Difference between revisions of "Broadband"
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*[http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/editorials/2015/05/23/broadband-competition-cajun-style/cOfdIzHm4JhMigFmVl8buI/story.html The Lafayette, La., community-owned broadband network]<br> | *[http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/editorials/2015/05/23/broadband-competition-cajun-style/cOfdIzHm4JhMigFmVl8buI/story.html The Lafayette, La., community-owned broadband network]<br> | ||
</h3><ul><ul> | </h3><ul><ul> | ||
− | <i>"The municipal network, which took on its first residential customers in 2009 and now offers 1-gigabit-per-second service for as little as $70 a month, has also given the city a tech-forward sheen."</i></ul></ul> | + | <i>"The municipal network, which took on its first residential customers in 2009 and now offers 1-gigabit-per-second service for as little as $70 a month, has also given the city a tech-forward sheen . . . At least 500 communities have community-owned broadband networks, according to data from the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, an organization that promotes the idea."</i></ul></ul> |
<h3> | <h3> | ||
*[http://www.newshare.com/wiki/index.php/Tnj-readings-jordan After a decade and two referenda, Longmont, Colo., begins connecting businesses to public-owned broadband]<br> | *[http://www.newshare.com/wiki/index.php/Tnj-readings-jordan After a decade and two referenda, Longmont, Colo., begins connecting businesses to public-owned broadband]<br> | ||
</h3><ul><ul> | </h3><ul><ul> | ||
<i>"Vince Jordan and the Colorado city of Longmont took on the major Internet-providing telecommunciations companies -- and won. But it was only round one. Now he's working to prove that Longmont Power & Communications -- the city owned utility -- can use 144-strand fiber-optic cabling installed in the 1990s to deliver exceptionally fast Internet to city's businesses and residents."</i></ul></ul> | <i>"Vince Jordan and the Colorado city of Longmont took on the major Internet-providing telecommunciations companies -- and won. But it was only round one. Now he's working to prove that Longmont Power & Communications -- the city owned utility -- can use 144-strand fiber-optic cabling installed in the 1990s to deliver exceptionally fast Internet to city's businesses and residents."</i></ul></ul> |
Revision as of 03:42, 25 May 2015
Links to go along with June 10 "broadband" community roundtable at Williamstown, Mass.
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"The municipal network, which took on its first residential customers in 2009 and now offers 1-gigabit-per-second service for as little as $70 a month, has also given the city a tech-forward sheen . . . At least 500 communities have community-owned broadband networks, according to data from the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, an organization that promotes the idea."
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"Vince Jordan and the Colorado city of Longmont took on the major Internet-providing telecommunciations companies -- and won. But it was only round one. Now he's working to prove that Longmont Power & Communications -- the city owned utility -- can use 144-strand fiber-optic cabling installed in the 1990s to deliver exceptionally fast Internet to city's businesses and residents."