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Freedom to Connect and Muniwireless event: March 30-31, 2009 in DC

Freedom to Connect, the annual event organized by David Isenberg, will be held on March 30-31, 2009 in Washington, DC. I am partnering with David to make this event fun and informative. This year is a very important one because President-elect Barack Obama has made broadband — its cost, quality and availability — a major issue for his administration to tackle. Broadband is, in the eyes of the new administration, not just there for its own sake, but is the means to improving our lives: from the education of our children to the reduction of social isolation among seniors to efficient management of our energy grid.

There will be a lot of new people in Washington DC. In the past, many of Freedom to Connect’s attendees have come from the FCC, various federal government agencies, the Congress and the Senate. We need to have a dialogue with them about the future of broadband and technological innovation in the United States.

The key topics for discussion include:

  • on-line, network-enabled industry and culture, new jobs and sustainable growth
  • Burlington VT, where muni fiber enables business, artistic endeavor, and new telemedicine applications
  • how Lafayette, Louisiana’s community came together as it built its muni fiber network
  • the twin cities of Cedar Falls and Waterloo, Iowa, where one twin has a muni net, and the other doesn’t
  • what municipal CIOs are planning for Seattle, Portland and San Francisco municipal fiber networks
  • city nets, wired and wireless, that didn’t work — what went wrong and what we can do better
  • what Obama’s infrastructure and economic recovery plans mean for tomorrow’s network

Sascha Meinrath (New America Foundation) and I will discuss in great detail what caused the municipal wireless networks in Philadelphia, San Francisco and other cities not to be built. Call it a post-mortem. It’s important for us to know what went wrong so we don’t make the same mistakes. We will also identify the key areas where cities and regions can use Wi-Fi networks not just to deliver public Internet access but to improve municipal and county services.

Among those who have already confirmed attendance to F2C are the CIO of San Francisco, the CTO of Seattle, the Commissioner of Telecommunications of Massachusetts and the Chair of the Vermont Telecommunications Commission, and 20-some other important shapers of the Internet who care about using it to spur economic growth, enhance participatory democracy and make our planet greener.

Get all the details, and sign up at http://freedom-to-connect.net.

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If you are interested in sponsoring the event, please contact us by email.

Related posts:

  1. Thomas Friedman keynotes Freedom to Connect Conference, March 30-31, 2009, Washington DC
  2. Freedom to Connect: March 31 – April 1, 2008 in Washington DC
  3. Freedom to Connect, March 30-31, Washington DC
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2 Comments on “Freedom to Connect and Muniwireless event: March 30-31, 2009 in DC”

  1. F2C: Freedom to Connect » Blog Archive » Quick Note on F2C: Freedom to Connect Says:

    [...] This year, F2C is a partnership between isen.com, LLC and MuniWireless. Esme Vos of MuniWireless writes: This year, President-elect Barack Obama has made broadband — its cost, quality and availability [...]

  2. Rory Conaway Says:

    I’m not buying the post-mortem idea yet. We have proved that municipal systems can be deployed for 1/10 or less than previous systems while simultaneously providing a wider coverage area. This opens up many more possibilities and should give pause to anyone who threw out the idea of a municipal system.

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