21st Century Communities and Bandwidth

Thomas Friedman:

The best of these ecosystems will be cities and towns that combine a university, an educated populace, a dynamic business community and the fastest broadband connections on earth. These will be the job factories of the future. The countries that thrive will be those that build more of these towns that make possible “high-performance knowledge exchange and generation,” explains Blair Levin, who runs the Aspen Institute’s Gig.U project, a consortium of 37 university communities working to promote private investment in next-generation ecosystems.

Historians have noted that economic clusters always required access to abundant strategic inputs for success, says Levin. In the 1800s, it was access to abundant flowing water and raw materials. In the 1900s, it was access to abundant electricity and transportation. In the 2000s, he said, “it will be access to abundant bandwidth and abundant human intellectual capital,” — places like Silicon Valley, Austin, Boulder, Cambridge and Ann Arbor.

via So Much Fun. So Irrelevant. – NYTimes.com.

Is this fast? Dean Shareski and His New Connection to the Internet

Aside

Great question.  As Mayor of the Internet, let me ask a few questions share a few observations.

1.  You pay $x/month for your connection to the Internet.  How much will Shaw Communications charge for you to get 100 Mb/s download?  4x?  8x? 100x?  How much would it actually cost them to do so?  Hint:  The answer is 0.  Explain.

2.  Why the difference between “download” and “upload” speeds?  Why are uploads 10x slower than downloads? Use the words “consumer” and “producer” in your answer.

3.  What would the cable television industry (who is also providing your connection to the Internet) prefer I spend my time watching?  Which is more entertaining?

a)  YouTube of Dean Playing Guitar
b)  Curling on TSN

4.  What is the difference between the Internet and broadband?  Hint:  Nobody owns the Internet.  Hint 2:  Time Warner Cable in the United States has started calling what you have “wideband”.

5.  How much does this connection cost?  What’s the difference between A+ and A grade Internet?