Wednesday, November 16, 2011
SCTA Conference Provides Opportunity to Explore USF Reform and its Impact on South Carolina
Monday, November 7, 2011
Protecting Children Online
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Don't need broadband? Think again as providers look to educate consumers
10 Ways to Avoid Phishing E-mails and other E-mail Scams
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Connect South Carolina Releases 2011 Residential Broadband Adoption Survey Results
43% of South Carolina residents still do not adopt broadband at home
Columbia, South Carolina – Today, Connect South Carolina released new residential broadband adoption survey results revealing the top trends in technology use among key demographics in South Carolina. The preliminary indicators from the survey are available online, which gives a comprehensive view of the challenges and opportunities for expanding broadband in targeted sectors. Approximately 43% of South Carolina residents are not subscribing to broadband at home. Most notably, the majority of low-income, rural, senior, disabled adult, Hispanic, and African-American households are without broadband at home, leaving them facing an uphill battle in keeping up with essential online resources, job and educational opportunities, and social services.
This survey is conducted in support of Connect South Carolina’s efforts to close South Carolina’s digital gap. The survey explores the main barriers to adoption – cost, digital skills, and relevance – and also provides unique insights into the national broadband landscape.
“The broadband adoption gap affects us all – it affects the economic future of our communities, it affects the education of our children, and it affects the economy’s potential for job growth,” said Tom Koutsky, chief policy counsel for Connected Nation, Connect South Carolina’s parent organization. “But there are no simple solutions to what is a multifaceted problem. Our South Carolina-based research into the demographic, economic, and digital skill barriers to adoption is a crucial first step that will help communities and policymakers tailor and target effective broadband adoption solutions.”
This survey reveals that:
• 53% percent of people living in rural areas do not subscribe to broadband service at home.
• When comparing to the 57% of all households that do subscribe, there remain large gaps among key demographics:
o 74% of low-income households;
o 51% of Hispanic households; and
o 69% of seniors are without broadband.
• Approximately 170,000 children in low-income households are without access to this essential tool at home.
• 252,000 South Carolina adults say a lack of digital skills and knowledge of how to use a computer and broadband is the main reason they don’t have broadband at home.
• The biggest gap is among low-income seniors. Only 9% of low-income seniors subscribe to broadband and only 24% have a computer at home.
These results and comparisons to many others are available on Connect South Carolina’s new consumer trends widget. This interactive tool gives people the ability to view, share, and download the results. Connect South Carolina will use these survey results to target solutions in communities based on the demographic and economic barriers that the surveys indicate are most relevant to those communities.
This release comes on the heels of the FCC’s newly released plans to launch a comprehensive public-private initiative called Connect to Compete, aimed at extending digital literacy training and providing employment assistance to communities. Connect South Carolina’s parent organization, Connected Nation, is one of the top strategic advisors in the national initiative.
Connect South Carolina’s 2011 residential survey was conducted in the summer of 2011 and includes responses from 3,601 residents. The survey was conducted as part of the South Carolina Broadband Initiative (SBI) grant program, funded by the U.S. Department of Commerce, National Telecommunications and Information Administration, and funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment of 2009.
Download the Press Release
Monday, October 24, 2011
5 Tips for Protecting Your Identity Online
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
State and District Measures Require Students to Take Virtual Classes
Monday, October 17, 2011
5 Tips for Securing Your Personal Computer
Friday, October 14, 2011
27% of South Carolina Businesses do not use Broadband
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Tightening your data belt can save you money
Monday, September 19, 2011
Bridging the digital divide; Winston-Salem church to open computer lab
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
South Carolina Businesses Using Broadband Report Higher Annual Revenues than State Averages
Monday, September 12, 2011
Obama Administration Releases Report, Highlights Rural Broadband Expansion
Thursday, September 8, 2011
Millions going to Expanding the Internet
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Technology Report Shows how Broadband Makes Good Business Sense in South Carolina
Connect South Carolina Report Demonstrates Broadband is Key to Higher Business Revenues
Thursday, August 25, 2011
American Red Cross Using Technology to Prepare People for Hurricane Season
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Farmers need high-speed Internet access
Monday, August 22, 2011
Two Charleston Co. schools set to get iPads
WEST ASHLEY, SC (WCSC)
The Charleston County School Board has approved a recommendation to allow two schools to have iPad 2's in the classroom.
