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The Internet Government

Remote Massachusetts Towns Welcome Broadband's Arrival 90

New submitter arnoldjm writes: This story from the Boston Globe tells of the effort to bring publicly funded fiber-optic data transmission capabilities to Western Massachusetts. The Globe Reports: "The network, financed with state and federal stimulus money, will extend broadband to 45 isolated towns where 40 percent of homes have no Internet access... Leverett [one of the towns involved] has contracted a private company to provide Internet service, which will cost subscribers $65 a month. That's about same as Comcast and Verizon FIOS customers pay in Greater Boston, but the speeds in Leverett are about 10 times faster."
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Remote Massachusetts Towns Welcome Broadband's Arrival

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  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday June 15, 2015 @05:43PM (#49917063)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by tnk1 ( 899206 )

      Oddly enough, my television hasn't been working for months, but my Internet hasn't had a problem.

      Even more oddly, I haven't even bothered to call them to fix the TV. I really don't miss it at all.

      • My young kids don't even ask for the TV - they only want the tablets. We sometimes reflexively put something on TV for them, and they often ask if they can't watch it on the tablets instead.

        • by rmdingler ( 1955220 ) on Monday June 15, 2015 @06:35PM (#49917425) Journal

          My young kids don't even ask for the TV - they only want the tablets. We sometimes reflexively put something on TV for them, and they often ask if they can't watch it on the tablets instead.

          It 's a different focking World.

          I used to imagine how my own version of "two miles to school uphill both ways barefoot in the snow"" might go. I used to think it would be, "We had to get up out of our seat to change the channel."

          Now I realize that it may well be, "We had to watch a program at a regularly scheduled day and time to see it each week."

      • Oddly enough, my television hasn't been working for months, but my Internet hasn't had a problem. Even more oddly, I haven't even bothered to call them to fix the TV.

        I assume you are referring to your cable television and not the physical television set, based on the fact you haven't "call[ed] them" to fix it. Or maybe it's the TV set. Either way, you're paying the cable company for service you aren't using -- handing them money for no reason.

        • by KGIII ( 973947 )

          It is not for no reason. It is ransom money. If they "try to fix" the problem then the internet will probably stop working too.

        • Either way, you're paying the cable company for service you aren't using -- handing them money for no reason.

          Every May, I call Comcast and threaten to cancel. In exchange, they usually offer me the same "discount" as new subscribers. Last year's offer was internet+basic cable for $50, vs internet only for $65.

          I figure Comcast must have such a massive stockpile of set-top boxes that they're willing to pay their customers $15/month to store them. Or, like "12 CDs for the price of 1," they make so much money off the people who forget to cancel after the trial that they don't mind the "loss."

  • So internet access is going to cost 9+ hours of minimum wage pay ?
    So about 10 hours out of 160 hours in a full month.
    Add 5 hours for cell phone and 4 hours for TV ( netflix/hulu cheap options)
    That's about 10%+ of a person's wages.
    Hopefully they have someone to share the internet and TV costs.
    And I hope there is a lifeline option for the people trying to live on minimum wage.

    Internet access makes so many things possible !

    • if you live alone on min wage...perhaps you dont need fiber internet??? DSL should suffice
      • Is DSL code for "the neighbor's open WiFi"?

      • Apparently they don't have DSL either, since the article is about "broadband's arrival." TV is definitely something they can cut out though. There's more than enough video entertainment/edutainment on YouTube et al. to completely replace, even exceed, what's available on TV.
        • dont forget broadband now means 25 down. DSL isnt broadband anymore in most if not all places (admittedly i havent kept up with DSL specs)
    • by pubwvj ( 1045960 )

      Lifeline does not cover the internet costs at this time.

      At $65/month they are paying about half what we pay. We are also 'out in the sticks' like them but we pay twice as much and we get far slower speeds plus we have outages that total up about one to two weeks of time a year.

      On the other hand, it is worth it to not have to live in a urban area so I'm not complaining.

