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Comcast's Incompetence, Lack of Broadband May Force Developer To Sell Home 536

BUL2294 writes Consumerist has an article about a homeowner in Kitsap County, Washington who is unable to get broadband service. Due to inaccurate broadband availability websites, Comcast's corporate incompetence, CenturyLink's refusal to add new customers in his area, and Washington state's restrictions on municipal broadband, the owner may be left with no option but to sell his house 2 months after he bought it, since he works from home as a software developer. To add insult to injury, BroadbandMaps.gov says he has 10 broadband options in his zip code, some of which are not applicable to his address, have exorbitant costs (e.g. wireless), or are for municipal providers that are prevented from doing business with him by state law. Yet, Comcast insists in filings that "the broadband marketplace is more competitive than ever." As someone who had Comcast call to cancel on the day of my closing (two days before my scheduled install) because they didn't offer service to my house after all, I can sympathize.
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Comcast's Incompetence, Lack of Broadband May Force Developer To Sell Home

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  • domain name error (Score:4, Informative)

    by Ydna ( 32354 ) * <andrew@s w e g er.net> on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:42PM (#49340941) Homepage

    It's http://broadbandmap.gov/ [broadbandmap.gov] (singular)

  • by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:42PM (#49340945) Homepage Journal

    I think that we should lobby to break the cable(and other incumbent monopolistic ISPs) companies.

    For example, state(and lower) prohibitions on municiple broadband systems should 'go away', and every time a cable company refuses service to a customer they should be hit with a $1k(or more) fine.

    Especially with the federal government declaring it a utility.

    • by kamapuaa ( 555446 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:48PM (#49340993) Homepage

      Dude lives in the middle of nowhere. There's nothing wrong with Comcast not offering him service, there's something wrong with them claiming they did when they didn't.

      Additionally, the homeowner should have been more diligent that his home in the middle of nowhere, with no cable box, would actually have cable.

      Internet over 4G really isn't that expensive, and that's what he uses now. I'm surprised that doesn't work for him.

      • by Bengie ( 1121981 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:20PM (#49341241)
        Middle of nowhere? He lives in a county with 250k people and about an average of 650 people per square mile. My county has roughly twice the area and 1/3rd as many people and access to gig fiber through most of the county.
        • But if Comcast doesn't service that area then Comcast calls it "nowhere".

        • Middle of nowhere? He lives in a county with 250k people and about an average of 650 people per square mile.

          Yes, the middle of nowhere. (I live in Kitsap County as well.) That average is misleading because most of the people are concentrated in one of three major 'metro' areas, much of the county is low density or practically empty. (And he lives in one of the low density areas, in an area which county residents regard as being 'backwoods'.)

      • by SuricouRaven ( 1897204 ) on Thursday March 26, 2015 @03:58AM (#49342703)

        He contacted two major cable companies prior to purchase to confirm availability of service. Both of them lied, due to improper checking of the address: They just looked at the zip code, confirmed that they serviced that area and promised him they could supply cable broadband. Neither comcast nor xfinity checked throughly enough to be sure that individual property could be serviced.

    • by Obfuscant ( 592200 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @10:51PM (#49341747)

      I think that we should lobby to break the cable(and other incumbent monopolistic ISPs) companies.

      The Kitsap County cable franchise ordinance is online [codepublishing.com]. "Any franchise granted pursuant to this chapter shall be nonexclusive ...". That means that all it takes to "break the monopoly" Comcast has on Kitsap County is ... have a second company get a franchise and enter the market. And the franchise is for cable TV, not ISP service, so all another ISP would need is ... to enter the market.

      But they're already there. The maps site says there are a lot of internet services. All but two are "too expensive", but the map site doesn't rate service by cost, just availability.

      According to the franchise ordinance, "14.32.350 Extraordinary installation":

      In the event a request is made for service and the residence is more than three hundred feet from an existing cable distribution line, such installation shall be completed on a time and material cost basis for that portion of the service line extending beyond three hundred feet.

      This applies to cable television service (ISP service is not covered by the franchise). So, if he's ordered cable TV and they don't honor this section of the ordinance, it becomes a legal issue reportable to the franchise authority.

