Linked by Howard Fosdick on Thu 24th Jan 2013 10:12 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 550377
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RE: While much of it is true
by Casey99 on Thu 24th Jan 2013 17:59
in reply to "While much of it is true"
RE: While much of it is true
by zima on Thu 31st Jan 2013 23:45
in reply to "While much of it is true"
places like Northern New Hampshire, Western Maine or the Dakota's where 33.6 dialup is a good day; you'd think the population density in such places was below 20 people per square mile or something.
What, you thought the places with the highest speed landlines corresponding to the highest population densities was a coincidence?
What, you thought the places with the highest speed landlines corresponding to the highest population densities was a coincidence?
Low-density areas hardly influence the statistics ...they have not that many households in the first place.
BTW, most of Nordic countries have overall population density close to that 20 per square mile. They also tend to have nice internet access offers.
Edited 2013-01-31 23:50 UTC




Member since:
2005-07-12
It really is a matter of finance -- in particular that NOBODY in this economy is planning a long term outlay for new infrastructure given the high initial investment. Copper costs money, fiber costs money, and NOBODY is going to pony up the front money to run the new lines needed to handle it when there's an existing infrastructure they can charge more for -- and that to be frank isn't even paid off yet in many places!
That's why so much effort went into re-using the existing copper in the first place! Sure in a handful of crowded cities you might maybe see FiOS -- but don't count on seeing it in places like Northern New Hampshire, Western Maine or the Dakota's where 33.6 dialup is a good day; you'd think the population density in such places was below 20 people per square mile or something.
What, you thought the places with the highest speed landlines corresponding to the highest population densities was a coincidence?