Increased US Broadband Adoption Could Create 2.4 Million Jobs 171
Ward D points out a story about a recent study that predicts significant economic growth through increased broadband adoption in the U.S. The study is based on a program in Kentucky that has, through the increased use of broadband, "saved an average of more than $200 per person per year" on health-care services, and decreased the average amount of time residents spent driving by 100 hours per month. From Computerworld:
"The Connected Nation model ... focuses more on broadband adoption and local needs than huge, government-funded programs. Several Kentucky businesses have benefited from the increased access, according to Connected Nation. Geek Squad, the Best Buy subsidiary, moved its headquarters to Bullitt County, Kentucky, in late 2006 because of the broadband availability."
Nice idea, but possibly dubious math (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Nice idea, but possibly dubious math (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Nice idea, but possibly dubious math (Score:5, Informative)
Personally, I don't work in IT and have no desire what-so-ever to be in that line of work (I'm a chemist), but plenty of people are. I'm sorry that you don't like the Midwest, but your stereotypes are just plain wrong. Don't think for a second there is no hi-tech work or expertise.
From my experience, the IT folks are usually the anti-social type and really aren't that fun to be around.
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As an aside, our local cable internet is Insight which offers a decent package (business too) for 10Mb/1Mb and we don't get all the nasty filtering we hear about from elsewhere or saturated nodes...
I'm 23 with certifications in
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Thankfully so many people have the wrong Midwest stereotypes or where I live might be like California or the Northeast - It's nice not having to sit in traffic.
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I live in Harrison county. We have 71 people/mi^2, pop. of ~34k and 98.38% white.
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You must be new here. You may leave now.
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Re:Nice idea, but possibly dubious math (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Nice idea, but possibly dubious math (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't all living things have an inherent right to to take what they need from the environment in order to survive and reproduce?
Imagine if a king, upon discovering a method of "Cost savings" decided to throw his surplus subjects into the ocean? He decries "there is no inherent RIGHT to be my subject and leech off my *MY* kingdom. The burden is on you to make yourself useful to me! Don't come back until you are useful."
As a property owner, you are merely a manager of wealth. there is nothing NATURAL that makes any wealth the exclusive property of a single being to enjoy. All the wealth of the world is naturally commonly shared by all the life of the world.
If you have taken it upon yourself to be "wealthy" then you have a duty to manage that wealth in a way that benefits all. and you have a moral duty for the welfare of your employees. you can tell yourself its ok to just 'let them go free'. But you dictated their level of education while they worked for you, by controlling the amount of free time they have and their work conditions. If you expect them to have skills for future occupations.. you must provide those skills.. otherwise you are a dictator and a tyrant and have no right to complain when the workers revolt and take the means of their survival into their own hands (and perhaps take your head in the bargain).
In general, all employers conspire to minimize the education and marketability of their workers. employers don't want mobile workers because such workers cost the most money. And any skills they posssess that don't go to their job, actually reduce their productivity. The wealthy may enjoy their lavish lifestyles, but it comes with a MORAL DUTY to the rest of mankind. A leader has a duty to his followers. You can't cut them loose in any natural kind of social relationship.
Some of the better monarchs in history understood this. In capitalism we have created a class of petty dictators that want all the benefits of monarchy but none of the responsibilities of leadership.
And then a bunch of wannabe petty dictators who go around blathering about now 'natural' and 'inherent' it all is.
Think of it this way. (Score:4, Interesting)
Its very hard to run an online business on dial up.
Ah but what businesses, and jobs, will be created? TFA says 2.4 million jobs will be created but it does not name 1 job. All it is really about is money saved and not jobs created. Then again the study itself does not say what jobs wll be created.
FalconRe:Think of it this way. (Score:4, Funny)
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Ah but what businesses, and jobs, will be created? TFA says 2.4 million jobs will be created but it does not name 1 job. All it is really about is money saved and not jobs created. Then again the study itself does not say what jobs wll be created.
I doubt anyone can really tell you what kind of jobs will be created, in much the same way that few could have predicted the ways that the post-war building of the interstate system would affect things. But we have an expanded tourism industry, next-day courie
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The math is more than dubious - its impossible:
Do you really believe that people drove 25 hours less every week - 5 hours less every day, Monday to Friday?
