Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Role of Satellite-Based Internet Connectivity for Rural Community Wireless Networks Alan Escovitz, Ph.D. Director of External Affairs Office of the CIO.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Role of Satellite-Based Internet Connectivity for Rural Community Wireless Networks Alan Escovitz, Ph.D. Director of External Affairs Office of the CIO."— Presentation transcript:

1 Role of Satellite-Based Internet Connectivity for Rural Community Wireless Networks Alan Escovitz, Ph.D. Director of External Affairs Office of the CIO The Ohio State University and Bob Dixon, Ph.D. Director of Emerging Technologies The Ohio State University/OSC Rural Telecommunications Conference October 17, 2007

2 Connecting Rural Ohio Partners and Sponsors The Ohio State University Office of the CIO Ohio Supercomputer Center American Distance Education Consortium Partners Village of Vinton Ohio State University Extension Ohio Learning Network Governor’s Office Of Appalachia Gallia County Department of Jobs and Family Services University of Rio Grande MindLeaders Vinton Elementary School Gallia and Vinton County Educational Service Center Microsoft

3 U.S. vs. Others: Broadband Penetration Source: Free Press, Consumers Union, Consumers Federation of America August 2006 U.S. dropped from 4 th to 12 th place broadband penetration among the 30 member nations of the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) between 2000-05 14 other members (30)of the OECD saw higher overall net growth in broadband adoption between 2001-2005 U.S. has 4 th highest level of students who never used a computer among OECD nations –exceeded only by Turkey, Mexico and Slovakia Population density is not the most significant determinant in broadband penetration -- most important factors explaining digital divide are income and poverty

4 OECD broadband penetration (per 100 inhabitants) net increase Q2 2005-Q2 2006, by country

5 Appalachian Ohio

6 Appalachian Ohio Region Appalachian Ohio occupies 14,299 square miles 1 in 5 Appalachian children (77,000) live in poverty 1/3 of Ohio's 100 lowest performing school districts The college-going rate for Appalachian Ohio is 30 percent, compared to 41 percent for the rest of Ohio and 62 percent for the U.S. Nearly one-fifth of Ohio's population is poor in Ohio's southern and southeastern Appalachian counties. Approximately 1.4 million reside in Ohio's 29 county Appalachian Region

7 % Rural Broadband Internet Use Pew Internet & Am. Life Project Feb. 2006

8 Objectives of Connecting Rural Ohio Initiative Close the rural divide that previously existed in communities through this “rural datafication” program Create community learning centers for online credit and non-credit higher education courses, training and workforce development Provide the network infrastructure to support community e-commerce initiatives Stabilize local rural economies and reduce drain of human capital Improve quality of life and increase standard of living

9 “Claimed Broadband/DSL Coverage” Vinton

10 Satellite Communications Basics

11

12 Synchronous Satellites

13 Internet Connectivity to Anywhere AMC4 Satellite All Locations Ground Station Tachyon Central Ground Station--San Diego, CA 50,000 miles Internet

14 Town water tower, satellite dish and wireless antenna

15 Adjustable Tri-Sector Omni Antenna at Water Tower

16 2.4 Ghz Radio Access Points

17 Tachyon 1.2M Satellite Dish Antenna

18

19 Village of Vinton Network Overview

20 Network Overview 802.11g (WiFi) 3 Sector antennas (3X120º)/3 radios Capacity for 180 simultaneous connections Allows users to connect to each other Network addresses assigned automatically

21 Wireless Coverage Field Survey

22 Vinton Wireless Network Coverage Water tank Town Hall

23 Vinton Wireless Repeater Test

24 Vinton Village Town Hall Community Learning Center

25 Yagi directional antenna

26 Outdoor Home Antenna Outdoor 400mW 802.11bg Access Point / Bridge / WDS Radio with Integrated 16dBi Panel Antenna

27 All weather outdoor 2400MHz 802.11b/g bridge 802.11b/g radio, industrial grade construction, multiple antenna options, surge protection on the radio and PoE

28 Thinning ranks of Ohio college graduates Ohio population age 25 and older 7.5 M 7.3 M 6.2 M (86.1%) High school graduates College graduates 6.6 M (88.1%) 1.7 M (23%) 1.8 M (26%) 20061998 Source: Census Bureau: Educational Attainment in the US 2006 report

29 Educational Partnership with the University of Rio Grande Wireless Community Training Course Introduction to PCs and Technical and Network Support

30 Educational Partnership with MindLeaders Microsoft Office Workforce Development Business Skills Estate and Retirement Planning

31 Educational Partnership with the Ohio Learning Network E 4 ME --an online orientation course that helps individuals: Link interests to education choices, career paths, and jobs Find online courses and degrees that meet personal and career goals Learn how to be successful in e- learning courses

32 2005 Carnegie-Mellon/MIT Study: Measuring Broadband’s Economic Impact Increases in employment growth of 1% annually over communities that have not invested in broadband Property values increase, with rental rates were 6% higher. 1/2% higher annual growth rate in businesses 1/2% higher annual growth rate in IT business sector

33 Outcomes and Impact Model for Land-Grant university outreach Cost-effective bridge Addresses “last-mile” barriers and connectivity Framework for a community technology plan Stimulus to private sector investment and community development Creates a business case for the private cable/DSL Internet providers


Download ppt "Role of Satellite-Based Internet Connectivity for Rural Community Wireless Networks Alan Escovitz, Ph.D. Director of External Affairs Office of the CIO."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google