Fiber
The Coming Tech Revolution—and Why America Might Miss It
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
The world of fiber optic connections reaching neighborhoods, homes, and businesses will represent as great a change from what came before as the advent of electricity. The virtually unlimited amounts of data we’ll be able to send and receive through fiber optic connections will enable a degree of virtual presence that will radically transform health care, education, urban administration and services, agriculture, retail sales, and offices. Yet all of those transformations will pale compared with the innovations and new industries that we can’t even imagine today. In a fascinating account combining policy expertise and compelling on-the-ground reporting, Susan Crawford reveals how the giant corporations that control cable and internet access in the United States use their tremendous lobbying power to tilt the playing field against competition, holding back the infrastructure improvements necessary for the country to move forward. And she shows how a few cities and towns are fighting monopoly power to bring the next technological revolution to their communities.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A little fiber will go a long way, according to this book's plan for improving access to healthcare, education, and transit and for combating inequality in the U.S., which posits that "all the policies important to us as a country... depend on having last-mile fiber and advanced wireless services available cheaply to everyone." It may sound like a tough sell, but Wired columnist Crawford (Captive Audience) convinces with impeccable journalism and empathetic portraits of rural communities and low-income cities in distress, the ails of which could be much alleviated by a large-scale federal investment in fiber optic connections. She looks to Japan, Singapore, South Korea, and Scandinavia, all far ahead of the fiber curve, and compares their swift progress to the sluggish and haphazard efforts of American cities, which seem to lack the political will to make the switch. As she explains, fiber presents a cheaper and faster alternative to copper and DSL, which could enable low-income citizens easier access to healthcare and education via emergent possibilities like, respectively, telepsychiatry and robots that allow sick students to participate in classroom sessions from home. Crawford's work is both refreshing and potent in how it clinically identifies the problem, and proposes a straightforward, feasible solution.