Universal Broadband Access
meehawl writes: "Wall Street Journal has this on proposed new Government regulation and tax breaks to encourage Universal Broadband Access. This idea appears to be gaining ground. Whether this becomes a public good (Universal Service, the Interstates, the USPS) or just another corporate welfare program (or perhaps a mixture of both?) remains to be seen." Another submitter sent in an interesting story about broadband in France.
In Croatia there are these kiosks all over Zagreb that provide free internet access to everyone, although the keyboard is touchscreen so is a little annoying. They're provided by the Croatian telecom, HT. I don't think they're broadband, but they seem popular with all ages. I could see such a thing becoming popular in other countries, and using broadband.
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Big Big Loader!
bigspender540@hotmail.com
From the article:
"It is critically important for the United States to adopt a national broadband policy that encourages investment in new broadband infrastructure, applications and services -- particularly new last mile broadband facilities," said Craig Barrett, CEO of Intel Corporation. "Regulatory policies should encourage all companies to deploy these expensive and risky facilities."
Unless I'm reading something wrong here, is this guy encourging companies to hurry up and try like crazy to go belly up?!? He says straigt out deploy these expensive and risky facilities. He SAYS they are risky AND expensive, but in the same breath thinks EVERY company should do it for the last mile connections.
WTF?
I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
alt.binaries.startrek.adult
Im ZOOMing down the info superLOWway on my 56.6kb modem!
Because im a troll, i don't need broadband to download crappy operating systems! Luckly mr goatse dosent take long to load!
Of course I'm posting anonymously. Flame away.
...with AOLOS at the end of each one. What a vision. *vomits*
Cool! Amazing Toys.
In 1994, I wrote a short 'white paper' making it clear that it would be vital for the government to fund the deployment of broadband as the private sector could NEVER achieve it. I have been proven correct. 8 years later, the ratio of connection speed increase - vs - speed of our computers themselves is way off the mark. The government of Germany and the US both invested heavily in the construction of a national highway system and it has done wonders for their economies, well, so would such an investment in universal broadband. We're currently in a mess, with net surfers all connected at different speeds, using various entry points (PC, Mac, Linux, Interactive TV etc etc) making the creation of quality high bandwidth content a nightmare as the 'market' is too small. I shall have to dig out my white paper if I still have it. In those days, I was using Mosaic on a 28.8 dialup connection. Today, I'm using version 5.0 browsers on a 500Kbaud cable modem. However, that is still FAR too slow and a waste of my 500 Mhz Apple G4 Powerbook processing power. I want real-time full screen DVD quality video on demand anywhere anytime. And I'll pay for it. No more jerky 1/8" screen streams please.
O'WONDERWe're working on it.
Make that national as long the broadband will not reach Europe, Australia, Asia and all the other continents... USA alone is not the world.
Anyway, a real universal broadband would be cool.
The only way I think this can possibly succeed is to discard the traditional "Central Office" mentality of telecom providers. If this is to be a public network, (ala state sponsored, socialist, German and/or Euro-style), it will be imperative to keep it out of the hands of a few large corporations. This means decentralization; a home by home public network. Give a gigantic tax credit to those homeowners who "host" a switch, and have their neighbors' wires come to their home to be routed to other neighbors or neighborhoods. Of course utilize encryption, but anyone with privacy concerns should learn to trust their neighbors more. Geeze, you'd rather have a huge, above-the-law corporation in charge of keeping your data secure or your buddy down the street. Of course, this would be a great thing for neighborhoods, also. Allowing a nieghborhood email service, file sharing, and whathaveyou would bring about a whole new era in living. Post complaints about behavior anonymously, welcome newcomers, it'll be the 50's all over again. Maybe people will stop being so afraid of each other that they will come out and talk, and crime rates will drop, everyone will be happier. Wow. Utopia. Oh, and since it's socialist, and supported monetarily by the government, it's free! Or the government can just give huge amounts of money to these huge corporations and let them spend half of it on administration, the execs pocket another 1/4, and the whole thing just gets done half assed enough that they will eventually give up, keep all the stuff they bought, and use it to roll out their own expensive service. Sweet. Well, that's America for you. Why do things the easy friendly way when you can allow some rich power to control your life?
