Publicly Funded Broadband and 802.11
bflame writes: "The Canadian province of Alberta is building the infrastructure to provide highspeed internet service to 422 cities. The government of Alberta along with Cisco Networks, Microsoft and Axia will be installing highspeed fiber optic lines to link 422 cities. The contracts also required competition among ISPs to insure lower internet costs. Cisco provides a nice
write up in IQ magazine. Globe Technologies is
reporting that work has started on the Alberta Supernet. The government of Alberta has an article about the supernet along with this article." We've mentioned Alberta earlier - nice to see they're moving ahead with the project. And an anonymous reader sent in a link about the city of Tallahasee rolling out a public WLAN.
Now, who wants to volunteer to put up repeater stations so people outside of Alberta can leech off of the public infrastructure? :)
The real shocker in this article is not that the Canadian government is doing something so tech-savvy in provisding ISP services...
... but that the province of Alberta actually has 422 cities!
(In fact, according to this google cached page, there are only 9 cities over 25,000 population!)
Color me amazed!
-RT
SlashSigTheorem: Humorous, Political, Critical, Constructive- If you have a
And to say that the Canadian government could have used that money to make extra episodes of the X-files.
<Sig>The good thing about having a good memory is ... euh
/me feeds the troll:
:^D
Whoa there, Mr. Rebublican. Two hops short of Cuba? Don't think so. We are as democratic as they come (well, almost).
This is a Canadian thing, you see. Our country is so big with so little population thay we are forced to be communictaions intensive. Yup, lots of our infrestructure is government mandated, but it needs to be - otherwise, it just wouldn't get done. Private Industry wouldn't do it, and well they shouldn't, since there's not much profit to be made. However, we as a country essentially need top shelf communications like this in order to remain a country, since we wouldn't speak to each other much otherwise. It may sound weird to USAians, but it's good for us - like universal public health care. I for one look forward to conversing with my Albertan comapatriots over High Speed bit-pipes - it brings us closer.
So, at the risk of being a jingoist,
Take off, eh?
Soko
PS - Maybe you're just miffed at the Hockey Gold we won.
"Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous