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2016 CANADIAN INTERNET FORUM BROADBAND & THE MODERN DIGITAL ECONOMY FORUM CANADIEN SUR L’INTERNET 2016 LARGE BANDE ET ÉCONOMIE NUMÉRIQUE MODERNE

2016 Canadian Internet Forum

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2016 CANADIAN INTERNET FORUM BROADBAND & THE MODERN DIGITAL ECONOMY

FORUM CANADIEN SUR L’INTERNET 2016 LARGE BANDE ET ÉCONOMIE NUMÉRIQUE MODERNE

THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS NOUS REMERCIONS NOS COMMANDITAIRES

SOME HOUSEKEEPING FOR TODAY QUELQUES QUESTIONS D’ORDRE GÉNÉRAL AU SUJET DE LA JOURNÉE

•  Check the folders for agenda + material for the discussion today •  Use #CIRAif to join the conversation on Twitter •  Translation is available – headsets at registration •  Wifi: Nature Wifi

–  No password

•  Vous trouverez dans les chemises l’ordre du jour et le matériel prévus pour les échanges d’aujourd’hui.

•  Pour joindre la conversation sur Twitter, utilisez #CIRA .

•  La traduction est offerte — les casques d’écoute se trouvent aux inscriptions.

•  Accès sans fil à Internet : Nature Wifi.

–  Aucun mot de passe.

Byron Holland, president and CEO of CIRA président et chef de la direction de l’ACEI

WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION MOT DE BIENVENUE ET PRÉSENTATION

LINKING BROADBAND, SKILLS, AND GROWTH COMPÉTENCES, TALENT ET ACCÈS À LA LARGE BANDE — LE FIL CONDUCTEUR

75% of Canadian Internet users agreed that having Internet access was critical to the ability of Canadians to gain new skills.

Half of the IT leaders surveyed reported having difficulty getting the IT talent they need.

TOTAL DIFFICULTDon’t know/Not sure

40%1%

0% 100%50%

75%

18%

6%

1%

Agree Neither agree or disagree

Somewhat disagree Don’t know

conferenceboard.ca

Canada’s Economic Outlook: Adapting to Change in the Information Age

Pedro Antunes Deputy Chief Economist, The Conference Board of Canada June 2017

7

An Economic Growth Framework…

•  Viewing the supply side of the economy through a production function approach

•  Our productive capacity depends on: Ø  the amount and type of capital, Ø the amount and quality of labour and Ø  the efficiency with which capital and labour mix to produce output

8

0

100,000

200,000

300,000

400,000

500,000

600,000 2014 2035

Population distribution by age, 2014 and 2035

Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

9

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

1981-90 1991-00 2001-05 2006-10 2011-20f 2021-30f 2031-35f

Labour Force Growth average annual compound growth, per cent

Sources: Statistics Canada; The Conference Board of Canada.

10

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

1981-90 1991-00 2001-05 2006-10 2011-20f 2021-30f 2031-35f

Potential Output Growth Canada average annual compound growth, per cent

Sources: Statistics Canada; The Conference Board of Canada.

11

What is Efficiency/Productivity?

Over time is a key determinant of income levels in an economy Contributes directly to labour productivity—output per hour worked Capital stock per worker is the other defining component of labour productivity Why are we concerned…

12

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

3.5

NL PEI NS NB Que Ont Man Sask Alta BC

Previous decade 2004-2014

Canada 20-year average U.S 20-year average

Labour Productivity Growth by Province average annual compound growth, per cent

Sources: Statistics Canada; The Conference Board of Canada.

13

Report Card on Innovation. Overall Rankings.

14

Innovation Activity. ICT Investment.

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

4

AsapercentageofGDP,2013orMRYA.

15

Innovation Capacity. Connectivity.

