1 / 45

Broadband and Technology Trends Across Oklahoma

Join the January 12, 2017 webinar with Brian Whitacre to learn about broadband and technology trends in Oklahoma's agricultural economy. Explore national and state trends, access and adoption rates by county, smartphone trends, recent research, and the impact of broadband on agriculture and the rural economy. Discover how broadband affects civic engagement and the challenges faced by "un-adopters". Learn about OSU Extension products and programs in this informative webinar.

pauletted
Télécharger la présentation

Broadband and Technology Trends Across Oklahoma

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Broadband and Technology Trends Across Oklahoma Ag Econ Current Issues Webinar January 12, 2017 Brian Whitacre Professor and Extension Economist

  2. Agenda • Broadband Overview • National & State Trends (& where to find data) • Access / Adoption by OK County • Smartphone Trends • Recent Broadband Research • Broadband and Agriculture • Broadband and the Rural Economy • Civic Engagement • “Un-adopters” • OSU Extension Products & Programs

  3. Agenda • Broadband Overview • National & State Trends (& where to find data) • Access / Adoption by OK County • Smartphone Trends • Recent Broadband Research • Broadband and Agriculture • Broadband and the Rural Economy • Civic Engagement • “Un-adopters” • OSU Extension Products & Programs

  4. Broadband Overview • What is “Broadband” anyway? • Defined by speed of Internet connection • Historically, anything over 200 kbps • “Dial-up” access connects at 56 kbps • Official threshold is defined by the FCC and has changed over the years • CURRENTLY: 25 MBPS down, 3 MPBS up (2015) • 4 MBPS down, 1 MBPS up (2010) • 786 KBPS down (2008) • 200 KBPS at least 1 direction (prior to 2008)

  5. Broadband Vs. Dial-up • Dial-up was dominant in the early 2000s! • Largely disappeared as broadband became more available • There are still 3-5% of households who have a dial-up connection

  6. Why Is Broadband Important? • Think about all the things you do online! • Finding information • Flights / hotels • Banking • Social connections • Buying / selling • Healthcare information • Those that are not connected have fewer tools to help them in everyday life • “Digital Divides” • High / Low income • Rural / Urban • Young / Elderly

  7. How Important IS Broadband? • We asked 1,500 people across the nation to rank the following items in terms of their importance: • Home Internet connection • Smartphone • Cable / Satellite TV in your home • Air conditioning in your home • Personal car How would YOU rank these?

  8. How Important IS Broadband? • Results: % of people surveyed who ranked having a home Internet connection OVER • Smartphone • Cable / Satellite TV in your home • Air conditioning in your home • Personal car 47% 68% 45% 33% 12% Ranked Home Internet Connection #1!

  9. The Rural / Urban Digital Divide Persistent 10-15 point gap over time

  10. Agenda • Broadband Overview • National & State Trends (& where to find data) • Access / Adoption by OK County • Smartphone Trends • Recent Broadband Research • Broadband and Agriculture • Broadband and the Rural Economy • Civic Engagement • “Un-adopters” • OSU Extension Products & Programs

  11. What Technologies Are Used? • For FIXED Connections: • Cable • DSL • Fiber (FTTP)

  12. BUT…The Growth of Mobile!

  13. Put Another Way…

  14. Mobile Dominating… • Some households have BOTH Mobile and Fixed • But, many depend ONLY on Mobile!

  15. “Smartphone-Dependent”

  16. Data Sources for Broadband • Broadband Availability • National Broadband Map (www.broadbandmap.gov) - Data as of June 2014 Type in an address and see what type of broadband is available

  17. National Broadband Map • Explore options for wired / wireless Internet in your Community • Results broken out by speeds offered (> & < 3 MBPS)

  18. National Broadband Map • Or, select “Explore the Maps” to zoom in on an area around you Select Technology Type DSL Cable

  19. National Broadband Map • Also includes Mobile Wireless (i.e. Cellular) Coverage… • Is this realistic? You tell me…

  20. How Does Oklahoma Stack Up? Household Subscribership Ratio (# of Fixed Connections / # of Households) Source: Internet Access Services, Status as of Dec. 31, 2015 (FCC, 2016)

