Comments on: Is U.S. broadband access truly lagging?
Policymakers like to boo-hoo statistics showing the nation trails many foreign counterparts in per capita Net subscribers. A Washington think tank calls for measuring the situation in a new way.
Policymakers like to boo-hoo statistics showing the nation trails many foreign counterparts in per capita Net subscribers. A Washington think tank calls for measuring the situation in a new way.
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After working a contract job for a broadband provider, I found one thing that disturbs me. All they want is money and return on investment. They do not care that a whole town is not on their broadband availability list. There is no social responsibility at all. If it doesn't pay, the public cannot play. Well you can play, but sell your house and move if you want broadband!
I'll just stay disconnected.
The less we are reliant on greedy monopolies that only care about the bottom line, everyone will be better off.
Remote college campuses are a good model.
They do not care that a whole town is not on their broadband availability list. There is no social responsibility at all. If it doesn't pay, the public cannot play.
.....
Here's the thing - if you want all the trappings of civilization, move to a more urban area.
The providers obviously dont think it'd be a good decision to run their service out to you. Perhaps theres another slightly larger town they can reach to service more people before they get to you. Or perhaps it'd just cost them too much. YOU are the one who chose to live in a rural area. Thats the price you have to deal with for living away from everything. You cant expect a broadband provider to subsidize service at the expense of their other customers (which is who would end up paying for it) because you chose to live somewhere hard for them to get to.
Do what the other poster recommended - set it up yourself.
ranting, note that the researchers should have also taken into
account urbanization. Densely populated, the Netherlands is
more easily wired for broadband and a less densely populated,
rural and small town US. In much of the US, houses can be 1/2
mile or more apart.
There's also the social factor. Given their long & dark winters, I'd
expect Icelanders to be more inclined to get broadband than
someone in Florida, where even the winter doesn't force you
indoors.
When I Lived in Van Nuys California our area was one of the last to get Cable Broadband, we were one of the first to get DSL. 128K up 384k down 5 years have past. DSL hasn't improved since we happen to be at the end of the line. In the Middle of a 50 year old tract of WW2 Homes. Cable has improved they upgraded.
I now live in a small farming "village" not town in central Illinois. No broadband except satalite,
(expensive slow) or cell phone (expensive slow).
while towns a little larger than ours have had 5-10 generations of improvement. The school children in nigeria either have or soon will have better broadband access than we do here. Cable is still analog in this area. No broadband. Do it ourselves? $1600 a month for a 1.5 kps connection. 12 Miles away 1.5 kps connection 29.95. something is wrong same telephone company same cable company. The fiber runs through town to the school but no way for the locals to access it. AT&T will allow us access when they get around to it. I happen to live at the end of the line again.
You can not expect to force the cable and phone companies to shell out all the money for fiber for a town that only has 10,000 ppl when they can get 30 times that amount from a population of 400k to 600k.
Basically those that complain that rural area's do not have broadband are better off complaining that they do not have a Parks 5th Avenue store instead.
It is not a coincidence that our country went to hell once the corporations took over.
Broadband is a necessity. They are forced to supply phone service already. Stringing up fiber optic lines on the current infrastructure is not too much to ask.
With that said, regardless of how "on track" we are, as stated before, we should AT LEAST have top rated high speed access (50-100mbps)in our biggest metroplitan areas, where it's easy to feed the major populated areas with sufficient fiber. We arn't even seeing this.
And all of this from companies that were supposedly given hundreds of millions, if not billions of dollars to upgrade the nation's Internet infrastructure.
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- by toto00001 March 26, 2009 8:44 PM PDT
- Perhaps theres another slightly larger town they can reach to service more people before they get to you. Or perhaps it'd just cost them too much. YOU are the one who chose to live in a rural area. Thats the price you have to deal with for living away from everything. You cant expect a broadband provider to subsidize service at the expense of their other customers (which is who would end up paying for it) because you chose to live. see http://www.roomfurniturechina.com
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