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FC: The new pork: Tech firms ask Feds to pay billions for broadband
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 10:06:02 -0400
[Where's John McCain when you need him? --DBM]
http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB993418457489449631.htm
#
# Tech Industry Seeks Its Salvation June 25, 2001
# In High-Speed Internet Connections
#
# By SCOTT THURM and GLENN R. SIMPSON
# Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
#
# High-tech executives think they've found a cure for the industry's
# deepest slump in a decade: High-speed Internet access for
# everyone.
#
# For years, telephone and cable-TV companies have been promising
# to build high-speed "broadband" networks, which let consumers
# and small businesses tap the Internet 20 or 30 times faster than
# conventional phone lines, yet the rollout has been slow. There's
# little agreement, even within the tech world, on the ground rules
# for building such networks, which would cost tens of billions
# of dollars. But suddenly the topic has rocketed to the top of
# the technology industry's agenda in Washington, where
# traditionally distant tech executives are asking for help.
#
# The chairmen of International Business Machines Corp., Intel
# Corp., Motorola Inc. and others last week met with key lawmakers
# and National Economic Council officials to support bills that
# would provide tax credits for building high-speed networks in
# rural areas and economically depressed inner cities. Other
# executives propose broader tax breaks, comparing broadband
# Internet links with the government-financed interstate highway
# or rural electric systems.
#
# Likening the task to the 1960s effort to put a man on the moon,
# John Chambers, chief executive of Cisco Systems Inc., is asking
# that the federal government commit to making broadband connections
# available to every home by 2010. A Cisco lobbyist calls the effort
# "our No. 1 goal" (although a spokesman says Mr. Chambers doesn't
# think the government would be the one to build the network).
#
# Some tech executives argue that extending broadband networks
# would help revive the national economy, because tech spending
# contributed such a large share of economic growth in recent years.
[...]
**********
From: David Honig <honig () sprynet com>
Subject: Re: Pleading to Washington for broadband
Date: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 06:46:57 -0700
At 03:00 AM 6/26/01 -0400, George () Orwellian Org wrote:
Excerpt:
# Likening the task to the 1960s effort to put a man on the moon,
# John Chambers, chief executive of Cisco Systems Inc., is asking
# that the federal government commit to making broadband connections
# available to every home by 2010.
And in related news, Janet Panopticon, CEO of a webcam manufacturer,
suggested that the federal government commit to providing free
internet enabled digital cameras sufficient for each room of
a residence...
**********
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