From the stupid article:
If we
Should say miles, not hours (Score:5, Informative)
From the report:
The error is in the Computerworld article which misstates:
Re:Should say miles, not hours (Score:4, Informative)
There's lies, damned lies, and statistics.
This tells us nothing. if the other 34% drove 200 more miles per month ( 50 miles/week - for example, to look at stuff they found on cragislist, or to meet people they chatted with online) then there are zero savings in driving distances. The fact that they didn't give an overall figure shows they cherry-picked, and the real savings is more like 25 miles/month overall.Another bogus claim:
WTF is that supposed to mean? That people will suddenly be saving $9.50The "study" is bogus. Its an attempt from the telcos to get more "incentives" from the government.
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If there's anything this world really needs in terms of education, it would be mandatory education on how to separate legitimate statistics from bullshit. Anytime someone presents a "statistic" in the form of "A% of Bs are C more/less likely to D", in the absence of any fuller explanation about the 100 - A%, it is almost certainly bullshit.
The worst part of the age-old "lies, damned lies, and statistics" me
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They definitely cherry-picked their data. On that, there is no question. To say that 66% drove on average 100 fewer miles means that the other 33% either showed no difference, or drove MORE.
When people release slanted / manipulated figures, you're better off assuming the worst, rather than just naively accept them. Follow the money.
In this case, its broadband providers wanting pork.
They already got their pork on this issue a decade ago - and promptly wasted it on buying each other out, and giving the
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if a person is paying 360.00 per year for DSL and saving $200.00 that pretty good, but if its $600.00 for cable and saving $200.00 not so much,
finally increasing the deployment rate by 7%, you could gain that much by have good weather for the crews to work in.
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The stable releases are but anyone who wan'ts to get involved with thier distros future (if only to the extent of making sure all thier stuff still runs when the next version comes out) needs to track the development version and for that the fast connection is extremely usefull.
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Otherwise, I want to download Linux distros but once a month, or less. I might consume media a few times a month. You can't download a dozen eggs, and pound of butter, otherwise. People's pat
Enonomist math (Score:2)
These studies are such a crock and use very dodgy extrapolations. Of course I didn't RTFA, but they're generally along the lines of: Give a company 56k dialup and they become 20% more profitable. Therefore is we give them 2Mbits they will become 20% * 2M/56k = 700%. Or: a survey shows a correlation between company size and bandwidth. Larger companies tend to have more bandwidth than smaller companies. Therefore we will give all the
I think you have the answer already (Score:2)
Look at the problems with muni-wifi, the failures of WiMAX, and the sheer dominance of the telcos. Community networking is in a sad state, and this study, sadly, doesn't help.
(emphasis mine)
The sheer dominance of telcos is what is causing the problem with increased broadband deployment, when you include cable operators in that group. Very little is being done among that group to GROW their business. I know that Verizon is doing FTTH and that is good, and T-Mobile is doing the WiFi hand off phones which is good. The trouble is that this is a day late and a dollar short.
FTTH is not helping improve overall broadband deployment - it is there to compete with incumbent cable players
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
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If the jobs are located in those states:
* Are there even 2.4 million people without jobs in those states?
* In fact, are there even 2.4 million people in those states to begin with?
If the jobs are located outside those states:
* Can the people in those states support the salaries of 2.4 million people?
* Would they care about creating 2.4 million jobs for Indian and Chinese residents?
We get reports like that here in Holland as well: "another 15000 jobs w
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And yes, the numbers have the smell of bull excrement.
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"2.4 million jobs across the U.S."
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Disinformation helps no body; sorry to get all Ausbergers on you. The inherent evil of the telcos will one day do them in. It will take a while, but they'll self-destruct because they're evil, and in denial about their inability to transition from their monopoly legacy. Just wait. Don't lie. Let them do themselves in. They're doing a great job right now with bad designs, and anti-customer policies.
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Wireless (Score:3, Insightful)
How much more gets done with 1gps versus 128k? Not much IMHO.
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Re:Wireless (Score:4, Funny)
Increased US Broadband Adoption Could Create (Score:5, Insightful)
2.4 million jobs.
