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Join the Leading Disruptors in Telecom and Communications at VON: Evolution

At VON: Evolution From Oct. 31-Nov. 2, you’ll meet the change makers in the communications industry in New York CIty.

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WASHINGTON, October 27, 2023 – Broadband Breakfast is pleased to be a Media Sponsor of VON: Evolution, taking place in New York City on October 31, 2023-November 2, 2023.

At the event, you’ll have the unique opportunity to meet the change makers in the communications industry. The people responsible for driving changes and launching next-generation solutions. We are bringing together a global community of communication industry disruptors. You not only get to hear from them in person but also network with them during the conference.

See the full schedule on the VON: Evolution web page.

Register for the event using the Broadband Breakfast 15% discount.

VON: Builder | OCTOBER 31st

At: NYC Office of Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLC
31 West 52nd Street, NYC

9:00 AM – Registration – Main Lobby with Security & Name Badges on 28th Floor
10:00 AM
Welcome – Jeff Pulver & Dan Jenkins – Founder, Commcon | Everycast Labs | Nimble Ape
-Fireside Chat with Jeff: How We All Got Started in Real-Time Communications – Alon Cohen – Co-Founder, VocalTec & EVP/CTO, Phone.com
– FreeSwitch Community Update – Abbi Minessale – Community Developer, SignalWire
– Programmable Voice & AI – Pedro Sanders – Fonoster Project
11:10 AM
– Ethic & Sustainable Conversational AI- Diego Gosmar – Open Voice Network (Linux Foundation) Ambassador, Chief Evangelist, XCALLY
– Building RTC Applications in Finance – Dhananjay Deshpande – Director of Engineering, Bloomberg Real Time Communication (RTC)
– Controlling Physical Devices with WebRTC – Dan Jenkins – Founder, Commcon | Everycast Labs | Nimble Ape
12:10 PM – 1:45 PM Lunch Break
1:50 PM
– VON Coalition Update – Glenn Richards – Partner, Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP
– Kamailio as Building Block for Voice & AI Platforms – Henning Westerholt – Senior IT Operations & Software Development Manager, GILAWA Ltd
– Programmable Smart Contracts with JavaScripts – Diego Lizarazo – Director of Developer Relations, Agoric
– Decentralizing Real-Time Communications- Ayush Ranjan – Co-Founder & CEO, Huddle01
– DevOps Stories: Looking Back at FWD – Ed Guy – CTO, FWD
3:30 PM – Ending Remarks

VON: Evolution Day 1 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1st

At: City Winery
2nd Floor
25 11th Avenue, NYC

8:00 AM – Registration Opens
9:00 AM – Welcome – Jeff Pulver
– Genesis of the Real-Time Web – Alon Cohen – Co-Founder, VocalTec & EVP/CTO, Phone.com
– State of WebRTC – Dan Jenkins– Founder, Commcon | Everycast Labs | Nimble Ape
– Enterprise Wireless Connectivity & 5G – Dennis Specht – Founder & CEO, Redevi
10:00 AM
– GSMA Blockchain Vision for Telecom Industry – Shamit Bhat – Director of Product Management, GSMA
– VoIP Innovations – Iqram Magdon-Ismail – Founder, Smalltalk & Co-Founder, VENMO & Lior Cole – CEO, Novaverse
– Transforming the Digital Workspace – Fred Caicedo – Global Head of Unified Communications, Content and Collaboration, PNC Bank & Chris Fine – Technologist
– Regulatory Conversation – Glenn Richards – Partner, Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP
11:00 AM
– Bandwidth as an Asset Class – Suruchi Gupta – CEO, GIANT Protocol
– Evolution of PBS in the Internet Age – Larry Irving – Chairman, Board of Directors, PBS
– Innovation in Communications – Dan Thygesen – SVP & GM Wholesale, Innovation & Partnerships, T-Mobile
11:50 AM – 12:30 Lunch / Networking
12:30 PM – Fireside Chats Continue
– Age of Secure Messaging – Alan Duric – Co-founder & COO/CTO, Wire
– Connecting the Geneneration Gap with Graphic Novels – Paul Levitz – Former CEO, DC Comics
– Watch This Space (WTS) Podcast Live! – Jon Arnold – Founder, J Arnold Associates & Chris Fine – Technologist
– 5G | IOT Solutions – Syed Bari – CEO, BDATA Solutions
1:30 PM
– DePin Revolution – Mahesh Ramakrishnan – Co-founder, Escape Velocity (EV3)
– Telecom / Blockchain Opportunities – Dean Tribble – CEO, Agoric
– Future of Connectivity – Suzanne Helllwig – AVP, 5G Ecosystem & Alliances, AT&T & Kelly Green – Chief Strategy Officer, TelcoDR
2:30 PM – Recap of Day 1 – Jeff Pulver

