A short presentation by (Djursland International Institute of Rural Wireless Broadband) on Broadband in rural areas through self-organizing COMBINING SELF-ORGANIZING.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ADVANCED SATELLITE INTERNET SERVICES VIA BROADBAND IN CASTILLA Y LEÓN REGION promoting universal access to broadband, reaching the least populated rural.
Advertisements

USING BROADBAND TO TRANSFORM THE WORLD NEED FOR JOINT EFFORTS ITU FORUM KIGALI, 9-11 May 2012 & Dr. Speranza Ndege Director, Open, Distance & e-Learning,
Connect. Communicate. Collaborate TNC Bruges, 22 May 2008 GÉANT2: The Good the Bad and the Ugly - What worked and what didn’t work? Robin G. Arak.
The role of wireline access technologies to bridge the digital divide BB for All Cluster workshop “How to bridge the digital divide ?”
Innovative approach for rural broadband delivery Haiti Rural Broadband Initiative Bruce Baikie Senior Director Broadband Initiatives Inveneo.
Community Benefits & Digital inclusion Efforts. What Is Digital Inclusion? Every Minneapolis resident deserves access to the social, civic, educational.
Health IT Adoption by Rural Safety-Net Providers Speranza Avram, M.P.A. NSRHN Executive Director.
Innovation and Technological Development in regional networks Dynamic ICT knowledge exchange through interregional networks.
DAKNET Presented By: rreema.
Marketing For Nonprofits. What is marketing? Marketing is the methodology of communicating the value of a product or service to customers, for the purpose.
WiMAX Presented By Ch.Srinivas Koundinya 118T1A0435.
Radio Days Conference 5 July Can digital radio work in SA?
The Opportunity of WISP’s Mark Levetzow. Topics  WISP’s and how they work  IEEE standards and radio frequency.  Equipment  Good/Bad points about WISP’s.
Flexible transport services for elderly people: a solution against social exclusion. Dora Ramazzotti 1, Athanasios Lois 2 1 SRM – Reti e Mobilità, Public.
1 The Telecommunications Consumer Board The Telecommunications Complaints Board International Seminar on Dispute Resolution Scenario in the Telecom Sector,
Professia Ltd. - Part of the regional development network Vesa Keinonen Project Manager Professia Ltd.
A DANISH QUESTIONAIRE Vitale villages with active seniors
Association of Estonian Cities Fostering the Development of Decentralised Public Administration.
ICT policy and development trends and challenges in Bulgaria
Improving productivity with online collaboration © 2015 albert-learning.com Improving productivity with online collaboration.
1 The German ISP Market - From Opportunism to Professionalism Frank Pauer Chief Sales & Marketing Officer
Public Foundation «The Information future» … Only we can build the Global Information Society in Kyrgyzstan. PARTICULARITY OF KYRGYZ MODEL.
William Hoyle Chief Executive 1. Trade4all is a newly registered UK charity. Our mission is ‘to bring small scale producers out of poverty by transforming.
INTERREG IIIB NORTHERN PERIPHERY PROGRAMME. FEATURES OF THE NPP AREA Geographical similarities Long distances and many remote areas Sparsely populated.
By Omkar KiraniSridhara Chaitanya Sannapureddy Vivek Gupta 1.
The Digital Divide.
WiMAX, meaning Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access Emerging technology that provides wireless transmission of data using a variety of transmission.
Presentation 1 Impact of Internet to Wireless Network Construction Business – Case Finland Master’s thesis presentation Jim Mäkelä Supervisor:
Rura l broadband and its implications for the future of Universal Service The Israeli Case OECD, Porto, October 2004 Uri Olenik Director General Ministry.
Bridging the Digital Divide – Policies and Actions Professor Birgit Jæger Dep. of Society and Globalisation Roskilde University Denmark.
Imagine one day a moon, a star and a sun all coming together … NOT POSSIBLE… But we have made it possible…. EXPLORE SSEG…. Imagine one day a moon, a star.
From National Broadband Plans towards Broadband Ubiquity – Finland’s Experiences Speeding up NGN ubiquity: a pillar for digital growth Athens, February.
Case study of a broadband infrastructure investment project approved by DG COMP RAIN project in Lithuania Vytautas Tvaronavicius Public Company "Placiajuostis.
“ BIRD Project“ 1 Broadband Access, Innovation & Regional Development” Broadband Access, Innovation & Regional Development” Project Description Ulrich.
Eurodiaconia seminar on volunteering AGM,19 June - 21 June 2008 Vienna.
The Hard to Reach Areas NextGen 11 Scotland May 2011 © Avanti Communications Group plc.
1 SMEs – a priority for FP6 Barend Verachtert DG Research Unit B3 - Research and SMEs.
Food Teams A direct link between producer and consumer.
1 Lecture # 21 Evolution of Internet. 2 Circuit switching network This allows the communication circuits to be shared among users. E.g. Telephone exchange.
Who am I & why am I'm here ? My name is: Roger Silfver, born in Finland emigrated to Sweden 1974 Background : Social worker & Family Care 25 years 1990.
Eracon/INENTER conference 2012 Moderated and combined presentation from the InEnter workshop Starting of an Erasmus Placement Consortium and Eracon session.
Name of the project and Sub-Objective of the PEOPLE project NUENEN NETWORK / ONS NET NUENEN Social & E-inclusion (SO4)
Municipal Broadband Networks and their role in upgrading education broadband services Christos Bouras Research Academic Computer Technology Institute Broadband.
Action Plan For the formulation or review of a National Policy on ICT and Education JANUARY 2007 Belize.
Data Communications and Networking CSCS 311 Lecture 4 Amjad Hussain Zahid.
UNSICAR The practical role for meeting professional knowledge requirements in insurance distribution - October
ICTs at Work in Remote and Rural Communities Brian Beaton, K-Net Services Coordinator Connect NWT Symposium February 6, Yellowknife,
Introduction to Keypads Agenda 2010 Determining Priorities for State-District Leadership and Action.
Training Workshop on Development of Core Statistical indicators for ICTs Tunisian Experience in ICT indicators Collection. Tunisian presentation June 2005.
WiMAX Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access AMIT KUMAR AMIT KUMAR M TECH (ECE) M TECH (ECE)
09/10/2009SFERA Annual Conference 2009 Improving the deployment of wireless broadband networks in Emilia-Romagna region (Italy) Anna Lisa Minghetti Lepida.
Fibre-to-the-Home project Mid-Southern Jutland, Denmark Spreading the social and economic benefits of broadband (Session 09A38) OPEN DAYS 2008 Brussels,
Finnish NGA state-aid scheme Antti Kohtala Ministry of Transport and Communications Finland Digital Agenda Assembly, Brussels, 16th June 2011.
PRESENTATION ON. What is a Wi-Fi Hotspot? A Wi-Fi hotspot is location or access point where you can access wireless broadband using a wireless enabled.
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFORMATION SEMINAR ‘ ACCESS1513 PREPAID INTERNET CARD- IT’S IMPACT ON ICT DEVELOPMENT’ Resource Person : Chris Quartey 23 RD MARCH, 2006.
Learning from the Mistakes of Others How not to structure, run or design an equity plan October 5, 2012.
State aid for broadband Internet development in Lithuania TAIEX Multi-beneficiary Workshop on TAIEX Assistance within Chapter 10 – Information society.
Swedish Post and Telecom Authority Consumers service and needs Social and economic challenges Lars Erik Axelsson Expert Advisor, Access Networks PTS Sweden.
COMPUTER NETWORKS Quizzes 5% First practical exam 5% Final practical exam 10% LANGUAGE.
Connecting the Unconnected L'Afrique Digitale, Paris - Ibrahima Guimba-Saidou 16 April.
Implementation of Leader program in Estonia Kristiina Tammets.
BSR STARS - Programme for the Developement of Innovation, Clusters and SME-Networks Rima Putkienė Ministry of Economy of the Republic of Lithuania Maritime.
(Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access)
Local government`s engagement with bioenergy
Wi-Fi available here, Everywhere Interoperability for Public Wi-Fi
Chairman of the Board and CEO,
Bringing Broadband to.
Objectives and Plan of Action
WIMAX Presented By JAGADEESH.S 13X41A0546.
Mobile phones A mobile phone is a device which uses radio signal to reach a wide area without having to use a physical connection to a network. These devices.
Presentation transcript:

A short presentation by (Djursland International Institute of Rural Wireless Broadband) on Broadband in rural areas through self-organizing COMBINING SELF-ORGANIZING AND WIRELESS INFRASTRUCTURE IS AN AFFORDABLE RURAL CONNECTIVITY METHOD ! By educational leader Bjarke Nielsen Page 1

To introduce myself: 1.My name is Bjarke Nielsen. I am the educational leader at DIIRWB and I founded the DjurslandS.net, maybe the World’s biggest non-commercial rural wireless network, giving Internet connection to rural schools, -institutions, - firms and close to 6000 rural households - up to now. 2.DIIRWB is an institute for training builders of cheap rural wireless broadband, based on the experience of establishing and running the DjurslandS.net. 3.DIIRWB is a cooperation of the “Computer Support Community of Djursland” and “the Grenaa Technical School” and we support the grass root movement on free Wi-Fi “World Summits on Free Information Infrastructures” (WSFII). 4.I founded the Computer Support Community of Djursland in 1993 and has been its chairman ever since. 5.I am also chairman of GrenaaS.net, the area-network of Grenaa, the largest city on Djursland. 6.I chair all pilot-projects on using wireless network for rural broadband infrastructure in the EU-funded “Baltic Rural Broadband Project” (BRB) in the countries around the Baltic sea in Northern Europe, and are also project- responsible for the Danish part called “Networking Djursland”. 7.I am a member of the EU-funded think-tank or advisory-board on “Broadband Access, Innovation & Regional Development” (BIRD) for the North Sea Area. Page 2