And what jobs are those? TFA doesn't say. Sure some temporary jobs would be created to build the infrastructure and a few more permanent jobs will be created to maintain it but what other jobs will be created? /.'s title is a bad one as TFA is more about money saved not jobs created.
FalconRe: (Score:2)
There. Fixed that for you.
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>
> There. Fixed that for you.
Still had a bug.
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Increased US Broadband Adoption Could Create 2.4 Million Jobs
...in tech support.
Yea, neither TFA or the study itself say what jobs will be created. Actually they both more about saving money, job creation has nothing to do with it.
FalconRe: (Score:2)
It seems obvious to me that if you some rural location with a low cost of living was wired it could allow those areas to be more competitive with outsourcing ove
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It seems obvious to me that if you some rural location with a low cost of living was wired it could allow those areas to be more competitive with outsourcing overseas or south of the border.
Most of those jobs don't pay much though, and they don't create new jobs. At most they bring back jobs that were outsourced to begin with. Like what Dell did. At first Dell sent support to India but ended up relocating support to Carolina, I don't recall whether North or South. Outsourcing to India didn't really w
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And if the jobs are created won't they just go to India anyway because low level tech support is always shipped overseas because customer support means shit in America and it is cheaper, though they don't mind charging $300 per help desk ticket (yay M$).
Well, some jobs will have to stay here, they demand physical presence.
Falcon"decreased the average amount of time..." (Score:4, Insightful)
Huh? The average resident now drives 3 hours less per day? Is everyone in KY a truck driver or something?
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perhaps the manufacturer of medical equipment that transmits and allows specialists to return a diagno
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I live in Kentucky (Louisville to be specific) and take offense to that.
Maybe you're getting confused with our affinity for horse racing.
As an aside, I'm also running for State Representative in November. And I've been reading Slashdot since '98. There's a first for everything.
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Are you saying it really was a typo?
By the way, I drank my first bottle of Mezcal in Louisville. Good times. :-P
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...$200 Billion...nothing delivered...no consequen (Score:4, Insightful)
Could you elaborate? (Score:2)
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the rest of the story (Score:5, Funny)
Increased US Broadband Adoption Could Create 2.4 Million Jobs in India
fixed
Opportunity cost (Score:5, Insightful)
*The challenge is not to create jobs, but to create wealth. If the govt.just wants to create jobs, they can hire a million goons to destroy stuff and hire another million people to rebuild stuff - boom, 2 million jobs created.
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That is a simple economic fact, but I feel it is wasted on you since you are intent on childish name calling. Maybe you should be on reddit/digg with the other kids?
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Apparently you don't keep up with the news.
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Too depressing for me.
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The challenge is not to create jobs, but to create wealth. If the govt.just wants to create jobs, they can hire a million goons to destroy stuff and hire another million people to rebuild stuff - boom, 2 million jobs created.
What do you think war is for?
I have pretty libertarian views and prefer smaller government, but I can see the allure and benefits to projects like this and increased spending on infrastructure (roads, rail, etc.). I wish we'd get the hell out of the Middle East and use the trillion or so we'd save (and countless lives) and do two things with that savings: reduce taxes and increase physical and technological infrastructure.
They don't explain what they mean by broadband (Score:5, Insightful)
Real broadband is gigabit speed, bi-directional, to homes and small businesses. It allows every subscriber to become a content provider. The cable industry sees itself as being part of the entertainment industry, and the telcos would like to join the broadband-as-entertainment model. Real broadband scares the entertainment industry because they see it as a challenge to their business model.
The economic impact of real broadband would be immense. I like to analogize the comparison of legacy broadband to real broadband as the difference between animal power and engine power. If one horsepower is a fundamental limit, innovators will try to work out ways of getting two horses to work together. If power comes from engines, innovation goes to a much higher level. Innovators in countries with with real broadband can conceive ideas that American innovators can't even imagine.
The sponsors of this report are pushing legislation. I would urge people to examine the legislation to see how it defines broadband. If it doesn't talk about gigabit to the home, it is part of the trend in which the US is becoming a third world telecommunications country to protect entertainment business models.
