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Municipal Broadband: Demystifying Wireless and Fiber-Optic Options

15 Jan 2008

The United States, creator of the Internet, increasingly lags in access to it. In the absence of a national broadband strategy, many communities have invested in broadband infrastructure, especially wireless broadband, to offer broadband choices to their residents. Newspaper headlines trumpeting the death of municipal wireless networks ignore the increasing investments by cities in Wi-Fi systems. At the same time, the wireless focus by others diverts resources and action away from building the necessary long term foundation for high speed information: fiber optic networks. DSL and cable networks cannot offer the speeds required by a city wishing to compete in the digital economy. Business, government, and citizens all need affordable and fast access to information networks. Today's decisions will lay the foundation of telecommunications infrastructure for decades. Fortunately, we already know the solution: wireless solves the mobility problem; fiber solves the speed and capacity problems; and public ownership offers a network built to benefit the community.
government media, telecommunications, and information communication systems local and municipal government muni broadband community fiber network community broadband

Authors

Christopher Mitchell

Date uploaded to Policy Archive
2008-08-15
Pages
12
Policy Archive ID
8635
Published in
United States of America

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