Presentation to the C-U Joint
Cable and Telecommunications Commission
Challenge:
To be a model community for use and access of cable and
telecommunications.
Recent developments:
- De-regulation of cable television (local competition; no required
community access)
- De-regulation of telephony (local competition; open to new business
areas such as cable, Internet)
- Minimal regulation of Internet services for quality, cost, community
access, etc.
- Rapid growth of Internet services and connectivity for individuals
and organizations; decreased costs
Near-term developments:
- Strong competition for cable, telephone, and Internet services,
frequently by the same companies
- Further integration of media production and delivery services
(e.g., Time-Warner supplies cable and Internet connectivity
but also owns the TV shows and movies)
- New partnerships spanning: telephone service, ISDN and other
data service, dial-in Internet use, newspapers, radio, film,
cable, etc.
- Many new small companies focusing on local services and local
content
- Small companies being bought out or driven out by larger companies
- Focus on unregulated free-market growth with little guidelines
for community access and use, ethics, local content, etc.
Strengths in our community
- UIUC, including
- Media (WILL-AM/FM/TV, also strengths in print journalism)
- Cooperative Extension Services
- NCSA
- CCSO
- many others...
- Large media businesses with a local interest
- Time-Warner: Cable-based data communication
- Ameritech: ISDN
- MCI: Network supplier to UIUC
- CCNet (project of the Chamber of Commerce)
- Local hi-tech businesses and services
- Area schools on the Internet
- City Government on Cable-TV & the Internet
- Many active community groups
- Parkland College cable production & broadcast facilities
- Prairienet
How to be become a model community
- Provide for community access to modern production equipment
(TV and other media production cannot be done at home with a
computer!).
- Video recording and production
- Audio production
- Multimedia production
- Internet/World Wide Web production
- Training, support, equipment, services, broadcast/distribution
- Develop community access for Internet and computing facilities;
ensure the 'have-nots' may become 'haves'
- Commit to community-wide education about new media services. For
media, literacy is a precursor to empowerment
- Support development projects for use of cable and telecommunications
for area agencies and organizations (below)
- Continue to develop strengths
- Foster better communication, cooperation, and integration among
community strengths and projects
Results
- Children and others will be more highly employable and eligible
for the best colleges and universities.
- C-U will be desirable for business development, including new
businesses
- C-U will be assured to have leading-edge cable and
telecommunications access, but will also have a broad base of use and
access for mainstream technologies
- We can have the best community for access and use of
media including cable, telephony, data connectivity, and the Internet
Possible Areas of Development
- Government & Democracy: Get city/county/state information online
and interactive (lots of progress already!). Use media for
the political process. Educate and train government employees.
- Education: Upgrade schools, insure equity of access for students,
employ media across the curricula where appropriate, enable at
home access, support and train parents
- Social Services: Get better performance out of social services by
further integration and faster access to information. Insure users of
social services have ready access to the necessary technologies (cable
TV, VCR, computer, phone, etc.)
- Business & Commerce: Provide low-cost options for data
connectivity, encourage use of local media, look for corporate
support/donation as quid pro quo for use
- Agricultural Services: Implement advanced information systems
for agriculture
Challenge (again)
To be a model community for use and access of cable and
telecommunications.
Presented to the Champaign-Urbana Joint Cable and Telecommunication
Commission
April 17, 1996
by Dr. Gregory B. Newby
This presentation is also available on the Web as
http://www.prairienet.org/~gbnewby/presentations/cu-telecom.html