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What digital cities need
16/01/2008 08:23  - (SA)  

Want to know more?
Answerit can help.

Arthur Goldstuck

The very name sounds like a science fiction vision come true: the digital city.

A digital city is a metropolitan area that provides full connectivity to the internet wherever the user is in the city. It means that all libraries, educational institutions, public services and utilities are fully integrated into the internet, allowing free and unlimited access to their users and customers. It means that inhabitants of the city can connect to the internet at low cost from their homes, places of work or places of entertainment.

This, in turn, means that the city becomes a more attractive place in which to live, and more competitive in terms of attracting business.

So much for the vision. The reality is a little different.

Take that cool and futuristic term: "digital city". But let's turn it inside out for a moment, and describe it for the way it really is constructed in South Africa: "municipal wireless broadband".

Suddenly it isn't so cool or futuristic anymore. Broadband provided by a municipality? That can barely maintain its parks? That cannot provide adequate billing resolution services for such mundane services as lights and water?

Suddenly, municipal broadband has the whiff of the old-style, old-fashioned command and control economy. It has an aura of backwardness, and it appears deeply inappropriate.

Loophole

The best argument for municipal broadband is that a loophole in the law allows municipalities to roll out their own communications infrastructure, and thus provides competition to Telkom. But this really highlights the weakness of the law rather than the opportunity it provides: by allowing Telkom to maintain a stranglehold on connectivity, the law has created a situation in which a concept as improbable as municipal broadband can be seen as a boon to internet users.

Even more surprising is the fact that most telecommunications providers, who have been fighting for a piece of the broadband action for years, are not objecting to municipal broadband. In some cases, the reason is obvious: they hope to be stakeholders in the infrastructure or services that the municipalities roll out.

Among the very few prominent players who have been willing to declare that this broadband emperor wears no clothes is Mike van den Bergh, chief operating officer of Gateway Communications, which provides communications services across Africa. He told a conference in 2006 that municipalities have no place in telecommunications, and that municipalities should be playing an enabling role, not one of service-provider, in telecoms.

"The objective of a city's governors should be to ensure that their city is the best place to live and the most attractive to invest in," he argued at the Convergence Broadcast and Telecommunications Summit. "In this, telecoms, and broadband especially, is a key enabler, but this does not mean that municipalities have to become telecoms operators. Instead, municipalities should be creating enabling environments and letting the private sector run with it."

Failure

In the United States, several municipal wireless projects have failed. The much-vaunted Wireless Philadelphia project has seen its original cost estimates skyrocket. The cost of connecting a customer for free has been said to be four times as much as a normal commercial rate. San Francisco, Houston, Chicago and St Louis have canned plans for free wireless networks.

Municipalities generally do not operate in a competitive environment, and it is little wonder that they were unable to topple the highly competitive telcos who wanted the same customer bases. For that very reason, the US telocs have been more vocal in their opposition.

Walter White, vice president state and local government for Verizon Communications in the USA, confirmed that the company was highly sceptical about municipal wireless networks.

"From our perspective, taxpayers should ask hard questions about whether pouring money into muni Wi-Fi is a good use of scarce resources. There are several reasons it almost certainly is not.

"First, this isn't Field of Dreams - even if you build it, often they don't come. The city of Orlando shut down its system, having logged an average 27 visitors a day. Other muni Wi-Fi systems are also struggling. While some may succeed, the many that ultimately fail will leave the taxpayers holding the bill. If a private company risks capital, private investors foot the bill, not taxpayers. From our vantage point, that's a better way to go - let the private sector take the risk."

Innovative project

So far, the fall-out from the emperor's state of undress in South Africa has been twofold: on the one hand, there have been the inevitable legal challenges from both those who have not been favoured by the tender procedure, and from Telkom, trying to protect its patch; and on the other hand, municipal efficiency has been shown to be no more remarkable when applied to hi-tech as when displayed in the queues at municipal offices.

Knysna was the first municipality in South Africa to go wireless for its residents, but the pricing was not attractive enough to expand access beyond those who could already afford it.

While free wireless internet access is already offered in all 85 libraries in the eThekwini municipality, the metro is still wrestling with issues of how to be a service provider, and what business models to use. But it has taken a step forward: awarding a R10m tender for a wireless network to cover 2 400 square kilometres.

