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Forums » Why We Have No National Broadband Policy » "Because we can't even agree there's a problem"
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This would be funny if it wasn't so pathetic »
« Ummn.. right.  
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marigolds
Gainfully employed, finally
Premium,MVM
join:2002-05-13
Saint Louis, MO

reply to TKJunkMail
Re: "Because we can't even agree there's a problem"

said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

Those who want this BB policy expect the taxpayers to pay for broadband to every little rural whistle stop and farmhouse, and damn the cost. In other words, become more of a socialist country than we already are.
Leaving out Alaska, which is like addressing another country all by itself, what is the farthest distance in the continental United States from a metropolitan statistical area (including all MSAs, CMSAs, and PMSAs)?
In other words, how much of a "whistle stop and farmhouse" are we talking about?
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ossito16

join:2004-07-31
Whiting, IN
·RCN CABLE

What socialist country are u talking about? I know you don't mean the "big govt is better" usa. Or instead of big govt maybe we are run by the corp's, which would make us an oligarchy. But maybe I am wrong and we are socialist country where 3 or 5% of population controls 90+% of wealth.

Ahrenl

join:2004-10-26
North Andover, MA
reply to marigolds
Quite a bit actually.. there's this big swath of country called the Mid-West.


fiberguy
My views are my own.
Premium
join:2005-05-20

That map, although interesting, doesn't speak much for broadband deployment.

Take two states, called the midwest,...Minnesota and Iowa.. (And some people still call Ohio the "midwest" when they are more eastern than anything) but Minnesota and Iowa... both of those states have broadband in places most people wouldn't think broadband exists. Iowa, for being mostly farm land, actually has some pretty good rural coverage. As for Minneosta, many of the smaller areas have broadband too..
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Ahrenl

join:2004-10-26
North Andover, MA
·Verizon FIOS

Well the question was "what is the farthest distance in the continental United States from a metropolitan statistical area." So I was simply answering that. The map doesn't take into account infrastructure at all. Hell I bet they have GREAT service in Aspen Colorado.

Thaler
Premium
join:2004-02-02
Encino, CA
reply to fiberguy
YMMV though.

I have relatives in Louisiana that *just* got broadband made avaliable to them.


pnh102
Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty
Premium
join:2002-05-02
Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast

said by Thaler See Profile :

I have relatives in Louisiana that *just* got broadband made avaliable to them.
Wow! And this happened without a "national broadband policy" too!
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Only SHATNER is Kirk.


marigolds
Gainfully employed, finally
Premium,MVM
join:2002-05-13
Saint Louis, MO

reply to Ahrenl
Most of the midwest is near a metro area now... you are thinking of the great plains
(That map is 10 years old and the metro area coverage increased about 40-60% since then.)
But, it does illustrate nicely that most of the United States is not far from a metro.


Karl Bode
News Guy
join:2000-03-02

Host:
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1 edit
I don't buy this idea that "Metro" = served though. There are portions of Brooklyn that can't get DSL, and many third tier cities that have only the choice of a half-assed cable provider drowning in debt, etc....or a well off cable provider that can sodomize users because their only competitive pressure is a local telco offering late 90's interleaved technology or what have you...

It's a mistake to assume that metro=broadband competitive utopia, because that's just not accurate. And obviously, rural competition is worse.

And as broadband becomes increasingly used for social services via website, I think the issue of broad penetration does require more serious thought than investors and other financially motivated individuals are willing to give from their rather myopic, self-serving positions...


marigolds
Gainfully employed, finally
Premium,MVM
join:2002-05-13
Saint Louis, MO

said by Karl Bode See Profile :

I don't buy this idea that "Metro" = served though.
My point wasn't that metro=served.
My point was that metro=not in the middle of nowhere. In other words, that the number of rural whistlestops and isolated farmhouses that need to be served is shrinking and that those isolated farmhouses are growing closer and closer to cities.
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Karl Bode
News Guy
join:2000-03-02
Oh I know, I was just kind of opining in response to the general commentary of all the thread responses that suggests that if we're talking about populated areas, we're talking about real competition....


marigolds
Gainfully employed, finally
Premium,MVM
join:2002-05-13
Saint Louis, MO

said by Karl Bode See Profile :

Oh I know, I was just kind of opining in response to the general commentary of all the thread responses that suggests that if we're talking about populated areas, we're talking about real competition....
Oh well, I would definitely agree with that
Especially the suggestion that satellite always provides competition. There are simply too many small business functions in particularly that satellite cannot adequately handle.
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Karl Bode
News Guy
join:2000-03-02

Host:
Road Runner
PC gaming GAMES
PC gaming Tech
quote:
Especially the suggestion that satellite always provides competition.
The only people suggesting that are those who haven't used it for any extended period of time, or whom are financially or politically motivated to portray the market as more competitive than it actually is.

Ahrenl

join:2004-10-26
North Andover, MA
reply to marigolds
My bad, just grabbed the first one I googled...


Thaler
Premium
join:2004-02-02
Encino, CA


1 edit
reply to pnh102
said by pnh102 See Profile :

Wow! And this happened without a "national broadband policy" too!
For the are they were living in, the access to broadband could've been avaliable much sooner. Hell, old age is a way to die, but I wouldn't call Castro dying in a retirement home much of a successful assasination plot either.

I still have relatives and friends in locations that aren't the boonies, yet still have nothing but possibly a satellite offering. And no, I still won't consider satellite an honest broadband solution. 2-4x the cost for half the service of a traditional broadband provider isn't exactly "broadband covered".

We could certainly wait until 2050, 2100, etc. to roll on out until 256k coverage is avaliable everywhere in the US...but by then the slow "industry motivated" wiring movement would be waaay behind and nigh-useless for folks needs either. Perhaps having government wire the nation much like telephones isn't *the* solution, but the "we'll get to it whenever" moving force of broadband providers today isn't exactly utopia either.
Forums » Why We Have No National Broadband PolicyThis would be funny if it wasn't so pathetic »
« Ummn.. right.  


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