Millions In US Still Living Life In Internet Slow Lane (arstechnica.com) 209
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Millions of Americans still have extremely slow Internet speeds, a new Federal Communications Commission report shows. While the FCC defines broadband as download speeds of 25Mbps, about 47.5 million home or business Internet connections provided speeds below that threshold. Out of 102.2 million residential and business Internet connections, 22.4 million offered download speeds less than 10Mbps, with 5.8 million of those offering less than 3Mbps. About 25.1 million connections offered at least 10Mbps but less than 25Mbps. 54.7 million households had speeds of at least 25Mbps, with 15.4 million of those at 100Mbps or higher. These are the advertised speeds, not the actual speeds consumers receive. Some customers will end up with slower speeds than what they pay for. Upload speeds are poor for many Americans as well. While the FCC uses 3Mbps as the upload broadband standard, 16 million households had packages with upload speeds less than 1Mbps. Another 27.2 million connections were between 1Mbps and 3Mbps, 30.1 million connections were between 3Mbps and 6Mbps, while 29 million were at least 6Mbps. The Internet Access Services report released last week contains data as of December 31, 2015. The 11-month gap is typical for these reports, which are based on information collected from Internet service providers. The latest data is nearly a year old, so things might look a bit better now, just as the December 2015 numbers are a little better than previous ones.
Slow lane, eh? (Score:1)
Try looking at what we're getting up north.
That's Canada, for the geographically-impaired.
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http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2... [huffingtonpost.ca]
between 3 and 10 Mb/s is slow? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's fine. Not long ago I had a connection of 7Mb/sec, and I really had no issues doing normal browsing, streaming netflix, etc. I've streamed Netflix as low as a 1Mb/sec connection (which honestly was fairly bad whenever you needed to download anything over a couple hundred megabytes).
These days I have a 40 megabit connection, and it's great. But I'm quite certain I could easily live with a 10 megabit connection. The vast majority of people really don't need anything beyond say 5-10 megabit, which easily allows you to stream HD movies. It wasn't really that long ago that "slow" was considered perhaps 1 megabit or below.
Re:between 3 and 10 Mb/s is slow? (Score:5, Insightful)
You obviously don't live in a house with multiple people. Between my Mother-in-law streaming Hulu, my kids gaming while playing Youtube videos, my wife facetiming with the grandkid, and me on a VOIP call with work and 3-5 meg internet connection would be unbearable.
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The budget router, a TP-LINK TL-WR940N, has the capability to limit the bandwidth use of any connected MAC address.
So you are wrong, or lying, and in either case pretending.
Re:between 3 and 10 Mb/s is slow? (Score:4, Interesting)
Thank you grandpa...
Have you looked at the shit programming on TV today? Yes, this is why people choose what to what, and why Hulu and others have such successful businesses.
Kids watching Youtube? Ever thought about all the amazing educational content on there, again, far better than TV or public education can even imagine to provide?
Facetime (or other video conferencing) is a fuckton better than telephones. I'm just going to guess you don't even have a family? Some of us would actually LIKE to actually see the people we're talking to who live far away.
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Thank you grandpa...
Have you looked at the shit programming on TV today? Yes, this is why people choose what to what, and why Hulu and others have such successful businesses.
Kids watching Youtube? Ever thought about all the amazing educational content on there, again, far better than TV or public education can even imagine to provide?
Facetime (or other video conferencing) is a fuckton better than telephones. I'm just going to guess you don't even have a family? Some of us would actually LIKE to actually see the people we're talking to who live far away.
Have you seen what's on Hulu and Netflix? I just cancelled Netflix and stay only with Hulu... and I'm still thinking about it.
I finally got a HDTV OTA antenna to work and I'm getting excellent reception. I get PBS, some old movie channels and Qubo (giving kids TV programming all day.) Sure, it's kind of a bitch to cut selection, but when you do so, you become more selective on how you spend time in front of the TV.
In reality, there is quite a few options over the air, and you can always rent movies from
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There might be educational content on youtube. My kids choose annoying orange, fail videos, and PewDiePie.