Our home Page 3

Cities is an exception on earth. Most of the surface of the earth is rural districts, and among other things they have in common that it seems all too expensive to create a full surface covering broadband infrastructure that makes everyone living on earth part of the global ICT society. Thus the divide between life in cities and countryside is further expanded and bear catastrophic perspectives. Page 4

In Denmark ”Tele Danmark” (TDC), who owns the copper-line infrastructure, gives 95% of all households opportunity to get up to 2 megabit broadband access through 1600 ADSL centrals. If TDC should give the remaining 5% the same possibility, TDC would have to make another 4600 ADSL centrals. The need for almost 3 times extra centrals is due to these facts: 1.All the 5% live in the sparsely populated rural areas 2.The centrals is placed in the cities where 95% is concentrated 3.The rural areas covers the major part of the geographical Danmark 4.The ADSL centrals can at 2 megabit only reach out to 5 km on the lines To believe that the economical forces of the market will expand the amount of ADSL centrals from 1600 to 6200, just to reach the last 5% of the households, would be sheer naivety. Broadband coverage in Denmark Page 5

As all rural areas around the globe have similar background - or worse - I will analyze this and tell what we did to solve the problem on Djursland On Djursland the consequences of the short range of ADSL was that 25% of the households outside the cities could not get a ADSL broadband access Lets start to see the economical forces graphically Broadband coverage on Djursland Page 6

in dense settlement in dispersed settlement % of households in Denmark with respectively big and small bandwidth Possibility of Internet access through the Danish telecom net 19 times more homes which have access for 16 times more speed Totally unprofitable for TDC Page 7 It will almost cost 3 times more to reach one rural household than it has cost to reach nineteen in the cities, so for 1 rural you get about 3 times nineteen in cities

IT is all too expensive to create ADSL-access in rural areas TDC’s expense for establishment of these 4600 extra ADSL-centrals would in real money amount to 175 million €. TDC would have an additional expense of 150 € for each household to be connected. TDC does not think that connecting the rural people can happen on market conditions. TDC therefore wants national funds to make broadband access in the rural countryside. Page 8

The counterclaim from several of the Danish political parties to the TDC is wishing to decide a universal service obligation, but the EU-commission rejects universal service obligation in this field From the EU and the government side the decisions are clear: Broadband roll out is to happen based on pure market conditions So neither will TDC be ordered a universal service obligation nor will companies be given government grants to bridge the divide Thus a rural solution is left over to a market totally without ability This way authorities and business market leaves the rural population to themselves Page 9

(The 8 municipalities on Djursland) Since 2001 volunteers have developed the Djursland-model. It proved that people in the Danish countryside, through volunteer action, can get comparable broadband access at 1/3 of the average market price in cities, using an outdoor antenna amplified wireless data radio technique, based on standardized mass-produced Wi-Fi equipment. (Negotiations with 35 ISPs on all kind of technology showed that a rural IT-infrastructure giving access all over Djursland could not be established on market conditions) Page 10 Facts of Djursland: Population: Total area: km² Population density: 57,6 pr. km² Djursland and what we did

User installation box An outdoor box with: 1.An accesspoint 2.A directional antenna in the lid 3.Ethernet kabel for the house 4.An lengthened powercord Page 11

A central village installation: 1.A radio-based connection linking to a central radio station through a directional-antenna. 2.And an omni-antenna giving radio-based access for installations at roofs at households and institutions Page 12

.. is run by volunteers and consist today of 9 area nets, with more than 250 central antenna nodes, which each covers about 10 km in diameter in all directions, and which in all, up to now, give wireless access to close to 6000 amplified APs in rural households, -schools, -institutions and -firms. Each household etc. borrows the gear and pays a one time contribution of 267 €, and also 13 € each month for access. Bandwidth is between 2 and 5 Megabit/sec. The 6000 connected households etc. save all together each year about 2 1/4 million €, compared to the sum they should have paid to the commercial ISPs, – if they could have delivered to everybody in our rural areas at the actual city-market price for similar bandwidth. Each new household saves 275 € the first year, and each of the following years they save more than 500 €. DjurslandS.net User antennas with 1½ km reach is used in the purple areas User antennas with 3 km reach is used in the orange areas User antennas with 5 km reach is used in the yellow areas Page 13

