Report: Minn. Needs Significant Internet Upgrades

 

MARTIGA LOHN

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Internet speeds in more than four-fifths of Minnesota are too slow to support technologies that could draw new jobs, take cars off the roads and bring new services to people in their homes, a new report said Friday.

The Minnesota Ultra High-Speed Broadband Task Force is calling for minimum Internet speeds of 10 megabits per second for the entire state by 2015, setting a standard 15 times faster than the current federal definition of broadband.

By that measure, 83 percent of the state needs an upgrade.

The group's report describes broadband as "an economic and social necessity for all citizens of the state no matter where they are located." It says faster Internet could enable everything from more telecommuting for workers to telemedicine linking patients and doctors through two-way high-definition video.

"It's an important economic tool as we try to attract and retain the best companies here so we can have good jobs," said Rick King, chief technology officer at Thomson Reuters Legal and the task force's chairman.

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