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

PercentofhouseholdswithbroadbandsubscripAons2012orMRYA.

conferenceboard.ca

Broadband, ICTs and the Evolving Digital Economy An OECD perspective Verena Weber* * The views are my own and may or may not be those of the OECD and its Member countries

Fixed broadband subscriptions per 100 inhabitants, by technology, June 2015

Source: OECD Broadband Portal

18

Percentage of fibre connections in total broadband among countries reporting fibre subscribers, June 2015

Source: OECD Broadband Portal 19

Annual growth of fibre subscriptions, June 2014-2015

Source: OECD Broadband Portal

20

Speed measures: Actual download speeds, 2014

Sources: Akamai [www.akamai.com], M-Lab [www.measurementlab.net] and Ookla [www.ookla.com]. Data collected in the 1st quarter of 2014. 21

Fixed broadband penetration by speed tiers, June 2015

Sources: OECD for Fixed broadband subscriptions; Akamai (2015 Q3) for speed tiers

22

Average peak and average connection speed (Mbps)

Source: Akamai, 2015 Q3

23

Average connection speed (Mbps)

Source: Akamai, 2015 Q3

24

Mobile broadband subscriptions per 100 inhabitants, by technology, June 2015

Source: OECD Broadband Portal

25

Mobile voice and data basket, 300 calls + 1GB, Feb. 2016

Source: OECD and Teligen-Strategy Analytics

26

Fixed broadband basket, high use, >25/30 Mbit/s, USD PPP, Dec. 2015

Source: OECD and Teligen-Strategy Analytics

27

ICT capital and its contribution to GDP growth

28

Diffusion of ICT tools and activities in enterprises

0

20

40

60

80

100

Broadband Website E-purchases

Social media

ERP Cloud computing

E-sales Supply chain mngt.

(ADE)

RFID

% Gap 1st and 3rd quartiles Average Lowest Highest

Source: OECD, ICT Database; Eurostat, Information Society Statistics Database and national sources, July 2015.

Diffusion of ICT tools and activities in enterprises, 2014 - As a percentage of enterprises with ten or more persons employed

29

How ready are countries?

Note: Index in relative terms to unweighted OECD average. Index value is set to 200 where it exceeds that value. 30

Demand Supply

DDI-related indicators: Canada

0

50

100

150

200

Wireless broadband

Online purchase

Apps

Local content hosted

OECD site hosted

Open government data breadth

RFID diffusion

Net ICT business growth

Export in ICT services

Data specialists skills

Investments in economic

Investments in data and software

Canada OECD average

31

The use of the cloud in Canada

Enterprises using cloud computing services, by size, 2014 As a percentage of enterprises in each employment size class

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

%

All Small Medium Large

Source: OECD, ICT Database; Eurostat, Information Society Statistics Database, July 2015. 32

THANK YOU

[email protected]

@WeberVere

33

INTERNET PERFORMANCE RESULTS ACROSS CANADA

Presented by: Don Slaunwhite

35

25 – <27.5 Mbps20 – <22.5 Mbps17.5 – <20 Mbps15 – <17.5 Mbps12.5 – <15 Mbps7.5 – <10 Mbps5 – <7.5 Mbps

DOWNLOAD SPEEDS

*The download speed data for Nunavut and the Northwest Territories has been combined.Note that test numbers for the Yukon were relatively low with only 395 tests for the territory, the majority coming from Whitehorse.

16.6Mbps

6.7Mbps

15.4Mbps

13.5Mbps 22.2

Mbps12.6Mbps

21.8Mbps

15.9Mbps

27Mbps

21.7Mbps

14.6Mbps

19.7Mbps

AVERAGE DOWNLOAD SPEEDS BY PROVINCE

36

URBAN VERSUS RURAL DOWNLOAD SPEEDS BY PROVINCE

- Download speeds in rural locations (Mbps)- Download speeds in urban locations (Mbps)