      I don't see where he's reported Comcast to the franchise authority for failure to comply. If existing laws aren't being used to try to resolve problems, then why are new laws the right solution? (I used my local franchise authority to beat Comcast about the head and shoulders regarding cableCard service -- Comcast responded and I got what I wanted, in less than a week.)

  • Not faultless (Score:4, Insightful)

    by OverlordQ ( 264228 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:44PM (#49340957) Journal

    Maybe he shoulda talked to the people he bought the house from instead of level 1 sales drone. Hell, even looking at the house he should have seen if there was coax in place or not.

    • Re:Not faultless (Score:5, Insightful)

      by MickyTheIdiot ( 1032226 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:55PM (#49341057) Homepage Journal

      Is there any corporate malfeasance that someone won't try to explain away. How about if Comcast came out and shot the guy? Would you say that was his fault?

    • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
      He should have had it in writing.
    • by NoKaOi ( 1415755 )

      Maybe he shoulda talked to the people he bought the house from instead of level 1 sales drone.

      And what if the people living in the house didn't have broadband because they weren't interested in it? There are still plenty of people, although a small percentage, who don't have a computer at home, especially older people. On a previous rental I had, I asked the owner if it had broadband available and he didn't know because the previous tenant (who had been there a long time) didn't have it. On my house that I bought 2 years ago, I called both the phone and cable companies (only 2 options in my area)

  • by Maltheus ( 248271 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:45PM (#49340965)

    Before I bought my house, I went down to the Comcast office to confirm that I would be able to get broadband there. Multiple people told me yes, but I still wanted to speak to a manger, just to be sure. And they did assure me, over and over again. So I bought the house, moved in, and then they finally told me it wasn't available yet.

    Since I was doing software consulting from home, at the time, I made it clear to them that I wasn't going to move there if I couldn't get it. I ended up going over a year before they decided to turn it on (the wiring was all there, it was a new development). It really hurt my business, at the time. I'm still bitter about it to this day. I couldn't have been any more thorough in checking before moving in. They are absolutely incompetent.

    • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:50PM (#49341011)

      I went down to the Comcast office to confirm

      Your mistake. They have no problem lying to a customer's face. Conduct all correspondence by e-mail. And make sure the CCs to the state utilities commission, attorney general and FCC are clearly visible.

      • I don't believe it was a lie. That wouldn't make sense. I was already a customer and I told them I wasn't even going to move to that house, if I couldn't get internet. I stressed that point emphatically to them. Misinforming me cost them money too.

      • by Krishnoid ( 984597 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @11:42PM (#49341975) Journal

        Even that may not be sufficient. After this story, I would:

        • personally pay to install cable internet for the existing owner
        • call their real estate broker
        • have them download a preferably large nightly build for some project
        • have them run md5sum.exe on the nightly build, provide the result, and compare it to mine

          • A little paranoid, but it's a minor inconvenience compared to having to do without broadband at all.
    • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:57PM (#49341063)

      can you write into the house buying contract, the requirement for inet connectivity?

      I know, no one does that; but maybe it needs to be done, from now on.

      in my area, at least, comcast is a per month basis; so if a house sale was hinging on this, I guess I could -install- comcast, verify it in the empty house (sigh) and then move forward with the purchase.

      sounds like a drag - and if the market is a seller's market, then your request is probably going to kick you out of the running (unless your offer is that much higher than the rest).

      • by NoKaOi ( 1415755 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @10:18PM (#49341593)

        can you write into the house buying contract, the requirement for inet connectivity?

        Yes, you can. But what happens if you've done your due diligence (and maybe even the seller has too) and you don't know until after closing? I suppose you could write in that broadband be installed before closing to prove it, but if they have multiple offers then having an extra clause like that could be viewed as an extra pain in the ass (and an indication that there's higher chance that you'll back out for some other nonsense reason even if they do install it) so you're less likely to get your offer accepted.