4:30 PM – VIP Speaker Dinner
Vista LIC Hotel Best Western * 27-05 39th Ave * Long Island City
7:30 PM – Fall ’23 VON: Evolution RECEPTION
Vista LIC Hotel Best Western * 27-05 39th Ave * Long Island City

VON: Evolution Day 2 | ‘THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2nd

At: City Winery
2nd Floor
25 11th Avenue, NYC

8:30 AM – REGISTRATION
9:00 AM – Welcome Back – Jeff Pulver
– FreeSwitch Community Update – Abbi Minessale – Community Developer, SignalWire
– Startup Pre-Funding Cleanup – What to do Before Your First Funding Round – Diana Bikbaeva – Attorney, Marashlian & Donahue PLLC
– 2024 Outlook – Dean Bubley – Director, Disruptive Analysis Ltd.
– The Caller ID Mess – Ron Thornton – Consulting Engineer, Unified Office
10:10 AM- Bringing Back Trust in Communications Industry – Adam Macgill – Distinguished Engineer, BT Group
– Lessons from the Energy Industry – Andy Zetlan – President, Zetlan Consulting Services
– Evolution of Healthy Communication – Tessa Brown – Co-Founder & CEO, Germ Network
11:10 AM- AI Voice & Storytelling – Jeremy Toeman – Founder & CEO, Aug X Labs
– Distruptive 5G Communication Communities – Deborah Simpier – Co-Founder & CEO, Althea
11:45 AM – 12:30 PM LUNCH with Special Musical Guest
12:30 PM – Fireside Chats Continue
– The State of Now – Jeff Pulver – Founder, pulver.com
– Space-based Networks: Current & Future – Ian Fichtenbaum – Founder & CEO, SpaceRig
– Broadband Breakfast Panel – Drew Clark – CEO, Breakfast Media
– Blockchain & The Telco Back Office – Mark Bystriansky– Co-Founder, Emeldi Group
1:35 PM – NETWORKING
2:10 PM – VON: Evolution Wrap Up – Jeff Pulver – Founder, pulver.com

See the full schedule on the VON: Evolution web page.

Register for the event using the Broadband Breakfast 15% discount.

Breakfast Media LLC CEO Drew Clark has led the Broadband Breakfast community since 2008. An early proponent of better broadband, better lives, he initially founded the Broadband Census crowdsourcing campaign for broadband data. As Editor and Publisher, Clark presides over the leading media company advocating for higher-capacity internet everywhere through topical, timely and intelligent coverage. Clark also served as head of the Partnership for a Connected Illinois, a state broadband initiative.

Broadband's Impact

Missouri’s BEAD Initial Proposal, Volume Two

The state is unsure if any of its $1.7 billion allocation will be left over after funding new infrastructure.

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Photo of the Missouri River by Robert Stinnett.

Missouri released a draft volume two of its Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment initial proposal on November 15.

It was part of a wave of states and territories that began seeking public comment on their drafts in recent weeks. All 56 have now done so.

After a 30-day comment period, states and territories are required to submit their proposals to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration by December 27. The proposals come in two volumes: volume one details how states will ground-truth broadband coverage data, and volume two outlines states’ plans for administering grant programs with their BEAD funds.

The Missouri Broadband Office is “not yet able to determine” whether it will have any of its $1.7 billion in BEAD money left over after funding infrastructure projects.

The state is planning to administer two rounds of funding, something the state’s broadband director BJ Tanksley has flagged as being potentially difficult given BEAD’s one year timeframe for grant awards. The MBO said in the proposal a “sub-round” might be necessary if some undeserved and underserved areas receive no applications, and the state might seek an extension from the NTIA.

Missouri is looking to release multiple “advisory figures” for its high-cost threshold, the price at which fiber becomes expensive enough for the state to consider other technologies not favored by BEAD. Cost modeling data will be used for an initial figure before the first round of grant applications, and the number will be updated based on the applications the state receives in each round.

The state will also be using the NTIA’s updated financing guidance, which gives states more options to ensure the financial viability of a project. The new guidance makes room for performance bonds and reimbursement milestones, which tie up less money than the 25 percent letter of credit required by initial BEAD rules.

The agency made the change on November 1 after months of pushback from advocates and lawmakers, who warned small providers could be edged out by the letter of credit.

The public comment period for Missouri’s volume two is open until December 15.

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Broadband Updates

Alabama’s BEAD Initial Proposal, Volumes One and Two

The state is asking for a waiver to open up RDOF areas to BEAD applications.

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Photo of an Alabama field, used with permission.

