Nerd Alert: June 7, 2018

In Membership, Nerd Alert - On Demand by Zoe J2 Comments

Kim Horcher & B. Dave Walters. New Wreck-It Ralph 2 Trailer ; Can The Original Teen Titans Animated Show Be Revived? ;  Apple’s new USB Restricted Mode, D&D Stream of Many Eyes ; What makes a truly excellent Dungeon Master? ; Millions of Americans don’t have broadband access ; Bathroom surveillance in Indian college ; Doom Patrol’s mature tone ; Kelly Marie Tran harrased on Instagram.

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  1. This article will be helpful on the issue of broadband access
    https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2018/01/a-quarter-of-urban-americans-dont-have-broadband-access-here-s-why/

    The chief barriers to connectivity are quality of internet and affordability. A lack of IT literacy also poses a concern.

    That is according to a report by IHS Markit and the Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA), which identified what percentage of people from urban areas in eight countries lacked access to broadband.

    The report also analyzed connectivity in five cities, including in London where just 7%, or 625,000 of almost 8.8 million residents, are without broadband.

    In New York, the most densely populated city in the US and home to over 8.5 million people, roughly 1.6 million residents lack broadband connectivity, as the table below demonstrates.
    Image: IHS Markit and the Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA)

    City connections

    To tackle this, New York is focusing on providing people with IT and technology skills, as well as providing improved internet access throughout the city.

    For example, the OneNYC initiative, launched by mayor Bill de Blasio in 2015, aims to provide every resident and business in New York with access to adequate and affordable broadband by 2025.

    Last year, the project helped provide free Wi-Fi to around 3,500 residents, and offered dedicated support for senior citizens as well as for young people and their families.

    Another project launched by the de Blasio administration, called LinkNYC, included repurposing New York’s payphone infrastructure with free Wi-Fi. According to LinkNYC, at least 7,500 payphone kiosks will be installed in the city by 2025, providing superfast broadband for residents.

    Closing the digital divide

    The report also highlights the digital divide among those from rural areas, where the average proportion of unconnected people across the eight nations analyzed is 44%.

    In addition to lower rates of connectivity, rural populations often have to contend with less reliable and slower internet than those living in towns and cities.

    In the US alone, well over 16 million residents from rural areas lack broadband, which is equivalent to 28% of the rural population, as the table below highlights.
    Image: IHS Markit and the Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA)

    Social change organization Connect Americans Now (CAN) is trying to tackle this issue, promising to bring reliable and affordable broadband to all Americans living in rural areas by 2022.

    According to CAN, the most effective way to improve connectivity is via a combination of wired and wireless technologies, and by leveraging a range of bandwidths, such as the 700 MHz frequency range. The group claims this would enable wireless signals to travel over hills and through buildings and trees.

    Challenges in rural America, however, are far less pronounced than in other nations, particularly in India where 87% of the rural population lacks broadband access.

    Fortunately for its citizens, India has developed plans at a country-wide level to expand digitization and develop “smart cities”.

    Its Smart Cities Mission and Challenge project includes retrofitting and redeveloping existing areas to improve communications infrastructure and broadband connectivity.

    However, it is the UK and Germany that lead the charge in terms of rural connectivity. Almost 90% of residents in rural Britain have access to broadband, while in Germany around 82% of the rural population is connected.
    Image: IHS Markit and the Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA)
    Have you read?

    These are the most (and least) expensive countries for broadband
    The plan to get 100 million more Indians online by 2018
    Space could be the final frontier for the world’s digital divide

    To have your say on this topic, submit a question to be answered at Davos by a global leader.
    Share

    Written by

    Rob Smith, Formative Content

    The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.
    Subscribe for updates

    The chief barriers to connectivity are quality of internet and affordability. A lack of IT literacy also poses a concern.

    That is according to a report by IHS Markit and the Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA), which identified what percentage of people from urban areas in eight countries lacked access to broadband.

    The report also analyzed connectivity in five cities, including in London where just 7%, or 625,000 of almost 8.8 million residents, are without broadband.

    In New York, the most densely populated city in the US and home to over 8.5 million people, roughly 1.6 million residents lack broadband connectivity, as the table below demonstrates.
    Image: IHS Markit and the Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA)

    City connections

    To tackle this, New York is focusing on providing people with IT and technology skills, as well as providing improved internet access throughout the city.

    For example, the OneNYC initiative, launched by mayor Bill de Blasio in 2015, aims to provide every resident and business in New York with access to adequate and affordable broadband by 2025.

    Last year, the project helped provide free Wi-Fi to around 3,500 residents, and offered dedicated support for senior citizens as well as for young people and their families.

    Another project launched by the de Blasio administration, called LinkNYC, included repurposing New York’s payphone infrastructure with free Wi-Fi. According to LinkNYC, at least 7,500 payphone kiosks will be installed in the city by 2025, providing superfast broadband for residents.

    Closing the digital divide

    The report also highlights the digital divide among those from rural areas, where the average proportion of unconnected people across the eight nations analyzed is 44%.

    In addition to lower rates of connectivity, rural populations often have to contend with less reliable and slower internet than those living in towns and cities.

    In the US alone, well over 16 million residents from rural areas lack broadband, which is equivalent to 28% of the rural population, as the table below highlights.
    Image: IHS Markit and the Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA)

    Social change organization Connect Americans Now (CAN) is trying to tackle this issue, promising to bring reliable and affordable broadband to all Americans living in rural areas by 2022.

    According to CAN, the most effective way to improve connectivity is via a combination of wired and wireless technologies, and by leveraging a range of bandwidths, such as the 700 MHz frequency range. The group claims this would enable wireless signals to travel over hills and through buildings and trees.

    Challenges in rural America, however, are far less pronounced than in other nations, particularly in India where 87% of the rural population lacks broadband access.

    Fortunately for its citizens, India has developed plans at a country-wide level to expand digitization and develop “smart cities”.

    Its Smart Cities Mission and Challenge project includes retrofitting and redeveloping existing areas to improve communications infrastructure and broadband connectivity.

    However, it is the UK and Germany that lead the charge in terms of rural connectivity. Almost 90% of residents in rural Britain have access to broadband, while in Germany around 82% of the rural population is connected.
    Image: IHS Markit and the Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA)
    Have you read?

    These are the most (and least) expensive countries for broadband
    The plan to get 100 million more Indians online by 2018
    Space could be the final frontier for the world’s digital divide

    To have your say on this topic, submit a question to be answered at Davos by a global leader.
    Share

    Written by

    Rob Smith, Formative Content

    The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.
    Subscribe for updates
    A weekly update of what’s on the Global Agenda

    ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

    My comments: improving communication infrastructure is but the tip of the iceberg in a strained budget system worldwide.
    Challenges in rural America In addition to lower rates of connectivity, rural populations often have to contend with less reliable and slower internet than those living in towns and cities.
    However, it is the UK and Germany that lead the charge in terms of rural connectivity. We should learn from these nations to lessen the digital divide.

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