        All these people blaming the homeowner have probably never bought a house before, or at least if they did, they didn't pay enough attention to know what was really going on (which is what the realtor's job, so that doesn't mean they're stupid) and they didn't encounter anything unexpected.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Almost same for me. New development. No Comcast, no AT&T Uverse, no Charter. AT&T DSL was 1 month in because of the regulated & required phone line. Comcast was 6 months later, but probably had something to do with a neighbor who worked for Comcast. When I called them, they didn't even know my address for a good 3 months, and then told me it will be another 9 months.

      I thought it was so retarded that a I lived 3 miles from a major AT&T office, yet they had no plans to expand Uverse in my

    • If you had comcast business assuring you, in writing, that they could install to your house and then their error subsequently caused you to suffer financial damages, I'm pretty sure you have standing to sue.

      Of course, I am not a lawyer, and this isn't legal advice.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Get a T1 (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jsimon12 ( 207119 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:45PM (#49340973) Homepage

    I am sure the phone company can pull a T1 out so if it is really that important to his livelihood why not bite the bullet? Dumping a home 2 months after buying would likely cost more.

    • Re:Get a T1 (Score:5, Informative)

      by MAXOMENOS ( 9802 ) <mike&mikesmithfororegon,com> on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:14PM (#49341173) Homepage

      He explored that solution, and it turned out to be a huge pain in the neck. Quoting Consmerist [consumerist.com] (first link in the OP):

      Then there’s XO, which provides connectivity solutions for business. We confirmed with an XO sales rep that the company could, in theory, provide T1 broadband service (through CenturyLink). However, it would require that either Seth’s employer purchase the service or that Seth have a business license of his own. But even if that were possible, the cost would be exorbitant, starting at nearly $600/month with a three-year contract.

      I could see his employer saying "no," and $600/month for 1.5 mbps is highway robbery.

  • Why? Because... (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:46PM (#49340975)

    Why are they still in business? Oh, because there's no competition. That's why. As a friend of mine once said "yeah it's unfair and they suck, but c'mon I still have to do work, so they get my money." If there were competition Comcast and their ilk (I'm talking about the telco ILEC like AT&T (really SBC) and Verizon) would have long gone bankrupt or bought out. But they are in control because their lobbyists are writing the laws for them and there's little we could do about it besides hearing fud from these clowns.

  • I have never in my life seen a more despicable, deceitful and generally miserable business than Comcast.
  • by Art3x ( 973401 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:59PM (#49341077)
    It seems like the end game is peer-to-peer wireless.
  • by supernova87a ( 532540 ) <kepler1@@@hotmail...com> on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:02PM (#49341089)
    Let's be clear on whose responsibility is whose. No one is forcing this guy to do *anything* and it's kind of a stretch to say that Comcast is forcing him to move out of his house. He bought and wants to live in a certain house, that has not yet been clearly shown to have internet service. Comcast is incompetent, and it's his choice on what to do about it.

    The issue is not that he has to move out, it's that he doesn't have many cost effective options to get fast internet at his house. But he hasn't even exhausted all his options. Has he looked into contracting to extend a line tap? Has he tried satellite? Phone? Any other options? Many people and businesses operate in far more remote places where they manage to get connectivity.

    Much as I hate Comcast, have a sense of objectivity here...
    • by pz ( 113803 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:20PM (#49341243) Journal

      Heck, he could, you know, rent an OFFICE to conduct his business from that has connectivity. There are tons and tons of incubator spaces that would be happy to have his business.

      I've conducted business from home. It sucks. There are many good reasons to separate work and home.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:35PM (#49341347)

      DSL in his area is CenturyLink. The DSLAM that coves his house is in "Permanent Exhaust" meaning it's oversubscribed so far even CenturyLink won't add more subscribers, and they have made the business decision to NOT increase the bandwidth to the DSLAM cabinet further to be able to support more hardware. I.E. "I'm sorry, we're full. No, we're not adding any more capacity. Ever. Goodbye."

      Satellite doesn't work at all for full-time VPN access. Their bandwidth caps/fees are even worse than cell-phones.

