by mguhlin

DiigoNotes - Mobile Broadband

EdTech

http://images.dailymobile.se/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/mobile_broadband_on_the_beach.jpg
Source: http://images.dailymobile.se/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/mobile\_broadband\_on\_the\_beach.jpg

  • Chairman Genachowski’s Remarks, “Mobile Broadband: A 21st Century Plan for U.S. Competitiveness, Innovation and Job Creation” at the New America Foundation.
    Word | Acrobat

    Prepared Remarks of  
    Chairman Julius Genachowski  
    Federal Communications Commission  
    New America Foundation  
    Washington, D.C.  
    February 24, 2010

    -

    **"Mobile Broadband:  
    A 21st Century Plan for U.S. Competitiveness, Innovation and Job  
    Creation"**

    -

    The challenge is:  we are lagging behind when it comes to broadband.

    -

    Multiple studies have the U.S. ranked outside the top 10 when it comes  
    to broadband penetration and speed. While some people take exception  
    with those studies, few would suggest that we are leading the world in  
    broadband, or are even as close as we should be.

    -

    the rest of the world is not sitting around waiting for us to catch up.

    -

    Consider a study that Intel CEO Paul Ottelini described yesterday.  The  
    study ranked the U.S. 6th in the world in innovative competitiveness,  
    and 40th out of the 40 countries ranked in “the rate of change in  
    innovative capacity.”

    -

    The first of those rankings is enough of a concern.  That last-place  
    statistic is the canary in the coal mine.

    -

    The costs of our failure to lead are high.

    -

    As IBM CEO Sam Palmisano recently put it, “Without pervasive broadband,  
    our country will not be prepared for a new world that is increasingly  
    built on the fusion of the physical and the digital.”

    -

    For U.S. businesses to lead across the globe and for innovation to  
    flourish at home, we need to invest in the infrastructure of the  
    future: broadband.  
      
    We need robust and open broadband, flourishing with applications and  
    services that we can only begin to imagine.

    -

    It would be like having the technology for great electric cars, but  
    terrible roads.

    -

    When it comes to mobile broadband, our goal is clear:  To benefit all  
    Americans and promote our global competitiveness, the U.S. must have  
    the fastest, most robust, and most extensive mobile broadband networks,  
    and the most innovative mobile broadband marketplace in the world.

    -

    Breakthrough new devices that put the power of a “PC-in-your-pocket,”  
    combined with billions in network investments have liberated broadband  
     from the desktop and made it possible to imagine a world where the  
    Internet is available to anyone, anywhere, anytime.

    -

    And some of America’s greatest innovators have clearly been working  
    overtime to seize the opportunity, as the iPad and the Kindle attest.

    -

    Jobs in the mobile network economy – jobs building out and managing  
    extensive mobile broadband networks.  
      
    And jobs in the mobile apps economy.  According to Gartner research,  
    $4.2 billion in mobile applications were sold last year – up from  
    essentially zero just a couple of years ago.  The number of apps has  
    crossed 150,000.

    -

    Last week, a New York Times article described an Arizona school  
    district that installed Wi-Fi on one if its school buses. The bus was  
    instantly transformed into a rolling study hall. And if anyone ever  
    doubts the power of mobile broadband tell them this:  the driver says  
    that bus of high school kids is now quiet.

    -

    Mobile broadband can be about healthcare.  
      
    Mobile medicine takes remote monitoring to a new level. A patient’s  
    heart rhythm can be monitored continuously, regardless of her  
    whereabouts, and diabetics can receive continuous, flexible insulin  
    delivery through real-time glucose monitoring sensors that transmit  
    date to wearable insulin pumps.

    -

    Mobile broadband can be about energy.  
      
    With mobile broadband, consumers and businesses can utilize Smart  
    Grid-enabled information services.  A whole new world of “energy apps”  
    can adjust lights, heating, and cooling from a smartphone or netbook,  
    saving electricity, saving our environment, and saving money to boot.

    -

    Mobile broadband can be about public safety.  
      
    With mobile broadband, EMTs can beam images of a patient wirelessly  
     from the road so that emergency room doctors can review them while the  
    patient is in transit. First responders can also access a patient’s  
    medical records almost instantaneously when they arrive on the scene.

    -

    Mobile broadband can about 21st century government and enhanced civic  
    engagement.

    -

    During the recent snowstorm, Howard County, Maryland equipped all 120  
    of its snow plows with GPS receivers. A website displayed the trucks’  
    positions and the status of county streets, and county residents could  
    see which streets had been plowed, salted or sanded. Families who lost  
    power used their smartphones as a lifeline, coordinating cleanup  
    efforts.

    -

    Spectrum – our airwaves – really is the oxygen of mobile broadband  
    service. Without sufficient spectrum, we will starve mobile broadband  
    of the nourishment it needs to thrive as a platform for innovation, job  
    creation and economic growth.

    -

    America is facing a looming spectrum crunch.

    -

    “Without more spectrum, America’s global  
    leadership in innovation and technology is threatened.”

    -

    Mobile data usage is not just growing, it’s exploding.  
      
    AT&T reports that its mobile data traffic is up 5,000% over the past  
    three years.

    -

    According to Cisco, North American wireless networks carried 17  
    petabytes per month in 2009. By 2014, they are projected to carry 740  
    petabytes per month.

    -

    Many homes are technically passed by mobile broadband networks, but  
    still cannot get a clear signal inside their home.  And a mobile divide  
    is an increasingly important part of the digital divide. In Alaska, for  
    example, 23% of its population doesn’t have access to 3G mobile  
    broadband.  In West Virginia, at least 29% of its population lacks  
    coverage.  We also see disproportionately low adoption rates among  
    certain populations, such as persons with disabilities.

    -

    The National Broadband Plan will chart a clear path forward. And if we  
    do not seize the moment, I fear for the opportunity we will have lost.

    -

    When you get your chance, you better make it count, because you don’t  
    know when, or if, you’ll get another shot.

    -

    If we get it right, broadband will be an enduring engine for creating  
    jobs and growing our economy, for spreading knowledge and enhancing  
    civic engagement, for advancing a healthier, sustainable way of life.  
    This is our moment. Let’s seize it.

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