gigabit city summit
The Gigabit City Summit. (Photo by Bridgit Bowden/ Flatland)

How do you build the ‘gigabit city’?

January 13, 2015  |    |  3 min read

 

Nearly four years after Google Fiber announced service to the Kansas City area, some key questions remain largely unanswered — particularly questions about how the city will use gigabit-speed internet to grow and thrive.

This week in Kansas City, the Gigabit City Summit, organized largely by KC Digital Drive, is assembling representatives from Kansas City and other cities across the country to tackle one basic question: “How do you build the gigabit city?” or a city that utilizes super-fast internet.

Aaron Deacon, managing director at KC Digital Drive, said that gigabit internet did not come to Kansas City with an instruction manual. In other words, it’s up to the city to figure out how it will utilize super-fast internet speeds in our communities.

Deacon said there are so many potential ways to use gigabit that it can be a challenge to focus into specific applications.

“One of the most interesting challenges is the fact that gigabit applications are a hard thing for people to wrap their heads around,” he said.

A key to figuring out the gigabit future, he said, is to focus on ways that gigabit applications improve quality of life for everyone, including the underserved.

Deacon asked summit participants to consider the social benefits of potential gigabit applications. He said there’s huge potential in healthcare, public safety and education, but the key to making that happen is access. In fact, the problem of bridging the digital divide was one of the major themes of the summit.

Kansas City, Kansas, Mayor Mark Holland also stressed the importance of bringing internet access to low-income and underserved communities.

“We have an opportunity to take people who have no access to jobs, education and government services and give them access,” he said.

Holland said the demographics of his community of Kansas City, Kansas, make it essential to improve not only internet access, but also digital literacy. He said some people don’t have even the most basic computer skills, such as turning on a computer or opening a browser, and community leaders need to focus on educating that population.

Mayor Sly James and Mayor Mark Holland

Mayors Sly James and Mark Holland spoke at the Gigabit City Summit. (Photo by Bridgit Bowden/ Flatland)

Mayor Holland said he thinks that gigabit-speed internet has the potential to help bridge the digital gap. But, he stressed the idea that companies that provide broadband should focus on the greater good instead of just profits.

“We’re much more interested in community partners than robber barons,” he said.

The Gigabit City Summit runs from January 13–15.

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