As required by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, aka the stimulus package, the Federal Communications Commission has until February 2010 to develop a national broadband plan to be presented to Congress. With an emphasis on an open dialogue with all stakeholders through a series of public workshops, the FCC is busily compiling a public record on the state of broadband in America.
First, though, the FCC wants to know just how to define broadband.
“We seek tailored comment on a fundamental question-how the [National Broadband] Plan should interpret the term ‘broadband’ as used in the Recovery Act, recognizing that our interpretation of the term as used in that statute may inform our interpretation of the term in other contexts,” the FCC stated in an Aug. 20 Notice of Inquiry. “An understanding of what constitutes broadband thus is essential to evaluating the extent to which ‘broadband capability’ is available, and informs the evaluation of particular policy approaches intended to ensure access to broadband capability.”
The FCC currently defines broadband service as a static 768K bps downstream and 200K bps upstream, a definition a number of public interest groups claim is entirely too low a bar for 21st century telecommunications. In addition, the FCC notes, it is unclear what the endpoints of the connection are over which throughput is measured or whether the performance of the endpoints is reflected in the stated throughput.
The FCC also says there are network characteristics-such as latency, reliability and mobility-that are relevant for certain applications but not others.
“As the [Public Notice] points out, much of the recent debate tends to center on throughput speeds. Engineers know that these numbers by themselves are most often misleading,” The FCC’s Carlos Kirjner wrote Aug. 20 in the agency’s new broadband blog. “For example, in most cases the ‘advertised’ throughput speed has a tenuous relation with the actually delivered speed, which will actually vary over time, depending on the application, the server, and many other factors.”
The FCC is seeking public comment on whether to develop a single definition or multiple definitions of broadband; whether an application-based approach to defining broadband would work, and how such an approach could be expressed in terms of performance indicators; what segments of the network each performance indicator should measure, such as the local access link to the end user, or an end-to-end path; and how factors such as latency, jitter, traffic loading, diurnal patterns, reliability and mobility should specifically be taken into account for broadband speeds.
The notice also asks whether different performance indicators or definitions should be developed based on technological or other distinctions, such as mobility or the provision of the service over a wired or wireless network; and the feasibility and verifiability of measuring different performance indicators.
“If we want to decide who has and who does not have broadband, we actually need to agree on what we mean by broadband,” Kirjner wrote. “If we want to decide who can take advantage of one type of application or another, we need to know what they are actually getting today, and what is the gap between that and what they actually need to get?”
You can submit brief comments on the inquiry to the FCC here. Click on the radio button for the National Broadband Plan Notice of Inquiry – Docket 09-51. If you want to file longer comments using an attachment, file comments here using the same docket number.

AI thrives on data but feeding it the right data is harder than it seems. As enterprises scale their AI initiatives, they face the challenge of managing diverse data pipelines, ensuring proximity to insights, and supporting a growing range of workloads. In this episode, Corey Knowles speaks with Vrashank Jain, lead product manager for Dell’s AI Data Platform, about how businesses can overcome these hurdles with solutions that simplify data management, enhance performance, and unlock the full potential of their AI investments.

In this episode of eSpeaks, Jennifer Margles, Director of Product Management at BMC Software, discusses the transition from traditional job scheduling to the era of the autonomous enterprise.

eSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly uncertain world. They explore how automation, AI, and integrated platforms are helping finance teams tackle today’s biggest challenges, from cross-border compliance and FX volatility to […]
-
Latest News - Resources Resource HubsFeatured ResourcesLink to The Real AI Power Play: Who Controls Your Enterprise Data Layer?
The Real AI Power Play: Who Controls Your Enterprise Data Layer?IT and data teams were promised that AI would make work easier. Instead, it's created new layers of complexity.Link to Building the Backbone of Agentic AI with Trusted, Context-Rich Data
Building the Backbone of Agentic AI with Trusted, Context-Rich DataIn this 10-minute take video, Reltio Principal Solutions Consultant Guy Vorster explains how organizations can overcome fragmented data challenges to power AI agents.Link to IHG scales real-time, trusted data across global brands
IHG scales real-time, trusted data across global brandsAccelerating time to value while powering data-driven engagementLink to Dell’s Vrashank Jain on The Data Problem That Could Break Your AI
Dell’s Vrashank Jain on The Data Problem That Could Break Your AIAI thrives on data but feeding it the right data is harder than it seems. As enterprises scale their AI initiatives, they face the challenge of managing diverse data pipelines, ensuring proximity to insights, and supporting a growing range of workloads. In this episode, Corey Knowles speaks with Vrashank Jain, lead product manager for Dell’s AI Data Platform, about how businesses can overcome these hurdles with solutions that simplify data management, enhance performance, and unlock the full potential of their AI investments.
Link to BMC’s Jennifer Margules on Intelligent Enterprise Orchestration
BMC’s Jennifer Margules on Intelligent Enterprise OrchestrationIn this episode of eSpeaks, Jennifer Margles, Director of Product Management at BMC Software, discusses the transition from traditional job scheduling to the era of the autonomous enterprise.
Link to Global-First Finance: Building Scalable, Compliant Operations in an Uncertain World
Global-First Finance: Building Scalable, Compliant Operations in an Uncertain WorldeSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly uncertain world. They explore how automation, AI, and integrated platforms are helping finance teams tackle today’s biggest challenges, from cross-border compliance and FX volatility to […]
-
Artificial Intelligence -
Video -
Big Data & Analytics -
Cloud -
Networking - Cybersecurity Cybersecurity
- Applications Applications
- IT Management IT Management
- Storage Storage
- Mobile Mobile
- Small Business Small Business
- Development Development
- Database Database
- Servers Servers
- Android Android
- Apple Apple
- Innovation Innovation
- PC Hardware PC Hardware
- Reviews Reviews
- Search Engines Search Engines
- Virtualization Virtualization
-
- Blogs Blogs
- Events Events