  • 'bout time. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jtownatpunk.net ( 245670 ) on Monday June 15, 2015 @06:11PM (#49917241)

    Nearby communities are not far behind in bringing broadband to their residents; they see high-speed Internet as an economic boon akin to rural electrification in the 1930s, one that could bring higher home values, better business climates, and easier access to the modern economy.

    I've been saying that for a while. First was electrification, then telephonication, now internetification. High speed internet has become a basic service and necessary baseline for habitability.

    If you're buying a house, you don't need to ask whether it has electricity, phone service, water, and sewage service. The last two might be self-service in the form of a well and septic system (hopefully not too close together) but you can be pretty sure they're in place or the home wouldn't be on the market. But you can't count on high speed internet. (Satellite and other services metered in 10s of gigs per month don't count.)

    Last year, I picked the region where I wanted to semi-retire but I had to cross the entire area off my list because I couldn't get decent internet access unless I lived right in the middle of one of the little towns. Other areas were "up to" 6 meg DSL at best. I could have got 100mbit cable if I lived in town but, if I'm going to live in town, I'll live in a town with a Walmart, Home Depot, Best Buy, etc. A realtor said the first thing people ask is what kind of internet access they can get but, when I asked him what kind of internet access I could get, he had no idea. "I guess you could go ask one of the neighbors." Oh, sure. "Hi, I'm some random stranger. Can I come in and run some speed tests on your internet connection? I promise I'm not a serial killer."

    So, instead of buying a cabin in the woods, I'm on the outskirts of a city within the sphere of influence of a cable company. As the rest of my generation retires in large numbers (in 20 years or so), those areas are going to continue to get passed over if they haven't got decent communications infrastructure in place.

    And it's even more critical than electric/water/sewer. These days, it's possible for an individual to provide their own power. Solar panels, batteries, inverter, backup generator. Water can come from a well, sewage can go into a septic system. But creating a terrestrial internet connection 10 miles to wherever the local ISP is located can't be done by an individual.

    • by pubwvj ( 1045960 )

      "If you're buying a house, you don't need to ask whether it has electricity, phone service, water, and sewage service."

      I wonder where you got those ideas?

      Reality check: out in rural areas you do need to check to see if a house has electricity, phone service and it probably will not have water or sewage service. It likely has a spring or a well for the water. It might have an outhouse, composting toilets or a septic tank and leach field and you had best find out how old the leach field is. Buy with wide open

      • and it probably will not have water or sewage service.

        Not sure why you feel the need to point this out when he mentions that they might be 'self-service' in the next sentence.

        Generally speaking though, if you're going to be restricted to an outhouse, it's going to mention that in the documents.

      • "If you're buying a house, you don't need to ask whether it has electricity, phone service, water, and sewage service."

        Never purchased a house in the country eh? Where Electricity is pretty much everywhere, the rest is NOT a given for the vast majority of buildable land in this country.

      • by guruevi ( 827432 )

        It's not whether the government considers you 'served' by a utility, it's whether a person buying the house is. Some/most people are okay with well water and sewage tanks, once they find out the cost involved of getting it taken care of, they'll decide that way.

        You cannot sell someone a house without a steady source of electric these days though. You could in the 1920's, perhaps even in the 1950's, but since the 1970's, a house without electric or at least a planned rollout of it would have been a bad inves

    • Hi, I'm some random stranger. Can I come in and run some speed tests on your internet connection? I promise I'm not a serial killer.

      No, but five bucks will get you the wi-fi password and a large mocha. Oh, and no hipsters.

      • Heck with that.. Just look for the Golden Arches Steak house. If you want to come inside, the Dollar menu is cheap...
    • The last two might be self-service in the form of a well and septic system (hopefully not too close together) but you can be pretty sure they're in place or the home wouldn't be on the market.

      'Dry Cabins' are a thing up here where I live. It's where you don't have water/septic, nor a well/septic system due to the location. So you either truck water in yourself or have it delivered, and use an outhouse or composting toilet.

      Still, such are explicitly stated to be so rather clearly in any advertisements.

      Oh, sure. "Hi, I'm some random stranger. Can I come in and run some speed tests on your internet connection? I promise I'm not a serial killer."

