http://www.wispa.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/Jack.JPG

:-p


-----
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com




From: Jack Unger 
Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2010 12:16 PM
To: WISPA General List 
Subject: Re: [WISPA] From Today's WSJ


Sure coverage is "increasing" but that's just a distraction. The issue is that 
the current level of home broadband Internet access is way too low and millions 
of people are deprived of Internet access at home (or in a home-based 
business). The article is nothing more than a thinly-veiled hit piece for the 
telcos. Without saying so, the article argues for keeping millions living in 
the past, without having the benefits of the Internet to improve their lives. 
This is as clear as the nose on my face. (No, a picture is NOT attached) :)

jack



Jeff Broadwick wrote: 
I don't think it ignores that, it is suggesting that the private sector is
in the process of closing that gap, without government "investment" and/or
intervention.

I don't believe that it is arguable that coverage is increasing...that's the
net effect of the whole WISP industry. 


Regards,

Jeff


Jeff Broadwick
ImageStream
800-813-5123 x106     (US/Can)
+1 574-935-8484 x106  (Int'l)

-----Original Message-----
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Jack Unger
Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2010 11:28 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] From Today's WSJ

Sorry but this article (accidentally or intentionally) misses or (more
likely) ignores the point that 24 or more million occupied American
households have no access to broadband. The WSJ is merely a mouthpiece
(especially now that Rupurt Murdoch owns it) for the telcos.

jack


Jeff Broadwick wrote:
  http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703652104574652501608376
552.ht
ml?mod=WSJ_Opinion_AboveLEFTTop



    * REVIEW & OUTLOOK
    * JANUARY 20, 2010

A 'National Broadband Plan'
One more solution in search of a problem.


The Federal Communications Commission recently told Congress that it 
will miss a February deadline for delivering a "national broadband 
plan" and requested a one-month extension. If it keeps missing 
deadlines, nearly everyone in the U.S. might soon have high-speed
    Internet.
  As part of last year's stimulus package, Congress asked the FCC for a 
plan to ensure that everybody in the country has access to broadband. 
That's a worthy goal, but the idea of a government plan is based on a 
false presumption that the spread of broadband is stalled. The reality 
is that broadband adoption continues apace, as does the quality and 
speed of Internet connections.

Between 2000 and 2008, residential broadband subscribers grew to 80 
million from five million, according to a study by Bret Swanson of 
Entropy Economics. Broadband penetration among active Internet users 
at home is 94%, and nearly 99% of U.S. workers connect to the Internet 
with broadband. A typical cable modem today is 10 times faster than a 
decade ago. Wireless bandwidth growth per capita has been no less 
impressive, showing a 500-fold increase since 2000.

Meanwhile, U.S. information and communications technology investment 
in 2008 alone totalled $455 billion, or 22% of all U.S. capital 
investment. Nominal capital investment in telecom between 2000 and 
2008 was more than $3.5 trillion.

Those who favor more government control of the Internet ignore this 
private progress and point to international rankings. According to 
OECD estimates, the U.S. ranks 15th in the world in broadband 
penetration per capita. But because household sizes differ from 
country to country, and the U.S. has relatively large households, the 
per capita figures can be misleading. A better way to gauge wired 
broadband connections is per household, not per person. By that measure
    the U.S. ranks somewhere between 8th and 10th.
  Such comparisons will soon be moot in any case because broadband 
penetration is growing rapidly in all OECD countries. The Technology 
Policy Institute notes that "at the current rates of broadband 
adoption the U.S. is behind the leaders only by a number of months, 
and all wealthy OECD countries will reach a saturation point within the
    next few years."
  Even the Obama Justice Department seems to reject the broadband market 
failure thesis. "In any industry subject to significant technological 
change, it is important that the evaluation of competition be 
forward-looking rather than based on static definitions of products 
and services," said the Antitrust Division in a January 4 filing to 
the FCC. "In the case of broadband services, it's clear that the 
market is shifting generally in the direction of faster speeds and
    additional mobility."
  Justice concludes that while "enacting some form of regulation to 
prevent certain providers from exercising monopoly control may be tempting
    . . .
  care must be taken to avoid stifling the infrastructure investments 
needed to expand broadband access."

No matter, the default position of the Obama Administration is that 
little useful happens without government, so the FCC is busy planning. 
Chairman Julius Genachowski is sympathetic to net neutrality 
regulations that would prevent Internet service providers from using 
differentiated pricing to manage Web traffic. Liberal interest groups 
like Public Knowledge and Harvard's Berkman Center for the Internet 
and Society are urging the agency to reinstitute "open access" 
mandates that would force cable operators and phone companies to share 
their infrastructure with rivals at government-set prices.

The irony is that the private investment and innovation of recent 
years have occurred in the wake of the FCC rolling back similar rules 
that held back telecom in the 1990s. Consumers continue to have access 
to more and more broadband services, while Google, YouTube, iTunes, 
Facebook and Netflix originated in the U.S.

Doesn't the Obama Administration have enough to do than mess with a 
part of the U.S. economy that is working well?







Regards,

Jeff


Jeff Broadwick
Sales Manager, ImageStream
800-813-5123 x106     (US/Can)
+1 574-935-8484 x106  (Int'l)
+1 574-935-8488       (Fax) 



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--
Jack Unger - President, Ask-Wi.Com, Inc.
Network Design - Technical Writing - Technical Training Serving the
Broadband Wireless, Networking and Telecom Communities Since 1993
www.ask-wi.com  818-227-4220  jun...@ask-wi.com






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-- 
Jack Unger - President, Ask-Wi.Com, Inc.
Network Design - Technical Writing - Technical Training
Serving the Broadband Wireless, Networking and Telecom Communities Since 1993
www.ask-wi.com  818-227-4220  jun...@ask-wi.com





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