Search:  

 
 
   All ForumsHot TopicsGallery






how-to block ads


 
Forums » Municipal Report » I've said it once...
Search Topic:
Uniqs:
54
Share Topic:
RSS topic:
toggle:
flat / full
normal / watch
Post a:
Post a:
« That's a used Kia, not a Chevy  
AuthorAll Replies

lesopp

join:2001-06-27
Land O Lakes, FL

reply to MarkyD
Re: I've said it once...

I agree. Quoting from the white paper. (link at the bottom of the opening post) These are probably the two most valid reasons to support UTOPIA.

"The industry could replace its copper wire and coaxial cable networks with a virtually unlimited-capacity fiber optic infrastructure but business imperatives keep them from doing so. The long-term return on investment wouldn’t meet investors’ short-term profit demands. It is not cost-effective for each company to implement fiber in every area, and forced infrastructure sharing has not gone well among providers forced to use competitors’ systems. Also, many sparsely-populated areas that are expensive to serve likely would be left out because serving them simply doesn’t make financial sense."

"All major elements of infrastructure development have been sponsored by government efforts in one form or another, including:
-Financing (railways, power plants, highways)
-Granting franchises (power, telephone, cable TV)
-Construction (airports, roads, interstate highway systems)
-Operating (sewer, water, roadways, airports)"

Food for thought:
Assume for a second we had left it to the automotive industry to build roads, in all but the largest cities we would still be driving on single lane gravel roads. Those with pavement and those with connecting paved roads would would have to pay unreasonable funds for the privilege of using a "state of the art" paved road. There would probably be "speed tiers" so you could travel faster but there would be limits on the amount of cargo you could haul. Too many trips to the grocery store could cost you for exceeding your limits. Finally, when the "left behind" community's attempt to band together and make their own paved municipal roads the automotive industry would either buy legislation or force the municipalities to unnecessarily spend funds on frivolous litigation in attempts to kill the competitive efforts.


MarkyD
Premium
join:2002-08-20
Oklahoma City, OK
clubs:
·Cox HSI

and I'll say it again. Utah is doing this right. In 3 years, Utah is going to be the most advanced state in the USA when it comes to broadband communications. Not to mention, UTOPIA is going to open the network to lots of providers (not initially, but after trials) which means lots of competition and great prices! I'll move to Provo to get my 10/10.
Forums » Municipal Report« That's a used Kia, not a Chevy  


Tuesday, 24-Nov 00:03:33 Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Hosting by www.nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo | feedback | contact
over 10 years online! © 1999-2009 dslreports.com.
page compression OFF
Most commented news this week
· [83] New AT&T Ad Campaign Hits Back At Verizon
· [49] New Bill Takes Aim At Higher Verizon ETFs
· [29] Earthlink Suffers From Major E-mail Outage
· [29] AT&T Offers New Prepaid Wireless plans
· [25] Frontier Increases Modem Rental Fee
· [12] Vivendi In Way Of Comcast's NBC Desires
· [11] Charter Still Fighting With Creditors
· [7] Monday Morning Links
Most people now reading
· Connecting to Google Voice Via SIP [VOIP Tech Chat]
· Windows 7 boot manager editing questions [Microsoft Help]
· 3.x Feral Druid - Bear Tanking Guide [World of Warcraft]
· iNum and 911 [VOIP Tech Chat]
· What to use while demonoid is down? [Filesharing Software]
· Getting ready to pull the trigger, still have cold feet. [VOIP Tech Chat]
· Big Bank Alternative to Bank of America? [General Questions]
· Gizmo5 has added a Google Voice section in its members area. [VOIP Tech Chat]
· Best Bluray player [General Questions]
· netTalk tk6000 [VOIP Tech Chat]