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by res0nat0r
4526 days ago
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I remember this story when it came out, but a single citation involving Cisco networking equipment is in no way relevant when comparing an already culturally wired country smaller than the state of Kentucky, and trying to extrapolate that should somehow be a viable option next month for Comcast to start laying down multimode fibre across 3.7 million square miles of land. Yes Google Fiber has been a great success where it has been deployed so far, but that has relied on local government cooperation, incentives, right of ways, also neighborhood signup rates > $X for the rollout to even begin to happen. So just because South Korea can do this doesn't mean you should think somehow Comcast can roll 300 Megabit lines to the whole country. Or you can believe they can roll that out to your local densely populated metro block, where 99% of your neighbors will then laugh at the price, and you can subsidize their non-payment with your $500/month bill. |
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Secondly, there is no incentive for anyone (again least of all Comcast) to roll out anything next month, next year, or next decade that would significantly improve broadband in the US. For that you would need meaningful competition. We don't have that here. That's why idiots like TW cable's CFO can say things like "nobody wants gigabit internet" [2] and all that happens is the tech media gets ruffled feathers for a few days. Why on earth would Comcast roll out anything other than what they already have? What are their customers going to do if they don't like it? Go to satellite? Slower but maybe more stable DSL?
Yeah, it was one anecdote, but it was one that highlights the political incompetence and corporate graft that help hold us back from having nice things.
[1] http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/2007/pulpit_20070810_0026...
[2] http://www.wired.com/wiredenterprise/2013/02/time-warner-cab...