How About PH DA Setting Up Satellite-Based Internet In The Countryside?
If the Internet were cheaper, faster and available even in remote areas in the Philippines, with knowledge-conscious Secretary of Agriculture William Dar, it would be as easy as ABC husbanding Agriculture to many thriving industries. Millions of Filipino farmers & fishers would be informed and rise from poverty. Asa ka pa! Hope for more!
Those dreams of empires may not be long in coming. Above, 2nd
District of Albay Representative Joey
Salceda is the principal author of the bill “Satellite Internet
Liberalization Act” approved Wednesday, 24 February 2021, by the House Committee
on Information & Communication Technology (Filane Mikee Cervantes, “House
Panel Approves Satellite Liberalization Bill,” PNA). “A House of Representatives’ panel on Wednesday approved a
(proposed) measure allowing small-town Internet service providers, schools, and
civic organizations to use the country’s satellite orbital to provide internet
service to the countryside.”
(top image[1] from FilipinoHotTopics.com, lower
image my photograph)
In
such a case, no one can stop a small town from becoming Big Town!
Internet, Agriculture. You have questions on:
crop adaptability?
cropping season?
entrepreneurship?
fertilizers?
fishing laws?
loans?
machineries?
markets?
pesticides?
prevailing prices?
raw materials?
seeds?
technologies?
weather?
(The-ask-me-anything knowledge bank.)
Conversations, documentations, questions & answers could
now be lightning fast. Lecturers or technicians need not be at the location to
provide expert and on-time advice and/or instructions. Businesses will grow!
Mr Salceda says the Philippines’ “months of lockdown due to
the pandemic have steered the nation into the digital economy, demanding that
telecommunications companies improve their Internet services.”
Now, he says:
The new jobs are
digital. We will need new jobs as we recover from the coronavirus disease. We
will not get those jobs without faster internet, so this is a matter of
national emergency,
Mr Salceda notes that, in a recent study by Tufts University
in Massachusetts and Mastercard Inc, the Philippines is running behind regional
competitors Indonesia and Vietnam.
The internet is the
lifeblood of the new economy. If you do not have fast Internet, you're as good
as finished in the global competition. If we (have) bigger ambitions for our country,
we need faster Internet.
Mr Salceda is also the principal author of the House
proposal “Faster Internet Services Act” that will encourage more competition in
telecommunications – for faster and better services.
The Philippines is
ahead in terms of user experience. This country has some of the world’s best
designers. In fact, the index ranks us 10th on that score, but the country’s
infrastructure and regulations have to catch up.
Personally, the Internet is in my blood now. I started
travelling the information highway some 23 years ago. I began blogging in 2005
and, for many years now, I have stood as the world’s most creative writer
nonfiction online, having blogged at least 5,000 long essays at least 1,000
words each.
Today,
at 80, I am a work-from-home (WFH) Ilocano at ease with American English,
earning frankly more than I have ever experienced since I graduated from the
University of the Philippines in 1965. Thank God for WFH via the Internet!@517
[1]https://filipinohottopics.com/rep-salceda-inumungkahi-na-gamitin-ang-satellite-technology-para-mapalakas-ang-internet-connection-sa-mga-malalayong-lugar/
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