2021年6月28日 星期一

On Tech: Facebook goes boring. Yes!

Bringing the rest of the world online requires a million different tactics, and Facebook is on it.

Facebook goes boring. Yes!

Aljoscha Höhborn

Technology alone, even if it's cool and backed by billionaires like Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk, isn't sufficient to bring online the roughly 3.5 billion people worldwide who aren't using the internet.

That's why I appreciate a holistic approach taken by Facebook that smartly considers the complexity of the challenge.

The company's initiative started a few years ago with the simple but profound premise that everyone — governments, citizens and companies including Facebook and businesses that sell internet service and equipment — needs to benefit from the internet in order for it to spread everywhere. That required finding ways to lower the costs to connect the world.

If this sounds a bit ho-hum or difficult to grasp … yes. Facebook's approach is mostly boring, which I love, and far less visible than billionaires' satellites, drones or helium balloons used to beam internet service to more places. Instead, Facebook is doing things like sharing internet fiber lines to move data and inventing software for cheaper cellphone equipment. (Yes, Facebook is doing something really helpful!)

There is likely no Big Bang solution to bring the rest of the world online, but there are instead a diversity of approaches that involve effective government policies, self-interested corporations like Facebook, charitable funding and local community organizations tailoring internet technologies and policies for their needs.

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Connecting billions requires a million different tactics and some big-picture — and often boring — strategies.

Here are some examples of what Facebook is doing: In North Carolina, Facebook is sharing fast internet lines that it built for its computer centers with a nonprofit internet provider that is delivering service to rural schools and health care institutions. Fast internet connections cost a fortune, and sharing them eases the burden.

Facebook also designed a technology — and released its blueprints for free — that companies are using to make relatively inexpensive internet equipment to attach to light poles or rooftops in places where it's impractical to tunnel underground to lay conventional internet pipelines. Alaska Communications said recently that it's using gear based on Facebook's designs for speedier internet connections in Fairbanks and Anchorage.

And imagine if Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile owned a mobile network together. That's essentially what Facebook did with partners in Peru to collaborate on a mobile internet network in a sparsely populated area. Otherwise, it might have cost too much for too little potential revenue for companies to wire those areas. Facebook said the project has covered about 1.5 million Peruvians with 4G service since it started two years ago.

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It's not only Facebook; other companies and organizations like the Alliance for Affordable Internet, or A4AI, and the Omidyar Network are also taking holistic approaches to expanding internet use.

Facebook's tangle of internet connection projects may not all be effective. The company is not great at explaining to normal humans what it's doing, as you'll notice from this information the company released on Monday. Facebook, though, may have learned some lessons from the justifiable gripes about its higher-profile projects to expand internet access in ways that largely benefited itself.

What's different about these internet connection projects is that Facebook is mostly taking a back seat. It's trying multiple ways to help the cottage industry that already exists around the internet, including government agencies, internet equipment sellers and cellphone service providers.

Facebook is also laser focused on the mostly invisible parts of expanding internet access: digging internet pipes into rocky terrain or under water, making cellphone towers a little bit more capable and finding sustainable profit models.

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Facebook's self-interest is also out in the open. The company acknowledges that it benefits if more people get online. But so do countries and their citizens and many other companies that profit from selling stuff to billions more internet-connected people and businesses.

"There is no silver bullet for connecting the world," Dan Rabinovitsj, a Facebook vice president who leads its internet connectivity project, told me. He and his colleagues have repeated that sentiment a lot. It may be the most important statement about the challenge of improving the internet for everyone.

Facebook's approach isn't perfect, and it will take more time to assess how well it's working. But in principle, this is what an internet revolution should look like — methodical, collaborative and largely focused on the nuts and bolts to bring more people online. Changing the world is sometimes very dull.

