IEEE-USA
white paper: US prosperity at risk; Gigabit networks should be
national priority
The United States should
deploy widespread wired and wireless gigabit networks as a national
priority, according to a white paper from the IEEE-USA Committee
on Communications and Information Policy (CCIP).
"Providing Ubiquitous
Gigabit Networks in the United States," issued 14 March,
says that our nation must act promptly to ensure that a new generation
of broadband networks - of gigabit per second speed – is
ubiquitous and available to all. Failure to act will "relegate
the U.S. telecommunications infrastructure to an inferior competitive
position" and undermine the future of the U.S. economy.
"Priority deployment
of gigabit networks is essential for the United States to maintain
its world leadership in the knowledge economy," IEEE Life
Fellow and IEEE-USA CCIP member Dr. John Richardson said. "Information
drives our lives and our prosperity. The problem is that current
networks aren't fast enough to distribute that information properly."
Digital data rates,
or speeds, are typically expressed as megabits per second (Mb/s)
or gigabits per second (Gb/s). A megabit is one million bits;
a gigabit is one billion bits. Current broadband networks, such
as DSL or cable modems, have an asymmetric speed of about 2 Mb/s.
Gigabit networks are capable of digital rates 50 to 5,000 times
as fast, with equal upstream and downstream speed. Symmetric speed
means information can be downloaded and uploaded at the same rate.
With asymmetric systems, upstream speeds lag behind downstream
delivery rates.
Omnipresent U.S. gigabit
networks, readily achievable by deploying optical fiber and high-speed
wireless, would carry numerous benefits. These include providing
the U.S. economy with superior ability to compete globally; stimulating
economic activity in digital home entertainment; enhancing online
education and training; and facilitating health care remote diagnosis
and consultation (telemedicine).
Congress, the Executive
Branch and private-sector initiatives could secure these benefits
for our nation's global competitiveness and quality of life by
adopting "principles leading to ubiquitous, symmetric gigabit
availability as a national priority," according to the CCIP
white paper (http://www.ieeeusa.org/volunteers/committees/ccip/docs/Gigabit-WP.pdf).
Such principles include regulatory flexibility and encouragement
of user-owned networks.
"The key fact of
modern telecommunications is the convergence of voice, data, image
and video into digital bit streams," said Richardson, a former
chief scientist at the National Telecommunications and Information
Administration. "We need faster networks to carry these bit
streams to users. Broadband speed and penetration in the United
States are pitiful compared to levels in Japan and South Korea.
This means that U.S. prosperity is at risk because it depends,
in large part, on fast and easy exchange of information."
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IEEE-USA is an organizational
unit of the IEEE. It was created in 1973 to advance the public
good and promote the careers and public policy interests of the
more than 220,000 technology professionals who are U.S. members
of the IEEE. The IEEE is the world's largest technical professional
society.
For more information, go to http://www.ieeeusa.org.
The actual report, about 14 pages, is at
http://www.ieeeusa.org/volunteers/committees/ccip/docs/Gigabit-WP.pdf