      And ComCast is flat-out refusing to service his house/area entirely. Full-stop: Since they can't charge him the full line-extension fee ($50-60k) the portion they have to pay by law is too high so they'd rather refuse him service entirely. Welcome to the edge-case downside of regulation preventing the full cost from landing on the end-user.

      Point-to-Point wireless no longer covers his area due to a new tall building being built between their regional tower and his subdivision.

      Currently he's burning 30GB/month on his Verizon service to stay employed, and if it's a big file transfer he drives into town to use the local StarBucks Coffee or McDonalds wifi.

      He did his research, ComCast effectively has a bit flipped in their database: [X] Has had cable service previously at this address.

      That single bit has caused all this mess.

      - WolfWings, too lazy to login to SlashDot in over a decade now.

      • by DerekLyons ( 302214 ) <fairwater@@@gmail...com> on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @11:18PM (#49341861) Homepage

        DSL in his area is CenturyLink. The DSLAM that coves his house is in "Permanent Exhaust" meaning it's oversubscribed so far even CenturyLink won't add more subscribers, and they have made the business decision to NOT increase the bandwidth to the DSLAM cabinet further to be able to support more hardware. I.E. "I'm sorry, we're full. No, we're not adding any more capacity. Ever. Goodbye."

        I live in Kitsap County and I looked up his address, and I can't say I'm surprised. He lives in a very low density area, and given current land use restrictions, that's not going to change. There's no money to be had in expanding capacity.
         

        And ComCast is flat-out refusing to service his house/area entirely. Full-stop: Since they can't charge him the full line-extension fee ($50-60k) the portion they have to pay by law is too high so they'd rather refuse him service entirely. Welcome to the edge-case downside of regulation preventing the full cost from landing on the end-user.

        No, welcome to the "edge case" of living in a very low density area outside of town rather than in a suburb.
         

        Point-to-Point wireless no longer covers his area due to a new tall building being built between their regional tower and his subdivision.

        He doesn't live in a subdivision - he lives in the woods outside the built up area of town.

        Seriously, I've said it three different ways but I'll repeat it a fourth time because it's important to grasp - he lives in very low residential density area outside of town. He doesn't live in the suburbs or a subdivision. I give and grant that Comcast is incompetent - but his options are narrowed and/or blocked as much by the fact of where he chose to live as by any law or regulation. The north end isn't Palo Alto or Mountain View.

      • Currently he's burning 30GB/month on his Verizon service to stay employed, and if it's a big file transfer he drives into town to use the local StarBucks Coffee or McDonalds wifi.

        So...meh. At the $5 per gigabyte we keep seeing tossed around, that's $150 a month to work from home, with occasional trips into town for supplies and groceries he probably needed to get anyway. Some of us are out of pocket that much for a transit pass to get to work.

        Given that it probably costs north of ten thousand dollars in legal fees, commissions, and taxes to buy or sell even an inexpensive home (and the sky's the limit if the property is more valuable), moving out solely to save even a couple of

  • Utter nonsense (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Seth’s work requires that he have a VPN connection. Unfortunately, the latency on satellite broadband is so high that most residential-level service providers won’t guarantee that customers can access VPNs. So satellite might get TV and some Internet into Seth’s home, but not into his home office. Thus, strike ViaSat from the above list.

    That is an absolutely absurd statement. I am a software engineer and have no broadband where I live. We knew years ago when we purchased the land it would be awhile before broadband came to us. I can do about 90% of my work over satellite. Latency is 650ms-750ms on average through VPN connectivity. There is minimal packet loss. Putty is annoying but still usable. VNC and X are unusable over satellite, I'll grant that - here's an alternative, use remote desktop into a Windows box and use X or VNC from

  • by david_bonn ( 259998 ) <(moc.cam) (ta) (nnobdivad)> on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:18PM (#49341227) Homepage Journal

    ... and this guy doesn't need to sell his house.

    You can buy point-to-point wireless internet solutions which will give you up to 5km of range and around 50mb/s of bandwidth for $300 or so per end, so $600 total.

    If that is his house, he has a bunch of trees around it which will block line of sight so he needs a tower-type antenna mount which he can buy for about $1000.