Cool! Amazing Toys.
We all know telecoms (most clecs, and ilecs (some ilecs are pritty cool though) just want money, and lots of it. Thats why the cost of a t1 is still so high, so some technican gets fired when the loop alarm is on for a few days. Speaking of loop alarm, I hope BTI is firing people monday. Anyway. Broadband would be cheaper w/o goverment regs, and if telecoms were more willing to sell t1 lines chaper. Seriously, I would put a t1 into my house, I would consolidate my phone line onto one channel, and use the rest for data. I know one of the nearby ilecs (i have sprint, sprint sucks) is doing what they call dsl, but its really a multiplexed voice line in their words. In other words, they are rolling out t1 lines to homes. Makes perfect sence, High bandwidth, high quality, cheap since they are the incumbent local exchange.
The problem with new goverment regs is that it would just make broadband more expensive. I wouldnt mind getting together with a few friends and buying a few dslpipes to make my own dsl network, or setting up a few long distance 802.11b network, but all that stuff would get even more regulated. I mean honestly, Some Phone companies (local exchanges) will not do alarm circuits any more. I have buddies in one city that used to use them to quietly do point-to-point t1 lines inside the same exchange area.
The clear solution is for the consumer to dish ou the cash and build their own infastructure, any which way they please, but cheap t1 loops would be VERY nice.
Excuse my stupidity, but how would a 100Mb/s connection for everyone help the economy? What in heavens name do you need that for? Watching movies? How does that help the economy (other than the MPAA, RIAA and the rest of them, since we're not going to get all that content for free)? Watching movies is nice, but I already have something for that (TV, VCR, DVD).
Don't tell me you need 100Mb/s for browsing. Downloading big files, sure, but how often do you do that? And why isn't 1.5 Mb/s fast enough for that? Again, watching movies in real-time over an ultrafast connection would be cool, but why is that a national priority?
MSN 8: Now Microsoft even has bugs in their ad campaigns.
It will not be corperations and communications companies bringing broadband access to the masses in rural or small towns. it will be the gurella wireless network builders. I have seen towns in northern michigan completely ignored by telcoms and cable for broadband access. Wireless, 802.11 wireless can give users broadband. Unfortunately there's a problem.. T1 broadband costs $1000-$1500 plus access fees in these rural areas. farmers and rural people will not pay $300.00 a month for access, and the group or company setting up the wireless access cant afford to charge less unless they get 200 customers or more.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
this is actually funny... OT, but funny.
Hey, I'm at karma cap, I need a desire to post.
Get your Unix fortune now!
Please Boycott evil slashdot and try other sites!
Please, do boycott. Start with yourself. Set an example.
[yes, i'm burning Karma, I need a desire to contribute]
Get your Unix fortune now!
I am NEO, the one, and will tell you how it's going to be without knowing how it's going to end. You are NOOGIE, a parasitic assworm. And I just unplugged you from the matrix and the robots have just chased you down and stomped on your single-cell ass. Have a nice day. I am superman! Dun dun din dun din diiiiiiiiiiiiin!
Make it known how easy it is to get colossal amounts of pr0n.
That would sell it for millions of males all over the world, and end the problems of cable companies and telcos sinking under the weight of their debts.
I reckon the vast majority of existing and potential net users think the only way to get pr0n is from a web site using their credit card, and most people aren't really up for that. They've never heard of usenet, and many of those who have won't be aware of the amount of pr0n at their fingertips.
Trouble is, the cable co's and telcos can't really push this since a) it might damage their reputation - particularly if they want to be seen as providers of entertainment for all the family, and b) most pr0n in the multimedia newsgroups are rip offs of copyrighted material.
All it needs is an cable co or telco with sufficiently low moral fibre, a good legal department, an advertising campaign and some help screens.
Problem solved.
I think.
It won't make surfing the web any faster for these people. We'll experience the same phenomenon as with hardware/software. As the hardware gets faster, the software gets more bloated; as connections improve, there'll be more flash crap, stupid sounds, etc. You think X10 ads are annoying now? Wait 'till they start SPEAKING at you.
