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Harrisonburg ready for the next generation of Internet
technology
by
Doug Childers
for Virginia Business
October 2006
Many cities are beginning to offer wireless Internet
access and broadband service on a large scale. Last fall,
for
example, Philadelphia announced a plan to build an inexpensive
wireless, or Wi-Fi, network covering 135 square miles
through a partnership with Earthlink.
But no American municipality has offered Wi-Fi and
broadband citywide with the IPv6 format, which represents
the next
generation of the Internet. Harrisonburg, a city of
45,000, is about to change that. “We were looking at a
wireless system for the city as a part of our technology
initiatives,” says Jim Barnes, Harrisonburg’s
assistant economic development director for technology. “We
decided to do it right and be on the cutting edge. We’re
looking to attract technology companies, so having the
technology of the future is important.”
Currently, most of the Internet runs on IPv4, which
is more than 30 years old and beginning to show its
age.
IPv6, which is an abbreviation for “Internet Protocol
Version 6,” boasts considerable advantages over
previous versions, including higher security and greater
speed.
It also offers more IP addresses for network devices,
which is an especially valuable feature, given
the number of devices that require an IP address
to access
the Internet.
IPv4 supports 4.3 billion addresses, and it is
projected to run out of addresses by 2010. IPv6 supports
50
octillion — which
is 50 followed by 27 zeroes, or 50 trillion trillion.
Even with an explosion of Internet devices, IPv6 offers
the Internet adequate room to grow.
Harrisonburg’s wireless network, which is being
launched in stages, will be accessible citywide by Dec.
31. In later phases, fiber-optic cable will be installed
to expand the service as a wireless/fiber-optic hybrid
network.
City officials expect many benefits from the
system. They believe the network will help attract
companies
looking to locate in a city that offers cutting-edge
technology. “We see this as a great opportunity
for companies wanting to test IPv6 technologies being
developed,” Barnes says.
The network also will make the city more appealing
to federal agencies, which face a government-mandated
2008
deadline to adopt IPv6.
In addition, the new network will help serve
many of the 17,000 students at James Madison
University. “One
of our thrusts is to create more technology opportunities
for JMU students,” Barnes says. “Having the
latest technology for them to use provides a great advantage.
We’re getting a fair amount of technology firms
locating here, looking to hire JMU students.”
Down the road, IPv6 may offer a plethora of
expansion options, including offering television
shows
across a network because it allows one data
stream or
video stream
to be simultaneously broadcast to an unlimited
number of computers. “IPv6 TV is the future — the
resolution is phenomenal,” Barnes says. And it
may broaden the program options currently available from
cable and broadcast networks.
Because Harrisonburg set up the network as
a franchise, its development costs will
be paid
by the franchisee,
Winchester-based World Airwaves, which
owns and operates the network. It received easement
rights
and right-of-ways
from the city, just as cable companies
do.
It will generate revenue from monthly fees
it charges
users
as well as
fees it charges other Internet service
providers which use the network to supply broadband
to their customers. “We
like that because it’s a clean model,” Barnes
says. “It means another technology firm is coming
to Harrisonburg to invest in the city.”
World Airwaves recently signed a franchise
deal to build and operate a wireless
IPv6 network for Morgan
County,
W.Va., similar to Harrisonburg’s arrangement. The
company also has announced plans to develop an IPv6 network
for Occoquan, Va. And it’s not done with the Shenandoah
Valley.
“Our plan is to go from Winchester to Harrisonburg
as far south as Lexington and turn the entire Valley
region into a next-generation Internet [site],” says
Mark Bayliss, president of World Airwaves. “We’re
building a nice test area for the world.”
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