Savings by high speed Internet access with unlimited consumption via DjurslandS.net's area nets ISPspeedOncemonthyear 1year 2save year 1save year 2 Djursnet4096/4096 Kbit/s Cybercity4096/256 Kbit/s tele24096/256 Kbit/s Stofanet4096/512 Kbit/s TDC4096/512 Kbit/s DanskKabelTV4096/256 Kbit/s Average savings in Euro Connected households in new4.000 now Expected savings 2006, all connected households on Djursland Savings in all 2006, (self-sponsoring of the IT-society on Djursland) Page 14

Comparison of all expenses in € for a household - over 4 years - for comparable broadband access ISPSpeed1. year2. year3. year4. yearIn allExpense factor Djursnet (non-commercial)4096/4096 Kbit/s ,00 Cybercity4096/256 Kbit/s tele24096/256 Kbit/s600 Stofanet4096/512 Kbit/s732 TDC4096/512 Kbit/s DanskKabelTV4096/256 Kbit/s Market average a year for 4096/256 (512) Kbit/s:697, ,63,00 Page 15

Totally unprofitable for TDC The wireless landscapenet has a world-beating economy As seen here, a wireless landscapenet - which is established and driven by volunteers - has an economical cost effectiveness and sustainability which over 4 year is about 165 times bigger than when a surface covering IT infrastructure is created in a rural area, through establishment of extra DSL centrals and their access lines. Landscapenet has 165 times better economy than ADSL rural centrals Page 16

Self organizing is the sure solution for remote areas Through self-organizing in our rural districts we can - out of self interest -, establish and run our own broadband-infrastructures, where all institutions and households can get access at 1/3 of the average market price in big cities. So we are not really dependent on funding ! Think about what this means globally ! Page 17

As rural districts we don’t have to either be dependent on: the lacking ability of the political conditions to cope with minorities or the lacking motivation of commercial interests We can create and run IT-infrastructures by our own powers. As rural population we ought to take the initiative ourselves to better our living conditions, as we as minority anyway never will get high priority on the agenda of society. So I would say to rural people: Don’t wait for nothing – do it yourself, and do it now ! The broadband problem in the countryside is easily solved; it is only a matter of organizing volunteers and provide the appropriate knowledge and competence to run Wi-Fi based landscapenet. Page 18

DIIRWB’s training- and teaching-disciplines 1) Organization 2) Campaign 3) Administration 4) Equipment and tools 5) Net-planning- and building 6) Web-portal building and running 7) User-support and running net 8) Handling of routers and servers 9) Documentation and evaluation Normally we will train groups from the same area with at least 8 participants. They will be specialized so that a sharing of work can take place. Share of responsibility among volunteers makes non- commercial establishing and running of community network realistic. Page 19

Thank you for your attention :-) Further information can be obtained at: » » » » (fetch the institute brochure) » Or via: og 15 Page 20

Test of QoS in Wi-Fi IEEE a equipment from Lancom Test of QoS in WiMax equipment from Redline Communications Research was done at DIIRWB’s partner: the University of Stralsund in nothern Germany. Appendix A

Appendix B BIRD-REPORT FROM DJURSLAND, DENMARK DIIRWB - a cooperation between GTS and Bøvl - is running 16 local partial project to further develop an example of a rural IT society. We are here represented by Klavs, Birte and me Bjarke. Partner with the Innovation Djursland initiative. We are focusing on developing solutions to bridge the technological and social divide which rural people meet. IT minister has promised access, also all over in rural areas, but without funding, alone through the market TDC can provide access up to 2mbit to 95% households through 1600 centrals TDC would have to make an extra 4600 centrals to reach the remaining 5% and that can not be done commercially. According to the Djursland wireless infrastructure model, 165 households in rural areas can be given access for what it cost to reach a single household by extra traditional centrals and at 1/3 of the market price for similar service in the cities. - This is based on the experience from connecting 5000 households etc. in rural Djursland - an area of 60*50 km. 57 individuals pr. km 2.

Appendix C DIIRWB are now arranging a Networking Djursland Conference with participation of 25 partners and the public in jan pilot projects are presented on further development of Djursland into a good rural IT society. Cooperation with Grenaa City Antenna society about TV via the rural wireless network. We are testing wireless multicasting. Cooperation with the electricity company of our area about integrating fiber access and the rural wireless net, bringing higher speed to each wirelessly connected household etc. Cooperation with the rural board of our region, on multiplying our model for other rural areas in our region. A mobile reaching platform with tree tasks. A one month travel in India has prepared 5 rural areas to apply the Djursland- model and make showcases for all of rural India. Free wireless access with limited bandwidth is planned for the whole geographical area in two of our eight municipalities. This will benefit mobile wireless access for the locals as well as for tourists.