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Before we go …

  • Deception that brings in the cash: My colleague Shane Goldmacher reports on the "dirty little secret of online political fund-raising" — that both Democrats and Republicans use aggressive and misleading texts and emails that are far more likely to trick older Americans who aren't internet savvy. The tactics include fake bill notices, breathless exaggerations and pre-checked boxes that automatically repeat donations.
  • The shrinking TV hit: The Washington Post writes about how subscription streaming services have contributed to the accelerating disappearance of wildly popular TV shows that used to draw tens of millions of people. Making many TV shows for the few tends to be a better bet for subscription services than creating a few shows for the many, The Post says.
  • Laptops that cost less than $500 and don't stink: Wirecutter, the New York Times product recommendation site, has suggestions on good models to consider and how to shop smart.

Hugs to this

"Stop running, there's a bear!!!" In Anchorage, a marathon was stopped when a bear with her cubs plopped down in the middle of the course. The race was rerouted, the runners kept going and no one was hurt.

(This is at least the third tale in On Tech of animals interrupting a race, after that dog in Utah and the ducks.)

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2021年6月26日 星期六

How to Have Complicated Vaccine Conversations

With your caregivers and other people close to your kids.
A roundup of new guidance and stories from NYT Parenting.
Golden Cosmos

A programming note from me: I'm going to be starting book leave on Monday, so this will be my last newsletter until September. I will be back and ready to rumble when the school year starts, and over the summer you can find me on Instagram and Twitter.

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My fantastic editor, Melonyce McAfee, will be taking over for me while I'm out, and she has lined up a group of incredible guest columnists who will give you all the parenting information you need. If you have topics that you'd like to see me or another reporter cover, drop us a line here.

One issue you may be confronting over the coming months is vaccine status. Elisabeth Kwak-Hefferan has an informative piece about how to talk to people you may work closely with — like babysitters and nannies — about whether they are vaccinated. These are difficult conversations, and Elisabeth has helpful guidance about how to approach this thorny topic.

Also in The Times, Corinne Purtill has an interview with Daisy Dowling, the author of "Workparent: The Complete Guide to Succeeding on the Job, Staying True to Yourself, and Raising Happy Kids," about how moms and dads can navigate the fallout of the pandemic on their professional lives. Imani Bashir has a lovely essay about why it was so important to her to teach her Black son to swim. Our readers share their stories about what it was like having a baby during a pandemic. And finally, Alisha Haridasani Gupta has everything you need to know about the child tax credit, which may be sent to you starting on July 15.

See you back here in the fall!

— Jessica Grose, columnist, NYT Parenting

THIS WEEK IN NYT PARENTING

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Rose Wong

How to Have the Hard Vaccination Conversations

Asking someone if they've had a Covid shot can be tricky. Here's how to navigate the new norms of health disclosure.

By Elisabeth Kwak-Hefferan

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Sol Cotti

in her words

Being 'Always On' Has Reached Its Limits. For Parents, It's Time to Reset.

What crisis-acquired habits should working parents break? Daisy Dowling author of "Workparent" weighs in.

By Corinne Purtill

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Elena Fedorova for The New York Times

Teaching My Black Son to Swim

A mother's determination to end a legacy of racial trauma started with mother-son swim lessons.

By Imani Bashir

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Shaina McCoy

We Were Promised a Village: A Year in the Life of Pandemic-Baby Parents

Readers share life lessons from an extraordinary year.

By Alexandra March

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Allison Zaucha for The New York Times

Will You Get the Child Tax Credit?

If you're the parent of children under 17, you may start receiving monthly cash payments.

By Alisha Haridasani Gupta

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Tiny Victories

Parenting can be a grind. Let's celebrate the tiny victories.

We gave our 2-year-old a jar of dried beans and a bunch of kitchen utensils and pans. He will spend 30 minutes or more daily with those beans. His 6-year-old sister got jealous and now they each have their jar for daily bean time while we're cooking or drinking our coffee in the morning.— Rachael Harnish, Singers Glen, Va.

If you want a chance to get your Tiny Victory published, find us on Instagram @NYTparenting and use the hashtag #tinyvictories; email us; or enter your Tiny Victory at the bottom of this page. Include your full name and location. Tiny Victories may be edited for clarity and style. Your name, location and comments may be published, but your contact information will not. By submitting to us, you agree that you have read, understand and accept the Reader Submission Terms in relation to all of the content and other information you send to us.

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