The previous has been a secret message to my comrades.
...please don't turn broadband internet access into the shambles that is the "modern" telephone system. People think Microsoft is a monopoly, but I'll tell you what, Qwest is the monopoly in this area. Most (if not all?) areas have a single telephone company that services everyone, so basically, if you have a problem with the company, you have absolutely no choice but to deal with their crap.
For instance, Qwest promised me 7cents a minute long distance, but when the bill came, it was $800 - they were charging me 25cents a minute because of a computer operator error on their part.
At the time I was working solely online, and I used the telephone lines to access the internet for my job - so guess, what? If I didn't pay them $800, they were going to switch off my phone (and thus completely removing my livelihood). Even after 6 months straight of talking to them on the phone once a week, they never gave me a credit. I was promised, at least a dozen times, that my account would be credited - but it never was. Turns out the "Customer Service Representatives" just put in a request for credit, and these secret guys in the back (that they wouldn't let me talk to, no matter how I begged) were in charge of actually issuing it. Well apparently they didn't agree with the CSR that kept promising me credits.
Anyway, I didn't mean for this to turn into a rant about Qwest, but the point is, don't give us this local monopoly crap that we have to deal with for phone, electricity, etc. Soon as we have that, we'll have them supporting only one operating system, overcharging, giving us crap "privacy policies" like Qwest's new one (they should call that an "anti-privacy policy").
Fweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee... FRAPPPP!!!
"Internautes" = Internauts. I like it. Not so much "surfing" as an epic sea voyage. With sirens and cyclopses and a golden fleecing at the end of it all...
I've got a bad attitude and karma to burn. Go ahead. Mod me down.
The real key to universal broadband is the so-called last mile - the connection to the home and thru the home into the computer there. Whatever solution you come up with will have to be duplicated tens of millions of times, just like it has been for telephone jacks and electrical outlets. A company in my hometown, Time Domain, is about to get licensed by the FCC for a revolutionary new type of wireless technology that may very well be the key to solving the last mile problem. You can read coverage about them from USA Today, The Economist, US News & World Report, Business Week, and The New York Times.
how long will these tax breaks continue? not more than a year, i think. But still a good thing in these times of recession
Computer Help
If the view is that "Broadband will Save the World Economy", then its a reasonable question to ask: "How will this happen?".
A few articles down from this one on slashdot is a piece that details how the entertainment industry is claiming to be at risk from what is essentially broadband.
Sine both have powerful money interests behind them, there is clearly an agenda that the Internet will become the "commercial" Internet. Worse, I believe draconian copy protection and content protection will be mandated by law. Follow along:
1) Broadband will be subsidized by the US Government. This subsidy will naturally favor existing broadband providers, which at this point amounts to Comcast and TW/AOL.
2) Because of this subsidy, and the lure of high-speed access, smaller and regional ISP will have no alternative and will become ghetoized. I'll bet that most of them will fold within 2 years.
3) At the same time, content providers (TW/AOL, Disney, etc.) and their lobbiest (RIAA, MPAA) will begin a serious push to get hardware and software protection mandatory within the US.
4) Congress will agree, not because they think it is a good idea, but because they fear they'll push a broadband infrastructure and get no benefit.
5) Richard's Stallman's nightmare vision will very quickly become a reality as all types of content providers push congress to mandate the type of draconian laws (DMCA) that have been created to protect special and narrow interests.
6) Private web servers will quickly become a thing of the past, since all content providers do not allow you to run your own server.
7) My guess will be a call to "license" web servers on the same grounds that we "license" radio and TV stations....."Bandwidth belongs to the public, why should anyone be allowed to run a web site without proper government controls....it only makes sense so they don't interefere with 'legitimate' web sites".
8) And I don't even think I'm painting a worst-case scenario here. I think this is likely within a few years.
You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
No more jerky 1/8" screen streams please.
No wonder you're upset. If I were watching 1/8 of an inch streams I would be upset too. I amazed you could see to type that message after all of the eye-strain you must be suffering.
If you are in favor of government stepping in to help your own pet project, don't act so surprised when they step in to help someone else's in a way that removes some of your freedom.
