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Comments on: Internet life speeding up in small-town America

They haven't caught up to their cousins in N.Y. or San Francisco, but rural Americans are increasingly using broadband.

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Broadband TVA
by tomfool February 26, 2006 1:43 PM PST
How about a program for broadband internet that mirrors the Tennessee Valley Authority that brought electricity to rural America in the 1930's?

Having broadband web access available in areas of low population density would make those places more desireable for out-migration from our big cities to what has been called "exurbia".
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NPR article
by finleyd February 27, 2006 4:08 AM PST
Some small steps in this direction are already happening, such as the network in West Virginia recently covered by NPR (http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5053488).
Good-bye city life!
by J.G. February 26, 2006 4:49 PM PST
This article puts me in the mood for reruns of "Green Acres."
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My li'l ol DSL arrived
by kplay February 26, 2006 5:06 PM PST
I moved from a metropolitan to a rural area just as they were getting DSL IN 1999. After a 6 year wait I finally got DSL here 3M/768K.

I'm so danged happy I think possum stew is in order!
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Broadband Access
by djensen552 February 27, 2006 7:01 AM PST
I agree with another post for the TN area. I lived in Daytona Beach,FL all my life and used cable Broadband for many years. Now that I moved to TN I am restricted to dial-up again. With no broadband service available or planned by Bellsouth or the local cable companies ( Cable TV service is also not available )I am going to have to move again in order to get it.
Broadband ceased being a luxury years ago, and the providers need to realize this.
Thank You
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The Same Boat
by domcelyea February 27, 2006 9:43 AM PST
I have thought of moving too but really like not having any neighbors within spitting distance.
I live outside of town. About 3 1/2 miles. DSL and Cable is in town. I just wonder what they mean when they say Rural? It's more than likely the suburbs. I keep hoping but broadband is just out of reach.
Satellite internet
by countrylivinginmissouri February 28, 2006 8:15 PM PST
Before taking the drastic move of moving your household so you can get high speed internet, check to see if Wildblue is available where you live. I'm in the same boat, too far out to get DSL or cable. I signed up for the value pack which is around $50 a month and get around 500Kbps down and 128Kbps up. Not as cheap as DSL, but the only viable option available for me.
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Do Not Use DIRECWAY - stick to Dial-up
by UKOH March 9, 2006 12:50 PM PST
I had DIRECWAY for 15 months in my rural area before DSL is finally available!

In my experiences it is an illusion that you are getting broadband with the DirecWay system. It is a very expensive way to get a slow and unreliable system. At least dial-up is slow but cheap and reliable!

Although File Transfer was generally good for me surfing was at less than dial-up speeds. The system was also completely unreliable being "down" for over one month in total and sporadically "degraded" or "problem (no service)" most of the rest of the time.

Check out http://www.direcwayreallysucks.net/
for other experiences with this non system.
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SWANsat to Turn Earth into Wi-Fi Hotspot
by swansat_kaching August 30, 2006 11:41 PM PDT
I notice all this talk about speeding up the internet ... well, imagine a series of at least three geosynchronous orbital satellites providing wireless Internet access to the entire world. That?s exactly what a project called SWANsat or Super-Wide Area Network Satellite plans to do by the year 2011. They intend to be a global broadband Internet service provider that can facilitate up to 600 million connections per satellite. All you need is a handheld mobile device to connect to the system.
Read more: HYPERLINK "http://www.gizmocafe.com/blogs/gizmo_waydes_blog/archive/2006/08/21/96546.aspx

IOSTAR, SANDIA LABS, ORBITAL. The pioneers of GPS & Teledesic ? together with directors such as 4 Star General Tony McPeak & former secretary of US Air Force (Roche) and former Branch Chief of guided missiles & CEO of Western Digital ? are coming together for intriguing development called SWANsat.

The Teledesic Chief Architect (now President of IOSTAR) recently made this presentation:

http://csmarts.colorado.edu/presentationpages/34_future_of_space/page_01.htm (intro-nav page)
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