Right now, a kindergarten, first and third grade class at Drayton Hall are using iPads. With Monday evening's approval, all of Drayton Hall will get iPad 2's plus one more elementary school in Charleston County.
"They have made a huge difference in learning. The kids test grades have gotten much better," said Amy Winsted, a teacher at Drayton Hall Elementary.
"It saves so much paper. Eventually we're hoping to let kids take tests and quizzes on the iPads and e-mail them to their teachers," Winsted said.
To read more click here.
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
South Carolina Focuses On Broadband
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Broadband Expansion Going Nowhere Fast
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Targeting School Lunch Programs to Reach America’s Most Vulnerable
Across the board, households with lower incomes subscribe to broadband at a lower rate than higher-income households. The presence of this “Affordability Gap” can have a significant effect upon economic growth and opportunity – with the economy moving increasingly online, ensuring that every American has digital skills is crucial to economic growth, education, and workforce development.
But how much of a barrier is affordability? What is the most efficient and effective way of bridging the Affordability Gap? How many non-adopting households would be motivated to adopt broadband through low-cost incentive programs or targeted discounts? Is there any defining demographic characteristic of this community that would allow policymakers to efficiently target such initiatives?
According to a report released by Connected Nation today, titled “Broadband Adoption Among Low-Income Households: Insights from Connected Nation Research,” low-income households with children are at a particularly high risk, and this lack of broadband for such a large number of American schoolchildren affects the education and social welfare of our entire country. This report finds that 32% of households with children where the annual income is less than $25,000 do not have computers in the home, and 61% do not subscribe to home broadband service. In addition, based on our surveys, we estimate that 23% of households with children eligible (or near the eligibility threshold) for free or reduced lunches through the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) do not own a computer, and 48% do not subscribe to home broadband service. If these figures are extrapolated to the nation as a whole, that would mean that approximately 2.9-3.9 million low-income households with children don’t have a home computer, and 5.5-8.1 million don’t subscribe to home broadband service.

FCC: Competition is in the Eye of the Beholder
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) just released its 15th Annual Mobile Wireless Competition Report. A lot of people have been waiting with bated breath for this report to be made public, some looking for a stamp of approval for provider activities (like changes in price models and mergers) while others were hoping the report would portray wireless providers as robber barons that have successfully quashed all competition. This 308-page behemoth, though, paints a more complicated picture of a mobile wireless environment where both successes and reasons for concern can be found.
According to the report, about 92% of Americans (or about 262 million people) can choose from two or more mobile broadband providers, but fewer than seven out of ten (67.8%, or about 193 million people) have four or more mobile broadband choices. There is also a rural/urban divide, as only 69% of rural residents have two or more mobile broadband choices, and only 17.3% of rural residents have four or more options. In fact, a measurement of market concentration (the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index, or HHI) finds that the wireless market is “Highly Concentrated,” with four major national providers serving over 90 percent of the nation’s mobile wireless subscribers.
Yet not all is gloom and doom. As the FCC report points out, measures of concentration are not necessarily synonymous with a non-competitive market. It turns out the United States is following a global pattern, as mobile markets in many industrialized nations have just 3-4 major providers each. In the U.S. there is little variance in competition between census tracts with different median household incomes; tracts whose median household incomes are below $25,000 have an average of 3.3 mobile broadband providers, compared to 3.7 providers in tracts with median household incomes of $150,000 or more. The consumer price index (CPI) for the cellular market has decreased or remained the same every year since 1999, while the CPI for all goods and services has increased every year but one during that time period. In addition, mobile broadband providers show evidence of both price and non-price competition, a sign of healthy competition between carriers.