Take a stand against big government: join the Libertarian Party.
[ home ]
A public good is non-rival and non-exclusive. The USPS charges money (and at varying degrees, next-day, 1st class) which "excludes" users from the system.
1.) Talk about how Microsoft should be considered the epitome of 21st century business and why the current antitrust case against them should be dropped. And don't worry about forming a valid and consistent argument to back it up; regardless of the quality of your argument you'll get modded down. So why waste the effort?
2.) Repeatedly ask if the post you are about to make is the "first post," even if the bottom line of the story listing on the front page reads "1048 of 1301 comments."
3.) Discuss your love of Britney Spears and Natalie Portman.
Just follow this 1-2-3 plan and you'll shave off those excess Karma points fast. We guarantee you'll lose 10 Karma points in two weeks, or your money back.
Here is an actual testimonial. Let us remind you that ILoveGoats is an actual client. He says:
Disclaimer: ILoveGoats is an extraordinary case. Your results may vary. Always speak to a qualified professional before beginning any Karma loss program.
ATT@home decided that I only needed 1.5Mb/s, so they capped my bandwidth.
Thanks so much for deciding for me what kind of bandwidth I really need.
First, do you really want to trust any article that uses the term "Megabites" prominently in the headline?
.ISO's!"
;):
Second, do you REALLY want the US goverment to provide you with Internet service? Consider: in the 1970's the US goverment decided that 55MPH was the law. Since they owned the funds to pay for the roads, their word was law. I always wondered what would have happened if a rich state had said "FUCK OFF! I CAN'T DRIVE 55!" and kept the limits, and accepted the loss of the federal highway funds.
Do you really want the US government to be able to say "No Naptser, No Porn, and DAMN SURE NO
What I wouldn't mind would be something along the lines of the REA from the early 1900's. The government provided low-interest guaranteed loans to businesses to provide electrical power to rural areas. The catch - YOU WILL PAY THIS LOAN BACK! No Chapter 11, no Chapter 13. Fail to pay it back, and we nationalize your company.
EVERY REA COMPANY PAID ITS LOANS BACK AHEAD OF SCHEDULE.
A concrete example (for the blockheads out there
A friend of mine lives in a small town. The cable TV company there is also a phone company (but not in that town), and they don't do DOCSIS, they do DSL (great for me - they are MY telephone company). So cable modems are right out.
The phone company in his town is Sprint. They aren't interested in DSL, they want to do wireless and they aren't ready to deploy that in his town. So, right now he has 2 phone lines and runs bonded PPP to get a measly 112kbps.
He's a networking guy - he could set up his own ISP and run DSL if he could get the seed money to do so. What if he could get a RNA (Rural 'Netification Act) loan to do so?
www.eFax.com are spammers
Broadband is now our god-given right?
My parents live in a small town and have only ONE dial-up provider to "choose" from... and that is through the town bank!
Ironically, many small towns had cable TV long before cities because they had such limited access to broadcast TV and it was simply easier to bury the cable. But there is no digital cable or cable broadband available.
But still, you really go rural and there is no cable TV- it is all dish TV (much of it BIG dish... sometimes several).
On the flip side, in IA, where my parents live, there is a fat fiber pipeline in town connecting the school and courthouse to schools and courts across the state- the entire state is fibered. The infrastructure is there, but ordinary citizens are deprived of its benefits. In a town of 2000 people, how much of that bandwidth would the handful of people online actually consume?
I know with my phone company, living in the city I help SUBSIDIZE phone service in outstate communities (I receive notices to that effect every once in awhile). On the flip side, I can call millions of people in my local calling area compared to a few thousand in a rural area... so it is a small price to pay. I would not mind subsidizing broadband to rural areas. It is like fax machines. One fax machine in the world is useless... there is nobody to fax to. The more fax machines there are, the more valuable it becomes/the more people you can communicate with.
Yet again, if you want to live near an international airport, or a freeway, they won't just build one hear you... maybe it is just all about "location, location, location."
Those that suggest you "dance like no one is watching" really want to see you make a complete fool of yourself.
