Julius Genachowski, chairman of the US’ Federal Communications Commission (FCC), called for at least one gigabit-speed broadband community in all 50 US states by 2015 during remarks at the US Conference of Mayors Winter Meeting on 18 January.
Genachowski said that establishing gigabit communities nationwide would accelerate the creation of a critical mass of markets and innovation hubs with ultra-fast Internet speeds and challenged broadband providers and state and municipal community leaders to come together to meet what the FCC is calling the “Gigabit City Challenge”.
Speeds of 1Gbps are approximately 100 times faster than the average fixed high-speed Internet connection. At gigabit speeds, connections can handle multiple streams of large-format, high-definition content like online video calls, movies and immersive educational experiences.
Today, approximately 42 communities in 14 states are served by ultra-high-speed fibre Internet providers, according to the Fibre To The Home Council.
At the meeting, Genachowski proposed working jointly with the US Conference of Mayors on the best-practices clearinghouse effort.
“American economic history teaches a clear lesson about infrastructure. If we build it, innovation will come,” Genachowski said in a statement. “The US needs a critical mass of gigabit communities nationwide so that innovators can develop next-generation applications and services that will drive economic growth and global competitiveness.”
The FCC also announced plans to hold workshops on gigabit communities. The workshops will convene leaders from the gigabit community ecosystem – including broadband providers, and state and municipal leaders – to evaluate barriers, increase incentives, and lower the costs of speeding gigabit network deployment.
In Kansas City, the Google Fibre initiative is bringing gigabit service to residential consumers, while in Chattanooga, Tennessee, a local utility deployed a fiber network to 170,000 homes, and the resulting high-speed broadband infrastructure helped companies like Volkswagen and Amazon create more than 3,700 new jobs over the past three years.
With the development of high-speed broadband networks, the FCC said the networks would cease to be hurdles to applications, so it no longer matters whether medical data, high-definition video, or online services are in the same building or miles away across the state.
Gigabit communities can also benefit from tens of thousands of miles of critical “middle mile” fiber infrastructure funded throughout the country by the Broadband Technology Opportunities Programme run by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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