Showing posts with label fiber optic network. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fiber optic network. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

There's nothing on the city council's Thursday agenda. Imagine if they were talking about fiber optic, since City Hall won't.

Photo credit

And no, not just at an upscale apartment complex, but in the sense of infrastructure.

You know ... economic development.

Louisville has an innovation chief. Jeff Gahan has a media company. Can someone let him know that those propaganda videos travel faster by fiber optic?

‘New Currency’: Louisville Innovation Chief On Why Fiber Internet Matters, by Jacob Ryan (WFPL)

What type of economic development could this spark?

Ted Smith: Increasingly, when companies are looking at locating here, they are asking “well, tell me about your city and do you have the stuff I’m looking for.” The good news about Louisville is we’ve always been able to answer the question about cultural amenities, a great public media station, all these kinds of things. But new to the list is “tell me about your Internet pricing, are you a fiber city.” That’s new, it’s new currency. Nobody should underestimate the importance of all the items on the list, and there are usually a lot of items on the list. When people talk about infrastructure and how infrastructure drives economies, this is a type of infrastructure.

Friday, September 25, 2015

Opportunity costs and fiber optic communications: A closer look at Jeff Gahan's luxurious incomprehension.

Opportunity cost is defined as “the loss of potential gain from other alternatives when one alternative is chosen.”

During last night’s League of Women Voters “debate” at Estadio Azteca, I proposed that questioning the price of Jeff Gahan’s nice shiny capital project objects, while necessary and to be encouraged, doesn’t go far enough.

To be succinct, $20 million in TIF bonding for parks improvements not only makes hash of any sensible definition of economic development, but it also represents the absence of potential gain from other projects.

Down the road, as we continue to pay debt service (including interest) on Gahan’s bonded spending spree, and as yearly maintenance costs for these baubles escalate over time, what will we have lost by not pursuing infrastructure needs, as opposed to bread-and-circuses wants?

My example of urgent need? Fiber optic communication. Here's an overview.

A November 2010 report by the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) found that the Internet plays an integral role in helping small businesses achieve their strategic goals, improve competitiveness and efficiency, and interact with customers and vendors.

Respondents to SBA’s survey generally agreed that high-speed Internet access is “as essential to my business as other services such as water, sewer, or electricity.”

A more recent report from Connected Nation also shows that broadband connectivity is an increasingly essential component for business growth in the United States.

It states that over four million U.S. firms have web sites, including more than two million businesses with fewer than five employees, and that broadband-connected businesses report annual median sales revenues approximately $300,000 higher than revenues for businesses without broadband.

With Louisville partnering to explore Google Fiber, and as a fiber optic trunk line is being installed through Jeffersonville (estimated completion is 2016), it's easy to see how quickly New Albany could fall completely off the map of modernity.

I propose we call this preferred premature obsolescence "The Indatus Effect."

At a time when cities like Chattanooga are deploying fiber optic to shed their smokestack images, New Albany's mayor insists that a water park, not high tech jobs, constitute economic development.

But it gets far worse. In his rebuttal to these comments, Mayor Gahan expressed indignation at the suggestion that New Albany is behind the fiber optic times.

To paraphrase:

We're making sure the heavily subsidized luxury apartments for millennials has high speed internet. 

And the remainder of the city? I suppose it can do with dial-up, given that so much of the people live in poverty, anyway -- but don't mention that to a Democrat. They're not dealing with cognitive dissonance very well at the present time.

Let's turn to an actual millennial for a rebuttal of our own.

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My name is Matthew McDonald. I’ve been a resident of New Albany Indiana all 31 years of my life. It is a place I proudly call my home, and am proud to have grown up in. This year I became a first time home owner and bought a beautiful Sears home, one of only a few in New Albany.

I’ve been proud of some of the progress we’ve made in revitalizing our downtown and in making it a better place.

However, even with said progress, we are always seemingly a step behind our neighbors in Jeffersonville. We have yet to fully embrace Speck’s downtown two-way street proposals, which would make our downtown more livable, and slow down traffic incurred by the tolled bridges.

But besides this major issue, I see another issue which will put us at a major disadvantage with our neighbors in Jeffersonville and Louisville.

As we all know, Louisville has made a major announcement that the city is working with Google to bring Fiber to Louisville, offering speeds 100 times faster than the national broadband average.

There was much excitement among many for the benefits it will bring. It will make Louisville more attractive to high tech businesses and offer residents a better choice than Time Warner and AT&T Uverse. It will also force these companies to lower their prices and increase speeds to compete. Many of my friends were excited, but the resounding question was “Will New Albany get Google Fiber?”

While we are considered part of the Louisville Metropolitan Area and receive the same broadband providers, I find this possibility to be remote, meaning we will receive none of the benefits enjoyed by our neighbors.

Once again we’ll be behind, but it doesn’t have to be this way. I want to know from whomever is running for Mayor and those who are running for city council seats: Will you do what it takes to bring Fiber to this city?

We cannot allow ourselves to lose the next Indatus. This means we need a city government to work with the Mayor of Louisville and Google to find a path to making this happen, even if that includes paying for some the construction fees to make it possible. Nothing should be off the table.

As I write today I want a declaration of position from all candidates running for Mayor or city government seats. This city is important to me and I want to see it invest in our future because I’m invested in it.

I can tell you some are willing to leave this city because of these disadvantages, many of whom live here and work and Louisville. In fact, the previous owner of my home sold the house for that very reason. He didn’t want to deal with the traffic from the tolled bridges.

