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- 02-01-2008 12:41 PM #1
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How much for fiber optic line into each US home?
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As it turns out, 100 billion.
Fixing US broadband: 0 billion for fiber to every home
A pile of money.
But to put it into perspective, Microsoft just offered almost half as much for Yahoo!
When/if this is done, optical media distribution can be declared dead.
Good read. Don't skip the links in that article.
Diogen.
EDIT: Bush actually does have a plan
We have a broadband strategy? Bush administration says "yes" in cheerleading report
But it would probably be the next administration that would call his plan what it deserves and do something about it.
- 02-01-2008 12:41 PM # ADS
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- 02-01-2008 12:52 PM #2
Why did you put this in the War Zone?
- 02-01-2008 12:58 PM #3
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- 02-01-2008 01:22 PM #4
Good read. And a rather surprizing chart...
Of course it's easier to run the fiber in smaller countries, but still...Ilya @ SatelliteGuys.us
- 02-01-2008 01:41 PM #5
The report missed a project in Utah called
UTOPIA
. I'm kind of surprised by that, but its not a state project. It's one where a bunch of individual cities got together to pull it off. Most households can typically get 15Mbps and can get 50Mbps if you want to pay for it. Its rated to do 100Mbps per house hold and 1Gbps per business.
- 02-01-2008 01:58 PM #6
I think the biggest reason for this is simple, the companies controlling the US market wish to drag their feet to maximize the high prices they can charge for the slowest speed possible for the longest amount of time.
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- 02-01-2008 02:27 PM #7
- 02-01-2008 03:03 PM #8
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Somewhat similar to what happend shortly after telecoms started offering ADSL (the A stands for asymmetric).
To preserve their huge profit margins in ISDN being sold to businesses (often 10 times as much as ADSL), the upstream bandwidth was degraded to not more than 1/4 of the downstream.
Symmetric DSL (SDSL) was priced comparably to ISDN.
Diogen.
- 02-02-2008 11:53 AM #9
LOL hahahahahhaha
Where I am at I don't even have DSL (actually am within distance, however, there is a coil in the line so therefore no DSL for me), phone company (AT&T) won't/hasn't tried to expand their coverage area to include me for DSL, nor have they given any kind of estimate of when something like this might happen.
Now of course, installing a remote terminal would be expensive, however, I would think, no where as expensive as replacing all of the copper in my area with fiber. At the very least, running a fiber run to supply broadband to several houses (a remote terminal if you think about it).
Would I like this? Of course, I would enjoy not having satellite for my broadband connection. However, if AT&T isn't even willing to bring new technology, update their existing copper line, install a RT, etc. in my area, what makes anyone think they'd ever (say in the next 50 years) run fiber to the home, curb, neighborhood node, or any other fiber run for broadband?
I also have an issue with the one billion price tag. Sounds awful low, perhaps to run fiber to every home in major cities, however, rural areas, mountain areas, etc. would have to have fiber ran throughout, and though not as many houses, it would still cost money, and no phone company is gonna do that unless they can make their money back in the first year. (why would a company want to take a loss, cause their stock price to fall, and lose millions on-top of the cost of doing the upgrade?)
- 02-02-2008 03:22 PM #10
As the internet is already destroying life as we know it for human beings in America, imagine what fiber will do to them.

.......look at already what cheap cell phones have done to them.
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