    So all he needs to do is make arrangements with someone to be the other endpoint and he is in business. For less than $3000.

    I'm not making this up. I managed to do this in a remote part of Washington state (where I still do not have a landline phone, the last time I checked CenturyLink wanted more than 25 grand to put in the phone service, even after I pointed out that I had put in extra copper wires they could use when I put in power to my home site) over sixteen years ago. My out-of-pocket costs were less than five grand.

  • The article is wrong (Score:3, Interesting)

    by gewalker ( 57809 ) <Gary.Walker@Astr a D i g i tal.com> on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:22PM (#49341259)

    The problem in this case is not that Comcast is incompetent. It is that they are flat out lying. This is breach of oral contract. IANAL and certainly don't know the penalties in this case, but I know that legal damages are quite limited in my state -- i.e.. $500 max. Why do you think they won't write out any guarantees?

    Comcast screwed my over too as I had checked in advanced, was assured it was wired for cable and only required a phone call to turn it on, etc. Of course, when I made the call took several calls to determine that it was not in fact ready or had ever wired to their network. wired. Fortunately infrastructure was in place and I go service turned on only 10 tens late, but it was not pleasant for me either.

    Of course they are incompetent. But they are also lying monopolistic crooks.

  • by Radical Moderate ( 563286 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:25PM (#49341283)
    Seems like this would be a great case for getting that law stricken or amended. Most of those laws are justified so as to provide a level playing field for corporate ISPs, but since they're not interested in serving him the law shouldn't be enforced in this case. Maybe the EFF [eff.org] would be interested?
  • by chriscappuccio ( 80696 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:30PM (#49341321) Homepage

    Wow, an impossible problem to solve! Nobody who writes programs has ever installed their own wireless radio before? Drills and cat5 crimpers are beyond you, eh?

    "Wireless is so exorbitant if I want to live here I have to have Comcast and they won't come!! I have to take a huge loss right now just to stay in business!!" -- Said some fucking idiot

  • by Caviller ( 1420685 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:50PM (#49341439)
    DSL might very well be available there but for "new development", there is a trick you have to do in order to get it.

    When i moved into my new house a few years ago, I was told that there is no DSL service in my area. I told them that it was BS since the CO is less then a mile from my house (i pass it going to and from work each day) and the dang pedistal was in my front yard. Over and over again..."Sir we don't serve your address/area and have no plans on doing so." Each time i respond..."You put a new pedistal in my subdivision when the road/utilities were layed....want the number off the pedistal?" Them..."No sir since we have no service there...." This went on for three damn months threw 3! different support levels.

    Finally, i realized that by law, they HAVE to hook me up if i requested standard POTS phone service. I called, gave them the address, they told me they don't have service there and would have to set up a service man to survey and figure out how to get me phone service where i live. The next day the guy came out and said..."Well this is easier then i thought....you just need a line buried from the ped to the house (50ft). He was done in 10 min. I then asked if DSL was available here. He told me yea, it's just down the road, want me to turn that on too and add it to your bill, i have a new modem in my truck. 20 minutes later....i had 12Mbits DSL service to my house.

    I then asked why in the world i could not get this done MONTHS ago. He said that if a address never had regular home phone service, as far as ATT was concerned, DSL was not and never would be available. There system was incapable of turning up dsl before phone service....the computer system would just plain not even allow it.

    The next day...i canceled my home phone and kept the DSL

    So my advice to you is that get the mandated by law to provide POTS phone line, and then see if magically you can get DSL service now. I would not be surprised if you can now get it. When I told all my neighbors (who have been trying to months like me) how to do it, BAM!, a few weeks straight of ATT trucks at all the houses, and a whole lot of very thankful neighbors.
  • by bhlowe ( 1803290 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:56PM (#49341475)
    Just walk around and meet the neighbors. Ask to run a wireless link to one in exchange for some or all of the network charges. Great outdoor wireless radios are cheap and reliable. [slashdot.org]
  • Become your own WISP (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @10:30PM (#49341653)

    I live in a fairly rural place, but still work from home for a large tech company. When I built my house, the ONLY internet available was through a local WISP. I was paying ~$160 / month for 3 Mbps service. It was completely unreliable (the WISP actually didn't employ a network technician, just occasionally contracted one out). It wasn't horrible though when it worked, and I was able to do my job, so I lived with it. After 7 years I had totaled that I had spent over $13,000 on 3 Mbps internet. I figured it was time to do something about it.