Facetime, or other video conferencing, means that people can see you naked. OK, no problem, but they might record a copy and share it with people who have a problem with that.
There is a lot of educational content on youtube for kids, as well as silly stuff, kids needs to unplug too and laugh at silly shit from time to time. My kids certainly do after all the homework my wife and I make them do.
I downloaded as much as I could and put it all in an external drive attached to my smart TV. I ripped all DVDs we own, specially Disney and Studio Ghibli movies and put them also in the drive. We are talking about hundreds of hours of programming. All DVDs are now in storage, and kids d
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Although i agree that speeds should be much faster considering the amount we are charged, people need to recognize that THEY are part of the problem.
my Mother-in-law streaming Hulu
She should be watching television, not clogging up the intertubes
my kids gaming while playing Youtube videos
make them go outside and play
my wife facetiming with the grandkid
the telephone works just great for talking to people
And who the hell are you, that you think you can dictate what other people can do, or should do, for entertainment? Being an a-hole does not qualify you for that task.
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Although i agree that speeds should be much faster considering the amount we are charged, people need to recognize that THEY are part of the problem.
my Mother-in-law streaming Hulu
She should be watching television, not clogging up the intertubes
my kids gaming while playing Youtube videos
make them go outside and play
my wife facetiming with the grandkid
the telephone works just great for talking to people
And who the hell are you, that you think you can dictate what other people can do, or should do, for entertainment? Being an a-hole does not qualify you for that task.
He is pointing out that the OP's internet usage is what is causing the degradation in performance when he is trying to do work remotely. It's like person A saying "I keep eating all these krispy kremes, and I get obese. Being obese is a hindrance". Then person B saying to person A "well, don't eat krispy kremes, and take a jog for a change", and then Person C (you) come and say to person B "how dare you tell others how to live".
You are Person C. Don't be like Person C.
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my Mother-in-law streaming Hulu
She should be watching television
And spending $800[1] to time-shift over-the-air television.
my kids gaming while playing Youtube videos
make them go outside and play
For one thing, I have no idea how to make the weather suitable for that on any given day. For another, stranger danger hysteria has increased since you grew up, to the point of parents getting arrested for letting their kids walk to and from the park.[2]
the telephone works just great for talking to people
Yeah, at $6 an hour for long distance on a landline. A better suggestion might have been to downgrade from video to voice over IP, which is billed at a much lower rate than POTS long distance.
[1] Est
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It really wasn't that long ago that "slow" was considered 56k or below.
It really wasn't that long ago that "slow" was considered 4800 or below.
It really wasn't that long ago that "slow" was considered a telegraph.
It really wasn't that long ago that "slow" was considered letter carrier on horseback.
It really wasn't that long ago that "slow" was considered a guy running 26.2 miles.
Welcome to progress, you may be happy with 10 Mbps but I'd like to move on.
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Cue the Four Yorkshiremen [youtu.be]. Or Louis CK's classic rant [youtu.be].
Seriously, you have to remember how far we've come and how fast. My college age kids might remember dial-up modems but probably not. Today one plans her outings around whether there's free public WiFi. That was an unimaginable luxury 15 years ago.
Still, with the infrastructure we now have in place it is depressing that the cost of data should be such an important consideration for a young person.
Not surprising (Score:5, Insightful)
A better question is what percentage of customers have slower speeds because they have no viable alternatives, versus how many (ie: my Mom) are still on relatively ancient DSL (or other) services that haven't quite kept up with the times.
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I do have alternatives - at much higher cost and with data caps. No thanks, I'll keep my uncapped DSL line.
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I live about 6 miles from an urban area that has fibre, cable and DSL. My only choice is HughesNet Satellite (10 GB data cap/month) or a pretty slow (1 Mb/sec) wireless link.
No DSL (too far from a C.O.), no cable.
Both of the above choices are rather limited (the 1Mb link failed for about 6 hours this AM) there is no other choice.
I pay a little over $100/month for both services. I need two providers because both are unreliable.
The reason we don't have cable is because the area is semi-rural and the distanc
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I live about 6 miles from an urban area that has fibre, cable and DSL. My only choice is HughesNet Satellite (10 GB data cap/month) or a pretty slow (1 Mb/sec) wireless link.
No DSL (too far from a C.O.), no cable.
Both of the above choices are rather limited (the 1Mb link failed for about 6 hours this AM) there is no other choice.
I pay a little over $100/month for both services. I need two providers because both are unreliable.
The reason we don't have cable is because the area is semi-rural and the distance between homes is about 1/8 to 1/4 mile.
Don't take it personally, but this is why I no longer want to live away from an urban area. I used to, I even had concrete plans to move to a rural area and settle there with wife and kids. But as technology would have it, internet service has become a real necessity.
And this country has a shit of an attitude about providing ubiquitous good internet infrastructure. Japan on the other hand, it has a different approach. They are throwing good internet infrastructure everywhere in rural areas (to get young
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A better question is what percentage of customers have slower speeds because they have no viable alternatives, versus how many (ie: my Mom) are still on relatively ancient DSL (or other) services that haven't quite kept up with the times.
Or how many stay on DSL or slower connections because it meets their needs, so they have no reason to change even if there are options.
The real story (Score:3)
The real story is the ripoff of American's who were promised fiber upgrades to old infrastructure which never materialized. The providers did a bait-and-switch and only upgraded certain backbone lines with fiber, but leaving the critical -to-home endpoints with the outdated copper. My d/l speeds are far less than 1Mbps over DSL and upload is appalling. My ISP will allow me to use a second copper wire for double the price which is an absolute rirpoff.
For people who believed that all of our old copper line
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Where? Oh, yeah... (Score:2)
The thing they always gloss over in these "the Internetz is SLOW!" articles is where the slow internet is.
"there are still many parts of the country where slow DSL or satellite is sadly the best option"
Yeah, like way out in the boonies, where a lot of people move to get away from the "fast lane." That's where a bunch of the slow satellite connections are.
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Uh, no. Satellite or terrestrial LTE is a painful necessity for many of us who live just outside major cities. My girlfriend and I are both in IT and would dearly love fast internet.
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I was asked last week about internet in my area they were complaining that they were paying $100/mo for 40Mbps fiber and it was too slow for them and I was like O_o that's the highest residential plan available from any carrier here.
Although now that I think about it again it sounds like they just had a really crappy WiFi AP.
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Move.
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Comments from others on both sides of moving issue (Score:2)
You're not the first user to suggest moving [slashdot.org]. But several other users [slashdot.org] think "only a raving lunatic" would "live like a nomad chasing ISPs".
Re: Comments from others on both sides of moving i (Score:2)
Yes, better to stay where you are and complain...
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How much does it cost to move, especially given land value differences between rural and urban areas?
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What you consider the 'boonies' may not really be that far from what you consider 'not the boonies'.
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I suppose it depends what you consider "the boonies," but if we take those numbers at face value we have:
~6% says that US urban population is ~81%. So we've got a 30% gap there even if we assume every rural person everywhere is stuck with slow internet due to purely geographic issues.
They may not have specified the percentage of urban vs rural people they checked up on, but the numbers suggest it doesn't really matter because even in the best case scenario, things still stink with regards to internet spee
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Damn you slashdot tags! This bit:
~6% says that US urban population is ~81%.
Was supposed to be:
~6% less than 3mbps
~28% less than 10mbps
~52% less than 25mbps
http://www.citylab.com/housing/2012/03/us-urban-population-what-does-urban-really-mean/1589/ [citylab.com] says that the US urban population is ~81%.
I really should learn to use the preview button.
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There are cities that are bad also. People say "Just get LTE!" but that's expensive and difficult to use for computers. And in many places your decent enough to be usable internet may be restricted to a single overpriced most hated company in America supplier.
infrastructure (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:infrastructure (Score:5, Insightful)
But oh no, that would require more evil gubbermint to do all that. Leave it to private companies (yay capitalism), yeah sure and look what we got for internet.
