 AnnaS8
join:2005-05-26 Annapolis, MD | Hmmm... So do you think that Verizon is making a sincere effort or is this more of a PR move to help take some heat off their part in the NSA scandal? | |
|   MrMoody Beleaguered Middle Class
join:2002-09-03 Smithfield, NC
·Embarq
| 95 Million Active Place-shifting Servers quote: Today's consumers demand more than just varied content. They want it on their terms, on their schedules. Remember your first VCR and the worlds it opened? Get ready for the next radical notion. Unshackling your TV from the living room, you are now able to transport your media to where and when you want it.
And the content owners hate this idea as much as they did VCRs. Unfortunately, this time around the government is much less pro consumer and more pro big business.
And as an aside, the N&O are masters of stirring up trouble where there was none by bringing things to the attention of the troublemakers. For just one example, we NCans have them to thank for a recent law that makes vehicle equipment violations (many of which are actually pled-down speeding tickets) part of public driving records. -- The public is a poor business manager. | |
|  |  Kearnstd Elf Wizard
join:2002-01-22 Mullica Hill, NJ
| Re: 95 Million Active Place-shifting Servers the sports people are big against place shifting as for some reason they greatly fear disruption of blackout areas. however goodluck to any content holder in fighting place shifting because even if the content makers get laws that require special kill chips in slingbox devices that wont let them transmit certain content. a PC with a TV tuner and an open source app would just bypass that. -- [65 Arcanist]Filan(High Elf) Zone: Broadband Reports | |
|   swhx7 Premium join:2006-07-23 Elbonia
·RoadRunner Cable
| Broadband goal nearly reached? If "US broadband goal [has been] nearly reached", someone must have set the standard too low!
said by article : In 2004, President Bush pledged that all Americans should have affordable access to high-speed Internet service by 2007.
I'd like to propose a better goal: bandwidth as big, cost as low and availability as ubiquitous as in any other country. Japan and Scandinavia, for example, have many megabits both up and down for less than U.S. Americans pay, and more competition. | |
|  |  |  |  |  Sammer
join:2005-12-22 Pittsburgh, PA | Re: Broadband goal nearly reached? Sounds like our government has hired the Iraqi Information Minister, remember him? | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  PDXPLT
join:2003-12-04 Banks, OR | Something like that. The NTIA used the same bogus "if one person in a zip code has broadband available, then everyone in the zip code has it" criterion to come to the conclusion that everyone has broadband. | |
|  |  |  |  |   dslwanter Broadband blackhole no more Premium join:2002-12-16 Lowellville, OH
·Armstrong Zoom In..
·AT&T Midwest
·AT&T Yahoo
edit: February 1st, @07:22AM
| Re: Broadband goal nearly reached? said by PDXPLT :Something like that. The NTIA used the same bogus "if one person in a zip code has broadband available, then everyone in the zip code has it" criterion to come to the conclusion that everyone has broadband. Yes and that is utter bull shit. My zip code is 44436 which is Lowellville and Coitsville Township. Half of the zip code is Time Warner Cable and the other half currently has a cable system left in ruins and was never upgraded beyond the 1960-Mid 1990's analogue system, Although this is about to change with Armstrong now being our cable company, but still for the last 7.75 years that's how it's been. Right around late 2000 Adelphia upgraded their cable system which is present day Time Warner. It also just so happens that the central office for 330-536 which services most of the 44436 zip code is located in the village of Lowellville, which is right smack dab middle of the Time Warner territory. There's about 7 or 8 of us that barely qualify for very marginal DSL (less than 768kbps and unreliable, since the phone lines are in just as much ruins as the cable system) up where the other cable system starts. But everyone else, forget it. They are blasted with ads on TV telling them how great it is, but they can't get it. -- "You're as worthless as a screen door on a submarine!" Check out my Internet Radio Station & DJ Service, »www.thebomb102.com. | |
|  |  |   fuziwuzi Not born yesterday
join:2005-07-01 Atlanta, GA
·Comcast
| Exactly. Where my parents live in south-central Virginia, the only thing available is 24kbps dialup. There is no cable, DSL isn't available, and because of the phone system used, even dialup is physically limited to a maximum 24kbps connection. Try web browsing at that speed sometime! | |
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