    What I did was contact a local business owner in town. He happened to own a 250 foot tower next to his small business (not necessary, a tall building will probably work in most cases). In exchange for providing him free internet in his building he allowed me to purchase a business connection and run a line up 100 ft up his tower. I put up a single 120 degree 5Ghz sector. I didn't really need to go that high just for me though as I had line of sight and very few trees.

    All my neighbors needed internet though and were paying outrageous rates too. Putting up the sector allowed me to connect them as well. Some of them are 8+ miles from the tower. They pay me $20/month (plus the cost of their QRT5) and pretty much pay for my new line completely now. Proper QOS rules ensures no one hogs it all but still allows any of them to utilize the line to its max if no one else is. In the last 8 months since installing it, not a single connection problem even though power went out in town for a few hours. Everything is on battery backup.

    I now plan on doubling my bandwidth and moving the sector another 50 feet up the tower to reach a few more of my neighbors. Another option I have thought about is going 200 ft up the tower, and hitting the datacenter 50 miles away that I currently have a rack with 1 Gbps internet. The datacenter owns a 10 story building next store, and would allow me to put a P2P on top of it. Having even 100 Mbps connection at the house would be a dream come true at this point.

    Tower side - RF Elements Sector MIMO 5-120 paired with a Mikrotik RB912UAG-5HPnD (and case)
    House side - Mikrotik QRT5

  • by Chas ( 5144 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @11:26PM (#49341899) Homepage Journal

    I currently have a $250 bill in collections from those jackasses at AT&T.

    Several years ago, my landlords booted Comcast out and went with some fly-by-night Satellite/DSL reseller.

    I'm eligible for 4G Service through Clearwire, but I'm on a SW facing of a brick, concrete and steel building, with the nearest antenna being NE of me. So I would get 1 bar connectivity most of the time. Totally untenable for anything other than web surfing.

    As such, I'm stuck on AT&T DSL. I'm currently grandfathered into a 6Mbit/512K plan.
    Recently I'd started getting notices about exceeding my bandwidth cap.
    So I took a look at their business DSL. A bit more expensive, but at least it was a controlled cost, unlike capped consumer service.
    I ask to make sure I can still maintain the same speeds I have now, as my upstream speed is BARELY able to accommodate my IP phone (heavy internet traffic causes my phone to start chopping up).
    I get told "yeah yeah yeah" to pretty much everything I ask.
    The day they show up to do the switchover, I get told that I'm getting 3Mbit/384K and went "whoa".
    Apparently they stopped offering 6Mbit in my area because most of the lines are in need of replacement. And AT&T isn't going to invest in infrastructure in this area until they are FORCED to (due to fear of being getting fucked over the way Comcast was).
    I immediately cancelled. Yet they stuck me with a $250 bill.

    For what? A service I never used and never should have been sold? All because one of their sales-fucks wanted to make quota?

    Uh uh!

  • by brian.stinar ( 1104135 ) on Thursday March 26, 2015 @12:51AM (#49342247) Homepage

    Why didn't the purchaser pay to install Comcast before he bought the house? This would have been a few hundred bucks, which is significantly less than the cost of reselling a house (normally.) This makes no sense to me. An reasonable seller would totally allow a potential buyer to pay for the installation of high speed Internet...

    I work from home as a software developer too, and I'm aware of my Internet connectivity. I also helped a friend run a wireless ISP, and the cost of setting up unlicensed wireless equipment capable of carrying the kind of bandwidth necessary to run an ISP is probably less than the lose on a house.

    If a criteria is critical to buying a house, it's a good idea to make sure that the criteria is met, or that there are major consequences to the entity "promising" that it is met (such as another posted mentioned, the closing of the house being contingent on wired high speed Internet being installed before closing.)

    This sounds like buyer's remorse.

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