Baloney. The limited poor choices we have for broadband access today are generally driven by government-protected monopolies -- the exact opposite of free-market competition.
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My observation is that democrats petition bodies of government where they have minimal influence (federal/global) instead of bodies of government where they have maximum influence (state/local.)
I live nowhere near a major city yet my cable internet speeds have been regularly upgraded, now sitting at 50mbit for $50/mo with
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Current state of ISPs in the US is a pretty good example of government-granted service monopolies acting like typical monopolies. Actual capitalistic competition would be a vast improvement.
FTFY
Strat
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The US does have ridiculous regulations, but it's not their magnitude but their direction which is bad. Don't equate all government regulations as equal when clearly they can vary massively depending on the government which introduced them. The fact there are many European countries with telecoms regulated incredibly strongly, and yet with well-priced ISPs. Clearly your point needs some work.
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it's crap, many don't understand you need good infrastructure for a functioning modern society. But oh no, that would require more evil gubbermint to do all that.
Actually, it just requires them to carry through on that. Personally, I just want them to go get back the money we gave the telcos to build out DSL. They spent it on executive bonuses instead. I want that money back.
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What do you consider "socialist countries"?
On an unrelated note, I've known people in this country who think Germany and Japan are socialist countries. I shit you not. #fuckingsad.
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Just a heads up, second world means communist country. The 1st, 2nd, and 3rd world labeling system is not gradient in the way you have put it.
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That used to be the case, yes. However language changes, including these distinctions.
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Yes language changes but no this word has not changed meaning
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
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Shit, I only had read the first few lines in the wikipedia article before i posted. Strange they describe the out of date deffinition first
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Simple.
Step 1: Eliminate the "franchise fee" local government collects from cable companie(s). It's part of the Communications Act of 1984.
Either that or tar and feather your local elected officials for being greedy and helping the cable companies screw their customers.
Step 2: Convince your state government to eliminate telephone monopolies. It's been about 100 years and POTS buildout is now *shrinking*. So no need to encourage landline usage by keeping telephone monopolies.
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Either that or tar and feather your local elected officials for being greedy
Exactly. My guess is the none of biggest complainers here have any idea whose desk their local franchise agreement lands on whenever its up for renewal or debate. Therefore they could not have petitioned this office, nor could they have made intelligent decisions about who to vote for whenever this office is up for election. These complainers are noisy but toothless. They cant even vote out the corruption because they have no idea who to vote out.
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Bullshit, many European countries have faster and cheaper internet than the US, with nationwide coverage instead of the patchwork in the US.
Estonia, part of former Soviet Union, 10mbps DSL is only 15euro a month average, cheaper than the electric bill.
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I think the intent was that "a worldwide infrastructure" exists, but it depends on providers running the last mile to each subscriber. Thus a town doesn't need to build "a worldwide infrastructure", but it does need to connect its residents to the infrastructure that does exist.
Under President Trump this will no longer be true! (Score:3)
Making America Great! No More American's in the "Internet Slow Lane"!*
* - Pesky FCC demanding 25Mbps. We'll make it so 1Mbps is fast, thus everyone with 1Mbps or better is in the "fast lane"! #FIrst100Days
(Yes, this post is sarcasm, and completely made up)
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I think they already used that trick once.
Some folks might not even care (Score:2)
My dad could care less about the internet and doesn't see the value in it. Only reason he has it is so he can check his work email and keep his wife happy. He thinks the idea of having it be a regulated utility is stupid and unnecessary as people don't need the internet. He's 63 years old. I doubt he's the only person that thinks like this.
Re:Some folks might not even care (Score:4, Insightful)
Tell him to stop using it for a month and see what life is like when his work is pissed and his wife isn't happy.
Its not "necessary" in the same way that electricity isn't "necessary," but that's only relevant if you want to live like its 1800 again.
Cars and medicine and flushing toilets aren't "necessary" either but nobody really wants to live like it was the dark ages again either.