40 Mbps

30 Mbps30.4

23.7

29.1

11.1

24.9

3.57

23.8

19.423.4

15.818.2

12.1

17.7

5.94

17.1

3.51

16.414.1 14

6.3

13.6

4.587.28

5.43

20 Mbps

10 Mbps

0 Mbps

- CA average download speed

18.64 Mbps

Ultra HD Video Streaming Speed: 25 Mbps

HD Video Streaming Speed: 5 Mbps

New Brunswick

Newfoundland

Saskatchewan

Nova ScotiaOntario

British Columbia PEI

NWT & Nunavut

QuebecAlberta

ManitobaYukon

37

A COMPARISON OF UPLOAD AND DOWNLOAD SPEEDS AGAINST THE NATIONAL AVERAGE

38

AVERAGE DOWNLOAD SPEEDS BY OTTAWA NEIGHBORHOOD

Neighborhood boundaries are derived from the Ottawa Neighborhood Study (ONS). Preliminary data, not for distribution.

39

A SAMPLE OF DOWNLOAD SPEED DIVERSITY IN A CONCENTRATED AREA

Neighborhood boundaries are derived from the Ottawa Neighborhood Study (ONS). Preliminary data, not for distribution.

Beacon Hill South - Cardinal Heights Average Download speed: 27.2 Mbps Number of Tests: 16

Pineview Average Download speed: 50.1 Mbps Number of Tests: 46

Rothwell Heights - Beacon Hill North Average Download speed: 24.9 Mbps Number of Tests: 280

Carson Grove - Carson Meadows Average Download speed: 13.3 Mbps Number of Tests: 74

TAKE THE TEST TODAY

performance.cira.ca

40

Smart Industry Innovation Infrastructure

Network Transformation

January 2016, AT&T announced a bold plan to adopt Software Defined Networking and Network Function Virtualization with “a goal of software controlling 90% of their network by 2020”

CENGN Members

CENGN Commercialization

SMB/SME/Start Up

Submit Proposal

Evaluate, rank and

Select

Execute Project

CENGN Members CENGN Partners

Academia/Interns

VC Funding?

CENGN Members

No

VC Process

Yes

CENGN VC Partners

Yes

CENGN Smart Infrastructure

Internet

Core & Edge

Cloud Core&Edge Metro Internet

Flexible deployment tools and automation to create project/service specific Openstack cloud infrastructure instance

Redundant and resilient core network

First leg of the CENGN Metro network with 100G+ WAN link

Multi-homed Edge for redundancy/diversity

100Gbps

WW Academia

200Gbps

Ottawa Internet Exchange

Canada Industry CENGN Smart Infrastructure

•  Smart Industry Innovation Infrastructure for Internet of Things (IoT), Healthcare, 5G/ Wireless, Smart City, Public Safety and Cybersecurity testbeds

•  Open, programmable and SDN controlled to dynamically and securely accommodate PoCs and testbeds

•  OpenStack Production DataCentre and Wide Area Network

Canada Smart Infrastructure •  One infrastructure for all testbeds

saving time, money and ensuring collaboration.

•  Utilize and expand existing resources, partner with CANARIE for fibre/ optical combined with CENGN members for infrastructure.

•  CENGN expertise provides the managed services for all industry testbeds to connect and operate projects.

•  Open Standards; SDN, NFV, IoT enabling secure and dynamic allocation of resources and bandwidth.

•  SMB:

•  Member:

•  Use-case:

–  Smart City applications and services over programmable infrastructure and network

•  Project Summary:

–  Showcase a complete end-to-end Smart City infrastructure, management and services in a lab environment initially, followed by a pilot project in Ottawa

–  Features fibre infrastructure controller that makes it possible to have shared substrate networks leveraged in isolation by a variety of networks for emerging services.

–  Features a Services Control Gateway that manages delivery of user-specific services to different market segments

–  Demonstrate specific applications for small business, traffic control etc.