Tshwane has rolled out a variety of innovative projects, including power line connectivity and a wireless system called a mesh network, but the former has yet to be rolled out on a metro-wide basis, and the trial of the latter was suspended in December. On top of all that, the mastermind of the Tshwane broadband project, Charles Kuun, has left the municipality, leaving the initiative rudderless.

The same has happened in Johannesburg, where Douglas Cohen, the driving force behind the Johannesburg digital city project, also recently resigned. The Cape Town wireless project has stalled due to legal challenges after a tender was awarded.

Why isn't it all working yet?

The answer is simple, once we get around the emperor's fashion challenge: the real digital city is the city of wireless and broadband choice, competition, access and affordability. It is a city in which we can choose our service provider based both on our needs and on the quality and range of service being offered. The digital city as we know it in 2008 is none of the above.

  • Arthur Goldstuck is an award-winning author and journalist, and is managing director of World Wide Worx, which leads research into Internet and mobile communications in South Africa. Visit his urban legends blog at thoselegends.blogspot.comand his business blog at www.thebigchange.com

    Send your comments to Arthur.

    Disclaimer: News24 encourages freedom of speech and the expression of diverse views. The views of columnists published on News24 are therefore their own and do not necessarily represent the views of News24.

    - News24



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  •  
         
      Spot On Arthur
    16/01/2008 10:09
    I agree with this concept that municipalities should be playing an enabling role, not one of service-provider. However the government through municipalities have in the past tried to control the skyrocketing communication prices without success. Now these drastic steps especially with essential basic services like the communication had to be taken with an objective of creating competition and in the process driving down the already expensive prices, I strongly agree with you in a sense that if price reduction is the intention and why don?t municipalities issue more operating licences to the private sector operators to create more competitive environment which in itself will bring down the prices like they did with the cell phone costs, now you can talk for free on weekends - kolobe
     
      This is realy pathetic.
    16/01/2008 10:17
    This abuse and unnecesary waste of money by municipalities should come to an end..this truelly is pathetic..why waste so much money while we still have a huge backlog in schools and houses..I think we are somehow getting our priorities wrong... - kolobe
     
      wifi
    16/01/2008 10:59
    The argument as to whether or not this is viable is moot. The bottom line is you can't install first world technology in a third ( or developing) word and expect success. Far too many people can hardly afford food let alone "cheap" internet access. Must crawl before you can run. Don't waste tax payers money. - The fisherman
     
      It is a reality.
    16/01/2008 12:19
    I live in Scarborough which is situated near Fish Hoek in Cape Town. We have converted what used to be a one-horse town into a digital town. There are over 130 homes connected via a wireless network. We have not gone through the municipality as this would slow the growth of the "Commuinimesh" due to bureaucratic non-sense. Its an amazing concept. - wirelessjeano
     
      re: wifi
    16/01/2008 12:50
    I disagree with you 'The fisherman'. Although basic necessities are lacking in this country for the vast majority of the population, the fact is that it is not due to lack of funds on the governments side, it's lack of skills to implement and carry out the work. Lack of competitively price internet access in this country is a big inheritor to foreign investment and local online companies springing up, creating jobs and bringing in wealth to the country. - henry
     
      digital cities (1)
    16/01/2008 12:51
    Digital cities are the dream of city councilors who cannot get the day to day issues under control. Looking futuristic to get the admiration from the gallery of potential suppliers. WIFI is big business. Statistics about ?computers in Africa? look at a density of 10% of the population having access to ITC. The number will be higher in urban areas but still not a massive following. Implementing and maintaining a wireless network is not in the average municipality?s mandate or competency. The Gauteng ?Schools online? project is an example. Continuous supply is not secured. - Benzo
     
      digital cities (2)
    16/01/2008 12:52
    The other side of the coin is with potential customers. How many people can really put the offering to good use? Issues in this respect are: affordability (equipment and subscription), technical knowledge (computers are not as black box as TV?s and DVD players), language (mostly English with a veneer of local languages filtering through) and literacy in general. One wonders if municipalities have done the right marketing research before even contemplating the undertaking. - Benzo
     
      stupid
    16/01/2008 14:05
    The response of Fisherman is plainly embarrassing. What about cellphone technology? Think before you write pls. - pete
     
         
    This comments facility is now closed.
     
     
     


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