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Dial-Up Users "Don't Want Broadband"

Barence writes "The majority of dial-up Internet users say they don't want to upgrade their connection to broadband, according to a new study in the US. The Pew Internet & American Life research found that 62% of dial-up users had no interest in upgrading to a high-speed connection." (CNN is carrying the AP's story on the study, too.)

5 of 593 comments (clear)

  1. Dialup is "good enough" if you're not an addict. by pomegranatesix · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't know if it'll still connect (though I suspect it would...), but by the time I was in high school, broadband had so permeated my neighborhood that my dialup provider didn't even bother deactivating inactive accounts. Three years after we switched to broadband, we could still use our dialup service when the cable was down.

    Dialup was good enough back in the day. Couldn't -- and still can't -- beat $4.95/mo when 90% of all you needed to do is check your email once a day, which pretty much describes the internet habits of my parents. If they needed anything bandwidth intensive, they'd usually just take care of it at work.

    I think the only reason my parents switched to broadband was because I would spend hours tying up the phoneline when I was IMing my friends.

  2. I'm one of those by Night+Goat · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've been sticking with dial-up service because high speed Internet's too much money for me. It's an added monthly fee that I just don't need. I can make do with dial-up. Turn off graphics and Flash and most web pages load just fine on a 56K dial-up connection. I just download patches for my Mac while I'm at work. I don't have a cell phone or cable TV either. I think I was just raised frugally.

  3. Some people just get set in their ways by elrous0 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I've have a grandmother who would still be using her 1969 Philco black and white TV if it hadn't broken at some point. Some people just get to a point in their life where they get used to doing things the way they've been used to doing them for a long time. And those people resist change with a surprising tenacity.

    It's the same phenomenon that leaves me shaking my head every time they interview some laid-off Detroit autoworker who says something like "This is what I've done my whole life. What am I going to do now?" The obvious questions would be "Good Lord man, you didn't see this coming?" and "Why didn't you get some training or find a field with a brighter future in the last few decades?" Sometimes you just get used to doing something one way, and are lethargic about changing.

    You CAN teach an old dog new tricks, you just have to kick him in the ass sometimes to get him out of his rut.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  4. Re:Nostalgia by tinkerghost · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I used to be able to tell the connection speed from the squawk during the handshake - way too much time doing tech support.

  5. Re:Nooo! by jacquesm · · Score: 4, Interesting

    what makes you think that being out in buttfuck does not equal being in civilization ? Civilization does not equal 'living in a city'.

    I've lived in many different places, some rural and some not, the thing I noticed is that it doesn't really matter whether you're in a rural area or not, the big deciding factor for a carrier to install broadband is COMPETITION.

    As soon as they start losing their dial up customers to some yokel with a wifi hookup they make sure broadband becomes available pronto.