Monday, March 29, 2010

STILL LOOKING FOR THAT FREE BROADBAND

STILL LOOKING FOR THAT FREE BROADBAND

I remember some time ago hearing that we were going to get 'FREE BROADBAND'!
People were so excited. It was to be a GIANT leap forward, in providing FREE broadband for everyone.

FREE BROADBAND - YEAH RIGHT

So Much Planning & Debating

Preview this article from Dec. '08:
FCC to vote on free broadband Internet across USA
Free broadband for America has inched closer to reality: The plan, after two years of debate, is finally on the calendar for a full vote by the Federal Communications Commission.
Assuming the plan is approved at the FCC's Dec. 18 meeting, one of the agency's last before President-elect Barack Obama takes office, free broadband could become reality within a year.
First proposed in 2006, the plan calls for a chunk of airwaves called AWS-3 (now idle) to be used for wireless broadband across the USA. Under terms contemplated by the FCC, the winner of the AWS-3 auction would have to reserve at least 25% of network capacity for free broadband.
The winner would be allowed to charge for other services, including premium broadband that would offer faster speeds.
Assuming there are no last-minute snags, the AWS-3 auction will take place next year.
The FCC plans to impose several conditions. Among them: The winner will be required to launch free broadband with a filter that automatically blocks adult content. Users can remove the filter once they've confirmed that they are at least 18 years old.
FCC Chairman Kevin Martin has championed the idea of free broadband. Martin is particularly concerned about rural areas, where dial-up and satellite-based Internet still rule. Dial-up isn't fast enough to handle interactive fare, including video streaming. Satellite has the muscle, but broadband-strength speeds can cost $100 or more a month.

FCC Kevin Martin

About 38% of rural households have broadband. In urban and suburban areas, where competition for customers can be fierce, the numbers are a lot higher, 57% and 60%, respectively. Martin says free broadband can help bridge the gap. "This initiative brings with it the promise of a free basic broadband service to hundreds of thousands of Americans who currently have limited or no access to the high-speed Internet," Martin said in a statement prepared for USA TODAY.
Big wireless carriers, which stand to lose customers — and profits — if free broadband takes off, have criticized the FCC's plan.
The harshest critic is T-Mobile. The carrier paid $4 billion two years ago to buy the spectrum that abuts the AWS-3 block. T-Mobile claims the FCC's plan will cause service disruptions for its customers. The FCC disagrees.
Despite opposition from incumbents, the plan has a number of strong supporters. Chief among them is the company that dreamed up the idea initially, M2Z, a wireless start-up backed by Kleiner Perkins, the big Silicon Valley venture capital firm.
Milo Medin, M2Z's co-founder and a broadband pioneer, says that in addition to being a big positive for consumers, the plan is consistent with Obama's belief in the power of private-public partnerships. While free broadband alone won't close the divide between digital haves and have nots, Medin says it's a good start.

FREE WIFI NOT

Here's another article from almost a couple years later, 10 March '10:

FCC Considering Free Wireless Broadband as Part of National Plan
The FCC won't unveil its long-awaited National Broadband Plan until next week, but it has already hinted at what would be one of its most intriguing items: free wireless access. As Reuters reports, the Commission was pretty mum on details, but did say in a statement that offering a  "free or a very low cost wireless broadband service" to specific swaths of the population may significantly boost online accessibility. In the same statement, released at the Digital Inclusion Summit, the FCC said that it would also recommend that Congress create a volunteer Digital Literacy Corps, which could offer Internet training to targeted communities with low wireless coverage rates.
It's important to keep in mind that these are only recommendations. The FCC will surely beef up the argument for providing free Internet, and will hopefully offer some sort of outline about how to go about implementing it. Ultimately, though, it'll be up to members of Congress to pick and choose what parts of the FCC's proposal it wants to put into action. Given the political gridlock that's recently taken hold of Capitol Hill (and the sadly realistic possibility that "socialist Wi-Fi" could ignite another powder keg of Tea Party hysteria), we wouldn't get our hopes up, even in a country where one-third of the population doesn't have high-speed access. Providing free or subsidized broadband makes absolutely perfect sense -- which is exactly why we're not optimistic about seeing it come to fruition.

So Where's The Broadband?
As a result of all this, we seem to have now a couple free Wi-Fi hotspots here & there, predominantly in the metro areas of major big cities.
I heard Google had once a Beta TISP Program for bringing you sewer-cheap broadband into your homes:

[click to view larger pics]
GoogleTispWelcome
GoogleTISPGwtf
GoogleTISPImageInstructions

Do many of you have free, high-quality broadband reaching your homes yet?
ANYBODY? ..... ANYBODY?