I suspect that in the end everyone will pick and choose some data out of this report, depending on the argument they want to make. Are there indicators that mobile competition can be improved upon? Yes, there are. Is there evidence that points to a competitive mobile market? That’s in there, too. Does this report show a market that is too complicated to resort to bumper sticker competitive analysis? Most definitely.
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Fast Forward: Meeting the Technological Needs of South Carolina Residents
Since 1999, 11,000 South Carolinians have come to Fast Forward for assistance with their technological challenges. Some are taking advantage of computers for school assignments while others are completing technology certifications and looking for jobs. To meet those needs, the volunteers of Fast Forward, a Columbia, South Carolina nonprofit, are ready to help those who have been underserved through traditional programs.

“Fast Forward is about connections and helping people,” said Fast Forward Executive Director Dee Albritton. “I’ve seen people’s lives transformed.”
Albritton mentioned multiple examples of individuals whose lives have changed because of Fast Forward. Lucy volunteered at Fast Forward while she was in high school. After graduation, Lucy went on to college and later the Peace Corps where she started a community technology center in Namibia.
Another beneficiary was Jesse, who was living in her car when she first came to Fast Forward for help. Fast Forward helped her achieve technology certificates, learn life skills, and eventually obtain a job at a local grocery store. Jesse is now taking advantage of Fast Forward’s technology to search for a home.
Fast Forward also opened its doors to a local student working his way through high school and college without a computer at home. Fast Forward was where he went to complete his homework assignments.
Fast Forward also uses technology to teach community residents at the Babcock Center which serves adults with lifelong disabilities. Twice a week participants and program leaders come to Fast Forward to use technology to provide training on life skills. Also, Fast Forward is using technology to teach at-risk students geography, digital photography, robotics, nutrition, and many other creative classes. Creative classes include learning how to create cities using Google sketch and make music videos for local bands.
According to Albritton “there are technology jobs available, but people aren’t qualified for them.” Fast Forward is working to prepare people for these jobs.
Fast Forward is open to everyone. Class participants set up e-mail accounts that allow them to save their cover letters, resumes, thank-you letters, and class resources so that they can have access to Fast Forward tools if they move or relocate due to a job opportunity.
“Instead of teaching technology, we’re using technology to teach,” Albritton said.
Thursday, March 10, 2011
USDA rural broadband loan program updated
Washington, DC - The USDA today released new information for applicants for its broadband loan program for rural areas. The program is designed to provide loans for the costs of construction, improvement, and acquisition of facilities and equipment to provide broadband service to eligible rural communities.
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced that the USDA has issued a Notice of Solicitations of Applications and regulations implementing the 2008 Farm Bill for the broadband loan program.
“Broadband investments are an essential part of the Obama Administration’s effort to ‘win the future’ by out-innovating, out-educating, and out-building our global competitors,” Vilsack said in the announcement. “Investments in rural broadband networks create jobs and economic opportunity for rural America. Broadband is critical communications infrastructure of the twenty-first century, and it is vital to building vibrant rural communities.”
The notice is being issued prior to passage of a final appropriations act to allow applicants time to submit proposals and give the agency time to process applications within the current fiscal year, according to the USDA. Upon completion of a 2011 Appropriations Act, RUS will publish a subsequent notice identifying the amount of funding available for broadband loans.
The application guide to assist in preparing applications is available at: http://www.rurdev.usda.gov/utp_farmbill.html.
USDA’s Farm Bill broadband loan program has invested mote than $1 billion over the past decade in more than 100 projects nationwide, according to the USDA announcement. RUS is planning to schedule training opportunities to educate applicants on new program requirements, and how to submit complete and competitive applications. Dates for the training will be published on the USDA website.