Satellite
Critics Concerned Infrastructure Bill Money Will Go to Satellites, Harm Fiber Builds
The infrastructure bill’s tech neutrality is concerning critics who say money will go to satellite, not enough to fiber.
Because Rural America is often the least-connected region in the country, ensuring coverage is central to BEAD.
Satellite
The infrastructure bill’s tech neutrality is concerning critics who say money will go to satellite, not enough to fiber.
Rural
The build is also underbudget, they said.
Rural
Rural advocates are asking for accountability for infrastructure bill spending on broadband.
Rural
The agency released a statement of objectives earlier this month.
Broadband Live
Funds made available by the infrastructure bill will not need solid maps to make spending efficient, experts agree.
Rural
The agency is reevaluating winning bids after asking providers to ensure census blocks aren’t already served.
SpaceX
From direct fiber connections to low-earth orbit satellites, libraries can provide public Wi-Fi through varying means.
Infrastructure
Christopher Ali discusses his solutions to bridge the rural-urban digital divide in his most recent book, “Farm Fresh Broadband.”
Infrastructure
“Farm Fresh Broadband” explains the world of broadband policy and provides solutions to bridge the digital divide.
Infrastructure
FCC Acting Chairwoman Rosenworcel said EBB will benefit tremendously from local outreach efforts.
Broadband Live
Broadband Breakfast, in person and for lunch, heard about the possibilities with spectrum sharing and combining technologies for coverage.
Joe Biden
Broadband Breakfast revisits what some state legislatures did to narrow broadband gaps.
Infrastructure
The NTIA said $2.5B requested for broadband program, SpaceX ships 100K terminals, AMC appoints interim CEO.
Infrastructure
Webinar hears how critical mapping is to bridging the digital divide.
Infrastructure
In an interview with Broadband Breakfast, Technology Policy Institute President Scott Wallsten blamed bad mapping for RDOF mess.
Infrastructure
Defaulters say new FCC mapping data shows areas they bid to connect are already adequately served.