Comment 23B8B Re: Lots of cities

Story

Communities taking back their broadband destiny from big telecoms

Preview

Lots of cities (Score: 2, Insightful)

by fishybell@pipedot.org on 2016-11-25 17:59 (#22YQ2)

Lots of cities go down this path to offer their own broadband. My hometown even provided basic cable access. They f'ed that up pretty badly, losing millions of taxpayer dollars in the process.

Years later they decided to try again with fiber. Once again, they f'ed that up pretty badly, losing millions of taxpayer dollars in the process.

They eventually gave up and handed the whole thing over to Google. That went fairly well. Comcast (cable) and CenturyLink (dsl) both started offering higher speeds for less. Everyone won.

Merely offering an alternative isn't any good. Offering an alternative that is at least as good, and preferably better, is required to actually cause the existing powers that be to compete.

Re: Lots of cities (Score: 1, Funny)

by Anonymous Coward on 2016-11-26 15:31 (#231G7)

Could be worse.
You could be getting NBN.

Re: Lots of cities (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2016-11-27 04:34 (#2337R)

Or New Zealand's gigabit Gigatown, where you order it and get DSL speeds because the sales guy on the phone doesn't know they offer gigabit, and argues with you that they don't sell it.

Re: Lots of cities (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2016-11-27 13:39 (#2347F)

Order via a web page? Select the speed?

Re: Lots of cities (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2016-11-28 03:55 (#236B7)

I was already hooked up, but the speed was slow than I had ordered. Really, the problem was that they kept arguing without actually trying to find out what was going on.

Re: Lots of cities (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2016-11-29 11:15 (#23B8B)

Usual Telco crap. This is why people avoid Telstra.

Junk Status

Marked as [Not Junk] by bryan@pipedot.org on 2017-06-12 21:27