      Talking with the neighbors where you're going to be living for possibly decades? Who would want to do that? You know, make sure your neighbors aren't meth-heads, Jehova's witnesses, or other ann

      • by dwywit ( 1109409 )

        I understand there's different rules in different states about rainwater harvesting, but surely if you have a "dry" cabin, i.e. no piped water supply from the local mains, you'd want to catch the water falling on your roof?

        If you're in a rural area, and not near any other major source of air pollution, surely the rainwater is potable?

        I've been living on rainwater for almost 20 years, we only buy a truckload when the dry season lasts longer than usual. We could overcome that with another tank or two (current

        • I understand there's different rules in different states about rainwater harvesting, but surely if you have a "dry" cabin, i.e. no piped water supply from the local mains, you'd want to catch the water falling on your roof?

          There's no rules against it here. Rainwater tends to form around microscopic dust particles, plus you get dust and bird poop and such on your collectors, so you want a settling tank and treatment system, but nothing that can't be handled. But then you probably already know all that.

          Still, while there's no rules against rainwater harvesting, in my area for six months out of the year the precipitation is solid in form, so none of the cabins I've visited have rainwater collection systems. It's cheaper/easie

          • by dwywit ( 1109409 )

            My storage tanks are also the settling tanks - the pickup for household supply is about 5cm above the floor of the tank, all the dust and bird poop just settle to the bottom, and I have that cleared out every couple of years. No other treatment. It sounds icky, but I prefer to think of it as keeping my immune system active and healthy, plus I'm getting lots of minerals. My last blood test showed all mineral levels good, except for slightly low calcium - so I have to east more cheese, dammit.

            Seriously, thoug

    • Nearby communities are not far behind in bringing broadband to their residents; they see high-speed Internet as an economic boon akin to rural electrification in the 1930s, one that could bring higher home values, better business climates, and easier access to the modern economy.

      I've been saying that for a while. First was electrification, then telephonication, now internetification.

      You know, I'm not a fan of this idea, where government shoulders the costs and then owns the resource. We didn't do electricity or telephone this way back in the days, we encouraged private industry to do this by providing subsidies and a regulatory climate where private enterprise could survive. Just having the government do it is a bad idea.... Just about as bad as just handing out grants to companies that claim they will do it for government, which is, in effect, how this will end up. But we apparentl

      • You know, I'm not a fan of this idea, where government shoulders the costs and then owns the resource. We didn't do electricity or telephone this way back in the days, we encouraged private industry to do this by providing subsidies and a regulatory climate where private enterprise could survive.

        So, you favor government shouldering the cost, giving away ownership, and guaranteeing profitability for the utility company. Honestly, that system has worked out pretty well, in many cases. The private industry part tends to encourage cost minimization while the regulatory oversight discourages price gouging and customer abuse.

        The problem with purely private solutions is that the people involved have a financial incentive to provide poor service at exorbitant prices. The problem with purely government s

        • The way we did Telephone and electricity distribution in this country worked fairly well in the past, of course the proponents of government run services either ignore how this was done or don't know.
    • Nearby communities are not far behind in bringing broadband to their residents; they see high-speed Internet as an economic boon akin to rural electrification in the 1930s, one that could bring higher home values, better business climates, and easier access to the modern economy.

      I've been saying that for a while. First was electrification, then telephonication, now internetification. High speed internet has become a basic service and necessary baseline for habitability.

      Bullshit. What the quoted paragraph

    • My house doesn't have electricity, water or sewage, but it does have high speed internet. I don't even need high speed (I'm not in a hurry and que up jobs to work in the background and youtube still works perfect) and had to fight with the isp to give me the low speed package.
  • I bought a small ranch house about 4 1/2 miles from Western Mass' powerhouse of Umass Amherst, in the mid '90s, right off the main drag in the area, route 63. I could stand on the (low) roof and actually see Umass from the house. All the computing power there, and all I could get was bad dialup that would die if the humidity got too high, no dsl, no cable, and until I cleared a few trees, no satelite tv. For cell signal, I had to walk out to the yard, near the road. What a (relative) treat to move to Ge

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