wardmundy
Nerd Uno
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2007
- Messages
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T-Mobile’s 5G home internet service has become a reality
The $60-per-month service is finally ready for primetime.
Yes, but are there cell towers in range of all that big sky? LOLBut here , literally, the sky's the limit. They both have more of it ;-)
I agree. I have wanted to love T-Mobile for a long time and did when I lived in Atlanta but they are not putting money into lighting up rural America. While there's no money in low density areas for cell service, they could be a big provider of broadband if they would simply expand into these areas. If Verizon had not ventured into a lot of these areas, many people would be without any cell service or even vaguely affordable broadband.At least it's a viable alternative in some places to the absurdity that is the cableco / telco virtual monopoly in some places.
The modem doesn’t assign a public IPv4 address, so the modem doesn’t allow basic features like port forwarding or even bridge mode to use your own router without double NATing.
People have this misconception about what a monopoly is with telecom. Considering that telecom started as a regional/territorial thing. For example, in Lordsburg NM there is one telco the Lordsburg county one. No ATT, no Verizon, no one else. Just some little telco that was setup back in the day to cover that area of NM.At least it's a viable alternative in some places to the absurdity that is the cableco / telco virtual monopoly in some places.
People have this misconception about what a monopoly is with telecom. Considering that telecom started as a regional/territorial thing. For example, in Lordsburg NM there is one telco the Lordsburg county one. No ATT, no Verizon, no one else. Just some little telco that was setup back in the day to cover that area of NM.
So thanks to the CLEC rulings over 30 years ago I can go in and they *must let me use their infrastructure*. Now really the only thing stopping me is actual business sense because I'll need to pay for all that and well, in the end it just isn't worth it.
Being the only option in an area doesn't make you a monopoly when the competition has decided your area isn't worth stepping into to compete it.
True, Canada is a different beast when it comes to that. I was just speaking from the US aspect.I consider telco/cableco defacto monopolies in the US since in many locations I frequent (and I frequent many) you only have a viable broadband internet option from one or the other. ADSL is no longer viable IMO.
It is not entirely dissimilar in Canada, though in most areas you have at least VDSL (and sometimes FTTH) vs Cable and a regulatory environment forcing last mile access permissions (albeit with a lot of arguing about what a fair price is); in this way we're somewhat advantaged based on my perspective of both sides.
Love my FTTH.I consider telco/cableco defacto monopolies in the US since in many locations I frequent (and I frequent many) you only have a viable broadband internet option from one or the other. ADSL is no longer viable IMO.
It is not entirely dissimilar in Canada, though in most areas you have at least VDSL (and sometimes FTTH) vs Cable and a regulatory environment forcing last mile access permissions (albeit with a lot of arguing about what a fair price is); in this way we're somewhat advantaged based on my perspective of both sides.
Love my FTTH.Speaking of the last mile, or is that kilometer? CRTC may force the access permissions, but they don't allow access to the FTTH infrastructure, so I pay out the wazoo for 500/500 access as it's only offered by Bell Canada here in the Central East side (Telus in the West). But it's rock solid at least.
Which takes away the incentive for the providers to lay their own fibre. The first one into an area carries all the cost of the rollout and then is forced to lease capacity to a competitor.They'll eventually force FTTH access, they're arguing about it in court as usual AFAIK.
Which takes away the incentive for the providers to lay their own fibre. The first one into an area carries all the cost of the rollout and then is forced to lease capacity to a competitor.
In Australia the owner of the infrastructure (NBN Co) is only a wholesaler of bandwith so all retailers are on the same footing.
Don't get me stated on the NBN rollout... If the original plan (almost totally FTTH) had been implemented we'd be in a much better position for about the same cost. The change to FTTN has not reduced the cost and we're left with last mile as copper, most of which hasn't been maintained in the 25 years since I took redundancy from Telstra.I think Australia probably had it right other than the incredible cost overruns and difficulties with the NBN rollout.
@dicko if you are referring to Australia, that $50 doesn't buy much. Small data allowance... most of it off peak, 1am-7am. Both downloads and uploads count in data allowance. I don't know anyone using satellite here (I live in the city) but anecdotally there are a lot of complaints about speed (or lack thereof) and latency.But I see you can get satellite connections for less than $50/month. Last 22000 miles?
Reminds me of the CompuServe days. Peak hours it was $12 an hour ($6 off peak), and if there was no local access number, you would have to use Telenet or Tymnet for an additional $3 an hour, or use overpriced long distance. Back when minimum wage was around $3 an hour.@dicko if you are referring to Australia, that $50 doesn't buy much. Small data allowance... most of it off peak, 1am-7am. Both downloads and uploads count in data allowance. I don't know anyone using satellite here (I live in the city) but anecdotally there are a lot of complaints about speed (or lack thereof) and latency.
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