Smart City’s need Smart Networks

IP Network

Misc Dbases

Infrastructure Fibre and Mobile

Public Safety

Utilities Retail Health

Transportation

Government

3/4G Router Smart

Meters Retail

Transport

Traffic Kiosks

Surveillance

5G 4G

Applications, Analytics, Services

Infrastructure Controller

Services Control Gateway

2015 SME Projects Highlights SME Sponsor Project Overview Status

Multi-Site Multi-Domain Data Center Capacity Management

Completed Live demo at SDN World Congress (Oct) and OPNFV (Nov)

NFV-based LTE core in the Cloud

Completed Live demo at SDN World Congress (Oct) and OPNFV (Nov)

Multi-layer Data Connectivity Orchestration Evaluation completed

OpenFlow Switch – Hybrid BGP Network

In progress for completion in Feb/March 2016

Smart City Infrastructure & Services (Open Source) In progress

Upcoming 2016 SME Projects

2016 Projects submissions ranking completed and provided to members SME Potential

Sponsor Project Overview Status

Predictive analysis and management of energy consumption of an Enterprise in real-time Showcase planned at CENGN lab

IoT: Proximity based solution that collects data from bluetooth and mobile devices for real-time personalized interaction with mobile users

Scale testing of the solution with CENGN partner Empowered

Password-less federated identity for OpenStack that provides increased security level when users accessing critical parts of the Openstack system

Initial engagement to integrate into CENGN infrastructure for showcase

Auto-discovery of Layer 2 and Layer 3 network devices using unique Route analytics technology

CENGN showcasing Smarthawk product. Telus in conversation with SOLANA

Predictive Analytics for Telecommunication providers for churn reduction Under consideration by Telus

Optical reliable datagram communication platform (RDMA over Converged Ethernet) for cloud computing applications requiring low-latency

Proof-of-concept leveraging CENGN WAN technologies

Cloud-based visibility and analytics service + CatchWire product for continuous real-time monitoring of network devices and hosts

Under consideration by Telus and EXFO

Audio mining and speech analytics providing business insight Under consideration by EXFO

Thank you

Scott Jamieson, Director of Operations Coquitlam Optical Network Corp. (QNet)

June 1st, 2016 - Ottawa

PANEL TWO:

HIGH SPEED NETWORKS AND

INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO

BROADBAND DELIVERY

Canadian Internet

Forum 2016

Coquitlam Optical Network Corp. QNet is wholly owned by the City of Coquitlam and is governed by a board of directors. Coquitlam became the one of the first municipalities in the country to lease out its unused fibre optic capacity in 2008, and remains one of the few examples in Canada to have achieved commercial success.

In the information age, fibre optic networks are the canals, railroads, and highways of the

global digital economy

•  Patient capital investment – longer ROI •  Stick to well understood role (UG infrastructure) •  Make fibre strands available to competitive

telecommunications services providers •  Increase choice and lower prices for residents of

high-density towers and local businesses •  Lower City’s network costs

Value Proposition

QNet 2008 – a slow start

•  The concept of municipal metro fibre, in 2008, was not widely accepted (an understatement).

•  The network wasn't connected into a lot of commercial buildings.

•  There weren't many options for potential service providers to connect out of Coquitlam.

QNet 2015 and today

•  60km network, $553,000 revenue, 19% intrinsic growth •  Cable connections into QNet: Shaw, Telus, Urban,

Allstream/Zayo, and Bell (owned fibre) and others offering wavelength services

•  QNet customers who could otherwise build their own cable network: Novus Entertainment, Urban, and Rogers

•  Urbanfibre residential:

Coquitlam Optical Network Corporation

Our business is your future! www.qnetbc.net

Thank you. Any questions?

Marc Dupuis – Director Policy

Ottawa, 1 June 2016

Canadian Internet Forum 2016

The Unconnected And Underserved World

% of unconnected households

31 May 2016 60

54% of the world

has no Internet access

P R O P R I E T A R Y 61

Broadband - Key Technical Specifications

Coverage Percent of households

Speed How fast data can be transmitted (Mbps)

Volume Amount of data per month (Gbytes)

Latency Data packet round trip delay (ms)

31 May 2016

P R O P R I E T A R Y

36,000km = 500ms (radio waves) >600ms (end-to-end)

31 May 2016 62

Geostationary Satellites (Anik, HTS)

