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Alberta, Canada Goes Broadband -- By 2004

jasonu writes: "According to this article in The Calgary Herald, every town in Alberta, Canada with either a hospital, a school, a government office or a library will be getting wired for high speed Internet access by the end of 2004. I will finally get broadband!!" Though the article says this will be an "optical fiber network," it doesn't detail the mechanics of it, nor expected data capabilities -- but for $40 a month (Canadian), anything that sounds even remotely "high speed" sounds pretty impressive.

5 of 202 comments (clear)

  1. God bless socialism. by TheDullBlade · · Score: 5

    This is what I love about Canada: getting all these great things handed to us for far under cost, if not altogether free!

    Education, health care, even food and shelter (if you can't afford it yourself). What a generous government to give so freely of its own money! I sure wouldn't give my money away like that!

    I look forward to the inevitable day when our wonderful government gives us everything we need, and none of us need to work. I'm definitely voting Liberal!

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  2. Re:What a waste... by dbarclay10 · · Score: 5

    I agree with you on a few points, but only in a limited way.

    You see, I don't look at this as givine 'net connections to a bunch of people who will never use them.

    This about when rural areas first got paved roads. I doubt many people had cars(after all, there were no roads, so no cars), and yet it made a profound difference not only in their communities, but to the nation as a whole(not that I'm saying good changes, by the way). All of a sudden, a farmer could feed more than people within 20km of his house - he could feed people 200-300kms away!

    There's also a few things you may not realize.

    a) Farming is actually an incredibly technical occupation. The amounts of data that a farmer generates in one year is probably more than an an average two-three story office building.
    b) There isn't much to do out in the boonies. While farmers usually enjoy their work, their kids might not. This will immediately increase their quality of living. Also, the two absolutely brilliant people I met became brilliant studying on the farm they grew up on - their was nothing else to do.

    Dave
    'Round the firewall,
    Out the modem,
    Through the router,
    Down the wire,

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    Barclay family motto:
    Aut agere aut mori.
    (Either action or death.)
  3. TECHNICAL FARMING by FFFish · · Score: 4

    Farming is an extremely high-tech business these days. Check out Trimble, the first site in a Google search for "farming GPS."

    Farmers are using sophisticated soil-sampling quality testing, with GPS, to determine fertilizer spreads. The GPS is used to mark the sample location and generate a "map" of the field... and the GPS is used to control the mix of fertilizer *as* it is being spread.

    GPS is also used for yield monitoring, during harvest: volume and moisture content. Why is one area more productive than another? The soil/fertilizer/weather/etc data is reviewed and analysed, and plans made to improve yield the following year.

    Some farms use GPS with insect infestation data to perform variable crop spraying. The most sophisticated systems mix the pesticide on-the-wing: concentration dependent on infestation level.

    How about variable-rate planting? Overcrowding is ruinous in poor-yielding sections. Plant fewer seeds there, and save money. Variable-depth tilling: monitor the hardpan depth and till only deep enough to crack it.

    Variable-rate irrigation will make a fortune for its inventor, particularly in water-poor states like California.

    And so on. The farming business is as high-tech as one's imagination... satellite imagery mapping out stressed crops, so one doesn't need to sample all 4000 acres to locate the infestations? Why not!



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  4. smart Canadians knew about this long ago....... by CanadaMan · · Score: 4

    This is a poorly researched /. story. It is, in fact, the entire country of Canada which is gaining a national fibre-optic network. information can be had here. If you read the site thouroughly, including the various white papers, you will see that the Canadian government has invested a large amount of money in the project. The aim is to create a national network by 2004. It's also a plan that Jean Chretien and Liberals are including as part of their platform in the upcoming election. Evidence can be found in what the Grits call Red Book III.

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  5. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4

    Comment removed based on user account deletion