the 
Department of Agriculture's Rural Utilities Service (RUS) have increased 
the uptake of broadband service in rural areas.


Due to rugged terrain, it's more expensive to deploy land-based 
broadband in rural areas. The same areas are less populated and return 
smaller revenues. Broadband providers are more likely to enter a 
particular market if there's no existing competition, though the land 
grab appears to be over. By contrast, incumbent telecom and cable 
providers are likely to roll out or enhance services in markets with new 
competition.


The GAO conducts data collection using Form 477, a government-mandated 
survey of telecommunications competition and deployment of broadband 
services. At a Zip Code level, the FCC collects data based on where 
subscribers are served, not where providers have deployed broadband 
infrastructure for the report.



http://www.clickz.com/stats/sectors/broadband/article.php/3604581
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