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Cooperatives and Their Communities

Inter-County RECC
Entering the Internet
February 1996

Jim Jacobus went downstairs about 10 o’clock one evening to do some work on his home computer. “The next time I looked at the clock it was 2:30 in the morning,” he says.

This is a typical story of how people, and businesses, get involved in the worldwide network of computers known as the Internet.

Jim is vice president of member services and marketing at Inter-County Rural Electric Cooperative, which serves some 18,500 customers outside its Danville headquarters in central Kentucky. Inter-County is taking its first steps toward communicating electronically with its consumers. What is typical about this story is that organizations that have Internet addresses or home pages often get those features as a result of an employee getting bitten by the computer bug.

Jim had been talking with Inter-County’s Vice President of Operations, Steve Souder, about how Steve hooked his computer up to a telephone modem and a phone line to read information from the thousands of other computers and information banks that make up the Internet. At about the same time, Jim, who is on the board of the local Chamber of Commerce, had to line up a breakfast speaker. He called on Leonard Childers, the owner of Computer Mart, a local computer store. One thing led to another, and Jim invited Leonard to get Inter-County signed on to Searnet, which is a local connection to the Internet.

Now that Inter-County is hooked into Searnet, for the cost of a local call, employees can call up important business information, such as frequently updated weather forecasts. They can send electronic mail that whisks messages to people with other electronic mailboxes. Other electric co-ops in Kentucky are beginning to explore ways to use the Internet, such as reading about the latest scientific research to improve electric service.

“This is going to be the way of the future,” says Jim. “You can essentially access the world at very low cost.”

Inter-County is considering whether to start a home page, which is a kind of electronic magazine about a company or a person, that you can access through the Internet. For now, the co-op has an Internet address that allows you to send electronic mail from your computer to theirs. To send Inter-County an e-mail message, its Internet address is: ICRECC@Searnet.com.

So what does Jim do while he’s “surfing the net” for 4-1/2 hours in the evening/ morning? He says it’s a powerful way to do genealogical research, and that he has enjoyed looking up information on the Civil War. But he’s especially fascinated these days by a section of the Internet called Live Cam. It seems people have set up outdoor video cameras and hooked them into the Internet in a lot of different places around the country: Pikes Peak, the Grand Canyon, Hawaii, Boston, Atlanta, New York, Boulder, Colo.

“I like to take a look at those and see what the weather looks like at that moment,” says Jim. “Any subject you want to look into, it’s out there on the Internet.”-Paul Wesslund


Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives, Inc.
4515 Bishop Lane * Louisville, KY  40218
502-451-2430 * FAX: 502-459-3209
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