P R O P R I E T A R Y

1200km = <30ms (radio waves) < 50 ms (end-to-end)

31 May 2016 63

OneWeb Satellites

P R O P R I E T A R Y

OneWeb’s Satellite Constellation

64

•  648 satellites by 2020 - initial deployment

•  Service upgrade path by launching more satellites, maybe 900 or more

•  Built-in network redundancy (like the Internet) permits use of low cost satellites

•  Low Earth Orbit - altitude of 1,200 km

•  18 orbital planes - 36 satellites per plane

•  Capacity - 4 to 5 million subscribers

•  Ku-band (service links) and Ka-band (feederlinks)

•  Terminals with high look angle - permits use in cluttered terrain

31 May 2016

P R O P R I E T A R Y 65

•  Data speed up to 50 Mbps (typical UT)

•  Round trip latency as low as 50 ms (end-to-end)

•  Remote small cell networks and even smaller “pico” cells

•  Vehicular, aero and maritime broadband services

OneWeb allows a wide variety of new communications services

31 May 2016

P R O P R I E T A R Y

OneWeb Will Serve Three Market Segments

31-May-16

Satellite Broadband

Community

Residential

Corporate/ Small Enterprise

Cellular Backhaul

Macro-cell satellite trunking beyond

fiber and terrestrial

microwave, and pico-cells

Enterprise Vertical Markets

Capacity for maritime, aero &

government

66

P R O P R I E T A R Y

Strong Investors Support

67

Our world class group of partners and shareholders:

$500 Million initial capital round

31 May 2016

P R O P R I E T A R Y 68

w w w. o n e w e b . n e t

Thank you

Marc Dupuis Director Policy 1 (613) 805-6847

31 May 2016

HSPA+/LTE Mobility Services

Mobile Broadband

Transport Networks

•  Company Introduction Carrier Facts

•  3G Coverage Map

•  Success Factors

•  Remote Hands

•  Network Photos

•  Transport Networks Customized Solutions

•  Contact Us

Ice Wireless Field Engineer,Whitehorse Yukon

INDEX

COMPANY INTRODUCTION•  Ice Wireless is a mobile network operator that delivers state-of-the-art 3G/LTE

technology to rural and remote areas of Canada.

•  We are a privately held company founded in 1999

•  We have operations across Northern Canada and offices in Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver

•  Our local network covers 70% of the population of Canada’s 3 territories

•  We are supported by a strong network of agents in Northern Canada

•  We are partnered with Iristel, the largest VoIP Competitive Local Exchange Carrier (CLEC) in the country

•  We provide 24/7 customer care

•  Ice Wireless is a mobile network operator (MNO); one of roughly a dozen MNOs in Canada.

•  As a mobile network operator, Ice Wireless does not rent tower space or equipment from other cellular carriers. We own and operate our own towers, buildings and equipment in all three Canadian territories.

•  We are currently licensed by Industry Canada for PCS 850/1900 MHz spectrum.

A MOBILE NETWORK OPERATOR

•  Ice Wireless is building out an LTE network in the fall of 2016

•  New locations are being added to enhance our coverage area

Our Operating Area Ice Wireless operates 3G base stations from coast to coast to coast over one of the largest areas and lowest population densities in the world; an area of 2.5 million square kilometres inhabited by just 100,000 people. For perspective, that is an operating area that is three times the size of Ontario and five times the size of Texas.

3G COVERAGE MAP

SUCCESS FACTORS

•  Scalability – Rather than deploying

centralized cores, focus more om a distributed Architecture. Rural networks require an all IP based Architecture in order to support future networks and be successful. Macro cell towers require a lot of capital and time to construct. The bar to entry into underserved areas has always been high. Regulatory and policy makers should incentivize smaller and more agile networks that can be scaled out seamlessly over time

•  Flexibility – compact form that is highly

adaptable to either traditional tower installations or rooftop

•  Cost – virtualized environments can run on

fraction of the power and doesn’t require a lot of resources to deploy.