There's also the subtle changes broadband brings to peoples habits. Just got broadband recently and I'm still getting use to the always-on aspect. I expect to be disconnected at any moment. Also there's the speed. Currently it's above 1.5 Mb/s, which is a welcome change. One of the things I like it is that video of all kinds flows more naturally. Watching TV from around the world makes for a more informed consumer. Same with listening to radio. Not to mention the movies that would never see the light of day in this corner of the world. Maybe we can convince the politicians to spend the money by bringing up the fact that it's easier to reach a wider audiance via the internet, and especially the *broadband* internet.
Take the phone company to small claims court!
You don't need a lawyer, they do. Small claims courts are simple and don't allow most of the legal mumbo-jumbo that applies in "big" courts.
It'll cost them at least half of that $800 just to ship a lawyer into town to defend the case - meaning they probably won't.
Don't ask for anything but the filing fees (typically around $50) and your $800.
You're almost guaranteed victory if you can reasonably substantiate your claims! Include paperwork, times, dates, who saids, etc.
-Ben
I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
What do we really need universal broadband for? To view the latest shit from Hollywood or hear the latest garbage from Britney Spears, all copy-protected and available only under Windoze of course?
Ooh, moderator points! Five more idjits go to Minus One Hell!
Delendae sunt RIAA, MPAA et Windoze
I submitted the story about the huge growth in French broadband:
Broadband in France has grown by 500% in the past year, causing total Internet use in France to increase by 26% just in last quarter of 2001. France Telecom is charging such low prices (~$25/month) that they are being accused of trying to reimpose their monopoly.
What about the market structure in France makes companies compete to provide cheap broadband service to customers, while in most other countries they are trying to prevent their competitors from providing service?
Patriotism is the conviction that your country is superior to all others because you were born there. (GBS)
I have broadband. I live in Canada, and in my town, there is fierce competion between broadband providers.
I also run junkbuster, which speeds up page loading, and I don't have to look at X10 ads. You can too. Check out www.junkbuster.org.
Doug Moen.
I have written a truly remarkable program which this sig is too small to contain.
Therefore, when a salesman arrives and tries to sell you DSL access, he is like the messiah when he tells you you'll have 24/7 access for a flat fee. He doesn't even have to mention the speed increase, he already has sold his thing.
This and a better abitlity in general to manage and develop heavy investment networked infrastructure that there is in Europe, due to the governements being less shy stepping in, makes that broadband internet access is doomed to be better, more generalized and cheaper than in the US.
If you want a co-op ISP in your neighbourhood, then just go ahead and set one up. You don't need government handouts or new laws. Just do it.
There are lots of co-ops where I live (Waterloo Ontario). We have a co-op bank, a co-op grocery store, a co-op bike repair shop, etc. We used to have an internet co-op which offered fast 24x7 internet access to its members, but it fell apart when cheap broadband came to town a few years ago. There are quite a few 802.11 co-ops in existence (although not here, that I've heard). The point is, if you want it, then get together with some friends and organize it.
Doug Moen.
I have written a truly remarkable program which this sig is too small to contain.
Consider the small, non-corporate sites that can't manage the traffic throughput, versus the big, highly-connected sites. Which ones win under this scenario? Already we see major "independents" like K5 and Adequacy, creaking along, trying to keep up with the tides. Let's hope the phrase "All connected up but with nowhere to surf" isn't the watchword of the next decade...
This is really just spread spectrum, with more spread. There's way too much hype from the impulse radio people. There was major hype from LLNL about "micropower impulse radar", which turned out to be a dud - other RF sources interfered with it too much.
Right, this is exactly what we need. Picture this:
You're browsing the internet (you know, going to your favorite porn sites), and you get a popup ad. This is no ordinary popup ad, this one not only blinks, flashes, moves, won't close, and spans more of itself - it's talking to you - nonstop - about the product while playing some cheesy muzak. Right, that's exactly what I'm looking forward to. Not.
I think, therefore, I'm smarter than our president.
Universal Product Code
Why doesn't it occur to the technology world that we already are getting a very reasonable adoption per year in those areas that have high speed access for a major percentage of the average citizens entertainment budget! No doubt, decreasing the price would help--that it under the companies total control! But, both low speed and high speed bandwidth is getting more expensive and we have a recession.
