[LibreQoS] Fwd: Here's how the Broadband Fabric should be built.

dan dandenson at gmail.com
Thu May 11 15:50:04 EDT 2023


I'm not in that area, but just wanted to comment on the name being too
easily confused with everyone's most hated web browser...

On Wed, May 10, 2023 at 8:47 AM Dave Taht via LibreQoS <
libreqos at lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:

>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ---------
> From: Sascha Meinrath <sascha at thexlab.org>
> Date: Wed, May 10, 2023 at 7:30 AM
> Subject: Here's how the Broadband Fabric should be built.
> To: National Broadband Mapping Coalition <bbcoalition at marconisociety.org>
>
>
> Hi Everyone,
>
> A national team of GIS experts have been collaborating on an open source,
> address-level, free broadband availability map -- the PA beta is now live
> here:
>
>      https://internetxplorer.org
>
> ***
>
> As you will quickly see, the map has information down to the address level
> --
> and it enables easy zooming to whichever level you're interested in
> (unlike the
> FCC's map). *AND* we have also pointed out households that *should* be in
> the
> Fabric but are not (along with a bunch of highway mile markers that will
> need to
> be cleaned out -- an artifact of pulling locations from E911 databases).
> Most of
> the Turquoise dots represent challenges that should have been made -- and
> there
> are areas in North Central and SW PA where there are thousands upon
> thousands of
> households currently missing from the Fabric data.
>
> This map is freely and publicly available for non-commercial use, and it's
> built
> with open source code -- so we'd welcome both collaborators, re-use by
> more
> states, inquiries from devs who want to help, as well as your feedback
> (there's
> a handy "reach out" link at the top of the map that'll e-mail the team).
>
> The dev team is particularly keen to accelerate additional features (e.g.,
> drawing an arbitrary polygon and having it compute # of households, # & %
> unserved, # & % underserved; and mash-ups with demographic data from the
> 2020
> census [which would enable the first-ever empirical look at de facto
> digital
> redlining]).
>
> Long story short, this was pulled together by an independent team because
> the
> country and state continues to misappropriate funding for disastrously
> unusable
> broadband maps. We wanted to back up our critique by demonstrating what is
> possible. This particular map is purpose-built to show eligible areas for
> the PA
> Capital Project Fund RFP (coming out today), but it serves as an exemplar
> showing how feasible building an free and open, accessible, cheaper, and
> more
> usable map actually is.
>
> I hope folks like it.
>
> Best,
>
> --Sascha
>
> --
> Sascha Meinrath
> Director, X-Lab
> Palmer Chair in Telecommunications
> Penn State University
>
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> .
>
>
> --
> Podcast:
> https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7058793910227111937/
> Dave Täht CSO, LibreQos
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