The only thing that's strictly "necessary" is for a sufficient number of people to survive to breeding age and pass their genes on to the next generation -- and that's only if you think its necessary for the species as a whole to continue. Everything beyond that is comfort.
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My mom gets by just fine without the internet. Which means, she's always asking me to order stuff for her, or set up an email so she can get some discount. :p
25Mbps would awesome (Score:2)
Does the average household really need 25Mb/s? (Score:2)
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It's not arbitrary Netflix recommends at least 25Mb/s for Ultra HD.
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I am a geek and a somewhat heavy computer user/downloader (streaming video on YouTube and elsewhere, large file downloads etc etc etc) and even I dont need 25Mb/s to be happy.
The real problem in the US are people stuck with dialup (unusable on today's internet), wireless (slow as hell and very high latency), slow ADSL (ADSL2+ speeds are great if you can get them but many people in the US can only get 1.5Mbps ADSL1 if they are lucky) or slow shared bandwidth options (like cable where the cable companies put
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The vast majority of people "stuck" with dialup are "stuck" by choice - they have no desire/need for multi-megabit internet connections to the Internet and the high fees associated with the higher-speed connections. [cnn.com]
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Because too many Americans had connections faster than the previous 10 Mbit/sec figure... They needed to re-define the "minimum" to give the FCC an excuse to complain about US consumer's slow internet connections.
Some don't know how good they have it (Score:2)
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To which the reply would be COOL you had pterodactyls?! Or yeah yeah (crazy old man).
I ended up with a POTS simulator so I could run fax machines or connect computers together via modem for old times sake since I haven't had a home phone line in years.
Better Than Most (Score:2)
The slowest speeds listed in this report are far better than what HUGE swaths are of U.S. are relegated to: dial up.
Broadband rollout is so poor in the U.S., due mostly to corrupt relationships between providers and lawmakers, that most of the country's geography is not served by anything better than dialup or satellite, both of which are horrible.
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yes my brother in Florida lives in nice subdivision with house less than ten years old, but connects with juno dial-up for $14 a month. Compare that with my mother-in-law in Cambodia where in 1998 they were laying down fiber around her neighborhood, they went from dialup to megabits/sec overnight.
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yes my brother in Florida lives in nice subdivision with house less than ten years old, but connects with juno dial-up for $14 a month. Compare that with my mother-in-law in Cambodia where in 1998 they were laying down fiber around her neighborhood, they went from dialup to megabits/sec overnight.
Residential fiber in 1998? In Cambodia? I call bullshit. Here in Norway the first delivery of Internet over cable TV was 1998, ADSL in 2000, I see our first FTTH company was started in 2001 but that was in a very small area where they were rolling out lots of fiber for the oil industry anyway and was rare as unicorns and super expensive even for a first world country. It was only in the recovery after the dot-bust in the mid 2000s it saw any real traction.
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Did not mean to imply the fiber was going directly to the homes, but it was being laid for telco data distribution. I have pictures
Call me a graybeard (Score:2)
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Not me (Score:2)
Just got google fiber installed today woohoo!
Rural areas still only have dialup (Score:3)
Here in washington state, many rural areas only have dialup, because they don't have the money to run high speed microwave to the small towns. Some islands on the west coast have many retired millionaires, so they have high speed due to point to point microwave.
The small town my family is in, has a small point to point microwave, that Verzion and comcast rents off a small ISP, so they can bring in service. 80 homes have comcast, but only the town library has a 5meg wifi for the town. People drive up just to check mail. Verizon coverage is helpful, but gsm has no coverage.
They don't sell sat internet in Washington state due to over subscribing. Everyone waiting for the new viasat 2 to launch (already delayed) till Q1 2017, and viasat 3, so rural areas in the US can get high speed (but limited) internet.
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Here in washington state, many rural areas only have dialup, because they don't have the money to run high speed microwave to the small towns.