Alabama released a draft of its Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment initial proposal on November 14.

It was part of a wave of states and territories that began seeking public comment on their drafts in recent weeks. All 56 have now done so.

After a 30-day comment period, states and territories are required to submit their proposals to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration by December 27. The proposals come in two volumes: volume one details how states will ground-truth broadband coverage data, and volume two outlines states’ plans for administering grant programs with their BEAD funds.

Volume one

The state is planning to adopt the NTIA’s model challenge process to accept and adjudicate claims of incorrect broadband data. The Federal Communications Commission’s largely provider-reported coverage map was used to allocate BEAD money, but is not considered accurate enough to determine which specific locations lack broadband.

Local governments, nonprofits, and broadband providers are able to submit those challenges on behalf of consumers under the model process. 

Alabama is also electing to use one of the NTIA’s optional modifications to the model process. The state’s broadband office will designate all homes and businesses receiving broadband from copper telephone lines as “underserved” – and thus eligible for BEAD-funded infrastructure. The move is an effort to replace older technology with the higher speed fiber-optic cable favored by the program.

The state will administer two optional challenge types the NTIA laid out: area and MDU challenges. States are not required to use these, but most are planning to do so.

An area challenge is initiated if six or more locations in a census block group challenge the same technology from the same provider with sufficient evidence. The provider is then required to show evidence they provide the reported service to every location in the census block group, or the entire area will be opened up to BEAD funds.

An MDU, or multiple dwelling unit, challenge is triggered when three units or 10 percent of the total units in an apartment building challenge a provider’s service. It again flips the burden of proof, requiring providers to prove they give the reported service for the entire building, not just units that submit challenges.

Alabama’s broadband office is requesting a waiver from the NTIA’s rule around enforceable commitments from other funding programs. The state wants areas set to get broadband from the FCC’s Rural Digital Opportunity Fund to be considered unserved for the purposes of BEAD.

That fund, the state argues, has a deployment deadline too far in the future – six to eight years to BEAD’s four years – and is too prone to defaults to be a reliable alternative to BEAD.

Volume two

Alabama does not expect to have any of its $1.4 billion BEAD allocation left over after funding broadband infrastructure.

The state is planning to award that money in a single round of grant applications, but may administer a second, according to its proposal.

Like most states, Alabama won’t be setting a high-cost threshold before looking over all BEAD grant applications. That’s the price point at which the state will look to non-fiber technologies to serve the most expensive, hardest to reach areas.

Alabama’s broadband office is seeking comment on using the NTIA’s updated financing guidance, but plans on implementing it.

That updated guidance allows options which tie up less capital, like performance bonds. BEAD rules initially required a 25 percent letter of credit, which advocates and lawmakers warned could prevent small providers from participating in the program. 

The public comment period for Alabama’s initial proposal is open until December 14.

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Broadband Mapping & Data

Connect20 Summit: Data-Driven Approach Needed for Digital Navigation

The NTIA’s Internet Use Survey doesn’t delve deeply enough into why people choose not to adopt broadband.

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WASHINGTON, November 20, 2023 – Better data about broadband adoption is necessary to closing the digital divide in the U.S., a broadband expert said during a panel at the Connect20 Summit here.

Speaking on a panel about “The Power of Navigation Services,” the expert, Jessica Dine of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, said states lack comprehensive data on why some residents remain offline. This information is essential for digital navigator programs to succeed, she said.

She highlighted the need for standardized national metrics on digital literacy and inclusion, and said that federal surveys – including the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey – provide insights on barriers to technology adoption. But more granular data is required.

She also said that the National Telecommunications and Information Administration’s Internet Use Survey doesn’t delve deeply enough into why people choose not to adopt the internet. For instance, understanding the nuances behind the ‘not interested’ response category could unveil targeted intervention strategies.

In particular, Dine praised Louisiana and Delaware for surveying communities on their connectivity needs, including overlaying socio-economic indicators with broadband deployment data. But she said more work is required to quantify the precise challenges different populations face.

Other panelists at the session, including Michelle Thornton of the State University of New York at Oswego, emphasized the importance of tracking on-the-ground efforts by navigators themselves.

Bringing in her experience from the field of healthcare navigation, Thornton underscored the value of tracking navigator activities and outcomes. She suggested a collaborative model where state-level data collection is supplemented by detailed, community-level insights from digital navigators.

The panel was part of the Connect20 Summit held in Washington and organized by Network On, the National Digital Inclusion Alliance, and Broadband Breakfast.

The session was moderated by Comcast’s Kate Allison, executive director of research and digital equity at Comcast.

To stay involved with the Digital Navigator movement, sign up at the Connect20 Summit.

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