I also work in Louisville, but stand firm in living here, though not the same can be said of everyone else.

We can and should mitigate these disadvantages. Don’t leave this city behind while our neighbors move forward.

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This posting serves as my declaration. I asked a friend with experience in high tech to provide a summary.

Jeff, are you still reading?

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New Albany was the richest city in Indiana and Kentucky in the 1870s because of innovation - and our current sad condition is due to a failure to keep up. Other cities have time and again jumped us, using the same march of innovation as the driver of change.

New Albany saw the invention of plate glass (Star Glass Co) and business boomed. When natural gas was found in great quantity near Chicago, our plate glass business withered and fortunes fell.

New Albany had the largest woolen mill in America (If not the world) and again, the owners didn't keep up with greater mechanization, and innovation decimated that business as well.

Recently, a lack of reinvestment in the veneer business (more efficient plants, robotics) has seen New Albany's 100+ year veneer business start to die. The irony is China imports the raw veneer logs from Indiana and the midwest, ships it overseas, converts it to finish veneer and faced sheet plywood and ships it back! Even with the great expense of shipping two ways, the Chinese investment in modern infrastructure is killing New Albany's veneer business. Again, New Albany's leaders just sit on their hands and watch another industry fail.

And so it is with the stunning lack of foresight, planning and lack of effort to bring fiber optic trunk lines to New Albany and Floyd County.

It's the current equivalent of not stringing electrical lines and doubling down on whale oil since "that's the way everyone's always done it."

Kansas City, Chattanooga, Huntsville - these cities are booming, attracting high paying jobs that don't pollute, growing their tax base and they will thrive while New Albany seems to be doomed to watch the future pass the city by. 

Who's trying to tie New Albany in with Louisville's current effort to have Google Fiber installed? When Clarksville and Jeff hook into the Louisville loop, New Albany will literally be completely shut out.

Edwin Hubble taught at New Albany High School - we have a storied history of technology we could build upon, but most here seem content to milk the market instead of grow the market.

The positive impact of broadband technologies on economic growth and small business creation is clear.

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Cheer up, folks. After all, the water park opens again next June.

Monday, June 15, 2015

NAC Reader Comments 3: On Chattanooga's fiber optic internet system.


NAC reader W read our post, On Helsinki and the importance of internet infrastructure, and offered a wonderful counter-example much closer to home.

Imagine a city that provides EVERY home and business with one GIGABIT PER SECOND fiber optic internet access.

That city is Chattanooga, Tennessee. They have already built the system:
http://chattanoogagig.com
The city built the system on it's own, offering iInternet service 200 times faster than the puny "service" offered by Time Warner. 10 times faster than the US FCC Broadband initiative set for 2025.

Chattanooga is a city with a population of just 167,000 people (40% smaller than Louisville) and they are actively seeking business investment, relocation and growth.

Some town around here will do this. That town will win. Other towns will get to the party late, if at all.

Monday, April 13, 2015

Jasper goes fiber optic, while in New Albany, there's a sale on Re-Elect Gahan dog sweaters.


Jasper gets fiber optics.

We get a dog park ... and the dogs get personalized training gear, paid from the re-election fund filled with donations from the folks with the contract to build the dog park.

Entire southern Indiana city to have gigabit network (Associated Press)

JASPER, Ind. -- A telecommunications company will wire every home and business in a southern Indiana city with fiber-optic lines that will provide Internet service so fast that a two-hour high-definition movie can be downloaded in less than a minute, officials said Thursday.

Smithville Telecom's wiring of Jasper, a community of some 15,000 people about 40 miles northeast of Evansville, will take about three years to complete ...

 ... (Mayor Terry) Seitz said the city's decision to leverage fiber service for municipal departments into "a complete extension of fiber throughout the community will bring state-of-the-art communications capabilities."

"As technology becomes more immersed into our society I believe what we are beginning today will enable us to accomplish things beyond our wildest imagination in the future," he said.

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

No, Mayor Gahan, Indatus is not one of the "indie" bands playing at Bicentennial Park this summer.

Contributed by a friend, who is absolutely on target.

On Thursday, President Obama will visit a business that should could have stayed in New Albany if New Albany had a plan to install fiber optic and infrastructure support for tech savvy companies.

Indatus added 100 new jobs to their staff when they moved from New Albany - good paying jobs.

We'll get a pool not yet paid for, (although) it may be paid for with higher taxes levied on a shrinking population in a decade or two ...

In the mean time, Obama will visit, inspect and praise a high tech business in Louisville that could have easily stayed in New Albany if there had been a proactive plan to retain, attract and support the kinds of jobs that build a city up.

Our city's plan? Maintain a decaying, declining status quo.

Friday, June 20, 2014

Fiber optic, fiber schmoptic! We've got the Come to Rotary Dial City Initiative 2014!


Boy oh boy, the city of New Albany listens!

And what elderly Democratic Party voters are telling us is that we don't need no stinking fiber optic network just to build pallets at J & J!

Who needs fiber optic, anyway? We have all these old phones stacked up in the back room down at the Street Department!

There's just one little problem, so if anyone remembers how often you have to change those little cassettes in the answering machine, please let us know!

Just drop a note in the mailbox! It'll get right to us, because we have one of those cool pneumatic tubes like the one at the White House back when we were kids!

Two companies could bring fiber Internet to Louisville homes, by Chris Otts (WDRB)

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) -- A British company is considering building a fiber-optic network that would provide super-fast Internet connections throughout the old City of Louisville, according to a proposed franchise agreement on file with the Metro Council.