I live in the sticks and we had a local WISP that bounced the signal in from the next county from mountaintop to mountaintop, about two links. They got bought out and the large WISP I use now does it with four hops across mountaintops. Literally the only fiber into my county is owned by ATT and it is actually cheaper to buy access from a reseller, but then you have to deal with them and they are all shit at service. AT&T is, as always, the fucking problem. Ma Bell got the ill communication.
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#define rural.
I live in a small town in Illinois surrounded by corn and soybeans.... you can get a 150/10 internet connection here from the local cable company which they charge a premium price for. I currently have the 50/5 which is more like 55/10...it is fairly priced.
The situation here is such that one of the sat TV providers has a bundle that uses the cable company for Internet. Because while the cable company's internet/phone services are of reasonably good value...their TV services aren't so much.
5.8 million of those offering less than 3Mbps: So? (Score:4)
5.8 million of those offering less than 3Mbps
Is that surprising in a country of ~4 million square miles that ~2% of the population has to deal with 3Mbps? Sounds pretty darn reasonable to me.
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The _really_ poor value that most urbanites get on Internet access is a strong indicator that population density is a _tiny_ part of the Internet access quality problem in the US.
Poor value and access are different issues. The US may (does) have a problem with choice and value in most markets, but the fact that ~2% of the US populace either can't or doesn't want to pay for dual HD video streaming capability isn't a societal problem as far as I'm concerned (or a problem at all). Consumers will always want more for less, but no one is denied opportunity in life because they can't stream HD video.
If people in the US choose to live in rural areas ... that's it. It's a choice. You get th
So what (Score:2)
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Then why does internet access suck so badly in many large cities? Your argument doesn't hold water. Just look at Europe - larger than the US and still doing better. Clearly there is something more to it than just size or density...
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Finland's population density is less than that of the United States.
Why can't each of the several states, which is about the size of one European country, manage to deploy of high-speed Internet within that state?
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Finland's population density is less than that of the United States.
Why can't each of the several states, which is about the size of one European country, manage to deploy of high-speed Internet within that state?
They could easily if they just realized what is a free market and what is not. Infrastructure is almost always a shit choice to let a private operator both build and operate. Since it cannot be moved, and it is too expensive to build multiple copies of that infrastructure, you get maybe one or two providers per area. That's a monopoly.
Do like we do in Sweden instead. Let the government pay for the infrastructure, through a non-profit company that lays down optic fibers to all homes. Then let private ISP'
In other words... (Score:2)
I have faster options (Score:2)
I choose 6 Mbps because it's the cheapest plan and I don't care about high definition.
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>Crony Capitalism for ya!
Where's Trump? He should be twittering about this at least.
do you follow who he's been appointing? he's the king of the cronies. Plutocracy to the max.
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So far, he's appointing people that seem to want to deregulate everything. So we'll end up with blisteringly fast internet for the 1% who can afford it, and everyone else will be as good as cut off as providers zero-rate their preferred services and blackball basically everything else with slow lanes and whatever other schemes they come up with.
I'm just hoping some of his appointments change their tune once they've seen what things are like from the other side. Trump himself surprised everyone so maybe a
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Infrastructure buildout is certainly a problem as well, but its not the one I'm referring to.
If Trump's acceptance speech is anything to go by (and given his propensity for blathering on about whatever crosses his mind that day, it may well not be,) he might actually do some good in the realm of infrastructure.. though I imagine he was probably thinking more of highways and bridges than fiber optics. We'll see though.
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$49 is reasonable for 25MB/s.
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Eh, pihole is faster.
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[Kernel-level DNS blocking uses] Less power/cpu/ram + IO use vs. DNS/routers [...] + less security issues/complexity.
Eh, pihole is faster.
You still need to provide power to that Raspberry Pi. And you didn't address "complexity", as you also need to build your Pi (or do they come in cases yet?), install Pi-Hole, configure Pi-Hole, and keep Pi-Hole updated.
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Odd that your upload speed is actually better than your download speed.
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I think you have a faulty understanding of how "tax breaks" work...
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Hosts files don't block inline spam, such as yours, which also wastes bandwidth.