Re:They don't explain what they mean by broadband (Score:4, Interesting)
Just saying "the economic impact of real broadband would be immense" isn't enough. What would be the economic impact? You vaguely mention "people becoming content providers", but isn't Youtube a better model than running your own server off broadband for this? Why is Youtube popular in Japan? And why haven't amazing new business models been developed in nations that do have near-universal broadband?
Anyway, generally speaking, broadband is easily and widely available in the US as long as you live in an urban or semi-populated area. Any business model would revolve around them, not people in the countryside or people who just haven't bothered upgrading from AOL, because it's good enough for e-mail.
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My opinion is that is. Why build a highway system, when people are just going to use it for visiting their neighbours. Infrastructure questions are historically narrow and shortsighted, embarassingly so for the generations that follow.
Anyway, generally speaking, broadband is easily and widely available in the US as long as you live in an urban or semi-populated area.
Generally speaking, 640K was easily and widely available, b
gigabit speeds in Internet-2 colleges (Score:2)
More Comcast Support Technicians Needed... (Score:2)
In other news (Score:4, Informative)
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Having a political party come into office that is dedicated to taking an engineer's eye to fixing the legal code of the entire state. The last figure I saw for the cost to businesses to comply with federal income tax requirements was $289B. Just going to a flat tax would be an automatic release of $289B worth of labor!
Although it's not like $289B would materialize out of nowhere. It would be $289B less for the accountants of the world.
Granted, it would improve efficiency and productivity for the economy as a whole. But you could see how certain people would be against it. It would be akin to the government allowing an unlimited number of visas for overseas developers. A net positive for our economy (and the world), but your average developer who now has more competition is likely going to frown on such legislature.
Jobs going fast! Sign up now! Only 2.3 mln left! (Score:5, Funny)
1) Comcast traffic filterer
2) MPAA P2P network monitor
3) DMCA takedown notices writer
4) RIAA fake torrent uploader
5) Botnet senior manager
6) Senior wiretap installer
Re:Jobs going fast! Sign up now! Only 2.3 mln left (Score:2)
1) Comcast traffic filterer
2) MPAA P2P network monitor
3) DMCA takedown notices writer
4) RIAA fake torrent uploader
5) Botnet senior manager
6) Senior wiretap installer
7. Bandwidth usage tax adjuster.
broadband vs. green tech (Score:4, Insightful)
It's like living in a parallel universe where we sit in traffic 10 hours a week & spend half our income getting to work with all these unused internet cables sitting just a few feet away.
Blah! (Score:2)
A great leap forward in broadband usage (Score:2)
No, it won't. They'll import HB1's .... (Score:2)
After all, the lawyers have video seminars training employers on exactly how to avoid hiring expensive American workers and get only HB1 folks. Meanwhile, Gates and the other greedy multi-nationals will continue to spout the smoke screen about how it is impossible to find American workers who have "the necessary skills" as the bribe their congressional sock puppets to pass more bills to continue to allow such
Build in the local citizen worker's right. (Score:2)
Re:Useless statistical models (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:Hrm. Geek Squad in Kentucky (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hrm. Geek Squad in Kentucky (Score:4, Funny)
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If all of the newly created jobs are part-time and pay minimum wage, each unemployed person will have to take 10 of them to pay their bills.
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Re:How much did these people drive before? (Score:4, Informative)
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For one, shipping is not free and groceries aren't light. Secondly, I need my milk for my cereal in the morning, not 3 days from now. Lastly, people enjoy the shopping experience and being away from their home. I personally don't care for shopping, but almost every female I know does.
As a society we are accustomed to easy and instant travel. We will never go back. Face it, people
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Why gives you the right to cut my neighbors off? They are too far away for DSL. The closest area b
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When broadband becomes available? This is likely to be never, unless forced by a state or federal regulators. The sad fact is that the less population density, the less likely it is that any company is going to invest in the infrastructure needed to bring broadband into that area. Fiber or wire costs, as does the various switches, repeaters, and so on. If you have to run long distances to serve a few hundred people, then it's a losing proposition. For example, the area I currently live in has an averag
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In the meantime, I've created my own forum and posted whatever the hell I felt like.
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$3/gallon, I wish. Try buying some petrol in the UK, then you can complain about the price. It's $7.66/gallon (£1.04/litre) here.
RegardselFarto