  21. How Does Oklahoma Stack Up? Mobile Wireless Subscribership Ratio (# of Mobile Connections / # of People) Source: Internet Access Services, Status as of Dec. 31, 2015 (FCC, 2016)

  22. Wired vs. Wireless Big drop-off is b/c wireless can’t reach these speeds (yet)

  23. Oklahoma BB Adoption Data • Census Tract Estimates provided by FCC • % of Households with at least 200kbps connection 2015 2008

  24. Oklahoma BB Adoption Data • But, few households have faster speeds 2015 – 10 MB Download 2015

  25. Oklahoma Smartphone Estimates

  26. Agenda • Broadband Overview • National & State Trends (& where to find data) • Access / Adoption by OK County • Smartphone Trends • Recent Broadband Research • Broadband and Agriculture • Broadband and the Rural Economy • Civic Engagement • “Un-adopters” • OSU Extension Products & Programs

  27. Broadband and Ag • Precision Ag becoming more common • “How Connected Are Our Farms?” Source: Whitacre et al., 2014

  28. Broadband and the Rural Economy • Rural counties with high levels of broadband adoption show larger growth in income and lower growth in unemployment. Not true for access. Source: Whitacre et al., 2014

  29. Broadband and the Rural Economy • Alternatively, rural counties with low adoption fared worse in number of firms and total employment. Source: Whitacre et al., 2014

  30. Broadband and Civic Engagement • Rural Broadband is (mostly) positively related to most measures of civic engagement Source: Whitacre and Manlove, 2016

  31. Broadband and Civic Engagement • But there are some exceptions! Source: Whitacre and Manlove, 2016

  32. Broadband and Civic Engagement Source: Whitacre and Manlove, 2016

  33. Broadband “Un-adopters” • Some households have a broadband connection but choose to discontinue it (~4%) • Mostly due to cost • Subsidies can help • Retirees select “no need” Source: Whitacre and Rhinesmith, 2015

  34. Agenda • Broadband Overview • National & State Trends (& where to find data) • Access / Adoption by OK County • Smartphone Trends • Recent Broadband Research • Broadband and Agriculture • Civic Engagement • “Un-adopters” • OSU Extension Products & Programs

  35. OSU E-commerce Program • Extension program focused on small businesses trying to build their web presence • Partner with Rural Enterprises, Inc (REI) • Often team up with local chambers / banks / technology centers • Started in 2007, has progressed yearly… • Won AAEA Extension award in 2013

  36. OSU E-commerce Program

  37. Options for Low-Income Households • New OSU Fact Sheet • Options include: • $5/$10 / month programs from AT&T and Cox • $9.25 / month discount from federal government • Free library hotspot programs

  38. Options for Low-Income Households

  39. Library Hotspot Programs • “Check out the Internet!” • Wireless hotspot devices that libraries loan out to constituents for 1-2 weeks (FREE) • Tulsa, OK has program • Pilot rural libraries in KS and TX • Ongoing grant to find out “what works” If the library in your community is interested, let me know!

  40. NEW Program Under Development • “Broadband Basics” • Demonstrations of how various types of broadband technology is set up / used • iPads, laptops, phones • Digital literacy training • Examples from local health care providers / businesses about what can be done online • Costs / subsidies available for residential broadband adoption • Input from county educators about what can be done locally

  41. “Smartphone-Dependent”

  42. Seeking Partners… • If you are interested in this program, get in touch with me! • Currently seeking out partners: • Libraries • Technology companies • Senior centers • Civic organizations • Working on funding for iPads / laptops / phones

  43. Increasing BB Adoption is NOT Easy! • PEW’s “Digital Readiness” Index suggests 52% of all Americans are relatively hesitant

  44. Digital Inclusion Programs • Typically housed in libraries or public computing centers • Multiple courses on how to use websites, email, MS office, Internet basics • Many online resources available

  45. Summary • Broadband is increasingly important in today’s society • Mobile access is becoming dominant – most people use it to search, and some are ONLY using mobile • Several low-cost options exist for low-income households • OSU Extension program under development promoting “digital inclusion”

More Related