Network Technologies have a life span of

about 18 years. 10 years into that

network adoption cycle, new higher

speed technologies begin being deployed

REMOTE MONITORING & CONTROL•  Rural and remote communities in Northern Canada are typically

difficult to reach and cannot be profitably covered with conventional technologies and approaches.

•  Given the vast distances between base stations, Ice Wireless has implemented innovative and state-of-the-art remote monitoring and control systems. Each of our individual base stations are fully controllable by software engineers at our Network Operating Center, which provides remote monitoring 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

•  We operate Data Centers across the country including locations in Toronto, Montreal, Inuvik, Yellowknife and Whitehorse. We have local support teams across Northern Canada.

•  Our success in deploying small-scale networks has allowed us to operate in communities with populations as small as 500 people.

•  Ice Wireless has now fully integrated with our CLEC partner Iristel’s nationwide VoIP network to enable the next generation of mobile services. We have fully replaced traditional voice circuits by migrating from PSTN to SIP trunking. We now carry all voice, video and data traffic over an Internet link, which lowers our transport costs and maximizes our use of bandwidth.

FULLY INTEGRATED STATE OF THEART REMOTE MONITORING SYSTEMS

“If you provide a good experience for your

customers, people are going to hear about it and that’s

what drives your business. That’s

why we focus on delivering the best experience possible.”

- Samer Bishay,

President Ice Wireless

NETWORK PHOTOS

Base Station, Yellowknife NT Base Station, Yellowknife NT Base Station, Yellowknife NT

Base Station, Whitehorse YT Base Station, Whitehorse YT

Ice Data Centre, Inuvik NT Base Station Interior, Inuvik NT Base Station, Behchoko NT

Base Station, Hay River NT Base Station, Iqaluit, NU

NETWORK PHOTOS

Ice Wireless owns and operates communications towers, fiber optic cable and microwave transmitters in Northern Canada, and we continue to build out the infrastructure necessary to support a robust telecommunications network.

Advanced Wireless

•  Ice Wireless has built state-of-the-art wireless tower sites and antenna structures for mobile telephone and data networks across the country since 1999.

Fiber Optic

•  Ice Wireless and its partners own and operate fiber-optic cable in Northern Canada and are committed

to invest in leading edge finer optic transport networks for the North.

Microwave

•  Ice Wireless has built high capacity and cost effective microwave links in a number of rugged deployments,

both for short- and long-haul backhaul transport.

TRANSPORT NETWORKS

A COMMITMENT TO INVEST IN NEW

TRANSPORT NETWORKS FOR THE NORTH

CUSTOMIZED TELECOM SOLUTIONS (SCALABILITY/FLEXIBILITY/COST)

For customers who have unique requirements, customized mobile telephone and data network solutions are available We offer service to the following industries:

• Mining • Oil and gas • Government • Business • Military

Our solutions focus on reduction of total cost of cellular networks operating in challenging coverage areas to deliver immediate savings to our corporate customers. For example, Ice Wireless’ remote telecommunications solution focuses on low cost IP-based technologies and a smaller footprint to reduce both ongoing OPEX as well as site related CAPEX costs.

TRANSPORT NETWORKS

Ice Wireless provided a satellite- based cellular network in the Arctic for the Annual Operation Nanook exercise, which is Canada’s exercise to train for disaster and sovereignty patrols in the Arctic.

Canadian Military Department of Defense

Customer Profile

Base Station, Behchoko NT

CONTACT INFORMATION

TORONTO, ON Ice Wireless Inc. 675 Cochrane Drive East Tower, 6th floor Toronto, Ontario L3R 0B8 Canada Tel: +1-855-474-7423 Fax : +1-866-416-9948 E-mail: [email protected]

INUVIK, NT Ice Wireless Inc. 74 Firth Street New North Dome Inuvik, NT X0E 0T0 Canada Tel: +1-855-474-7423 Fax : +1-866-416-9948 E-mail: [email protected]

Ice Wireless Corporate Office Markham, ON