The worse thing possible is to subsidize the "socalled" high speed access which has not increased in speed for 3 + years -- still stuck @ ~ 500kb for dsl and 3 mbs for cable. They want a "subsidy" for their current business. If we encourage locking in the current technology, when we can get content beyond what dial up provides fine, i.e. current video content, video conterence and need more speed, the users will be locked into deals at the current speed with the incumbent suppliers and no funds will be available to the post-cable/telco era challengers.
I am. OS X doesn't help either with all the colours and fuzzy text. I await Internet 2, which is being trialled at verious Universities, including Stanford (US) and Warwick (UK). HDTV resolution streaming in REAL TIME. The connection is 1000 times faster than todays fastest -- apparently. Alas, the owners of content would balk at the potential of VideoNapster type services from being used to distribute just about anything instantly. We need http://www.PonyUp.net. Get your content from anywhere, pay for it if you like it.
O'WONDERWe're working on it.
Ambitious Goal of 100 Megabites to 100 Million
Homes & Small Businesses by 2010
I could understand if a small backwoods town printed something like that, but TechNet?
Come on...
Uhm AT&T is cash poor it's been pretty self-evident for a while now. They have their hands in so many cookie jars even they don't know what they do anymore. They have become bloated and apathetic to customers wants and needs. They would just assume bend you over a short log and give it to you in the butt as to even attempt giving customers value for their dollar. Because of this our government needs to send them cash so their execs who can't seem to find the time to remove theirs heads from their asses can still pay their employees and hopefully figure out how to dig themselves out of this. Now we can't just give them a handout but a company who pays millions a year in taxes sure feels it when they are granted some fairly large tax breaks.
Personally I'm done with AT&T, I've canceled my broadband, my long distance, my cell phone, and my digital cable. I'd just assume connect to the Internet with a tin can and a string and use anyone else who can provide me with services I would otherwise need AT&T for.
I know it is trollish and childish but every time I even hear of AT&T now I just want to kick someone in the nuts.
That should be a step in the right direction.
For the US though, it seems that faster access for less cash is as much a problem as a solution. The only thing that seems to captivate the majority of American consumers is lower prices. But lower prices on higher bandwidth will wipe out a lot of existing business plans like web hosting and existing ISPs, not to mention exponentially raising the stakes on the entertainment industry. Of course these are only problems for those who are swimming against the tide of technology by providing half-ass solutions and irrationally insisting on the validity of outdated business plans. Unfortunately, many US telecoms and entertainment businesses suffer this allfiction.
More bandwidth at lower prices will be an enormous blessing to many companies, but many of them may be outside of the US.
I'm a Californian living in Taiwan and I've had both cable and DSL in Taiwan for several years now at costs much lower than what I used to pay for a modem connection when you factored in the per-minute local phone charges. Spending the Christmas holidays back in the States this year I found that the majority of people I ran into were still using modems despite living in areas with both DSL and cable alternatives. It was clear that everyone of them had the same reason for holding out on broadband: cost. Paying too much for something you're not sure you want or need is the ultimate hulimiation in the States.
I assume first mile ethernet will bring broadband costs into check, but I'm not sure it's going to be a huge plus for the many US businesses operating on the assumption that bandwidth must be costly. in the cases of China, India and Brazil, the benefits may be much more easily recognized. They won't miss the neighborhood Blockbuster Video they never had.
I like to watch gorillas!
:(]
rtsp://63.237.143.140/encoder/d-zoone.rm [real players
Sometimes you can watch the camera focus. That is pretty cool considering you are getting the feed faster than the camera can adjust.
Real cool in full screen.
Get your Unix fortune now!
In other words... nah nah, told you so!
"Plagued by technical problems and consumer indifference, many of the largest providers have gone out of business"
"consumer indifference". And this is the technology that everyone needs so badly that it is going to revive the economy?
This is a scam - yet another way to get the government to take money by force (taxation) that consumers aren't willing to pay, and the corporations aren't willing to risk putting up themselves.