With Minnesota repeal, number of states restricting public broadband falls to 16.
Yay!
We do not have municipal broadband here (we live outside city limits anyway), but we have the next best thing- a local ISP started up and promised to lay fiber in any neighborhood in the county where 40% of the residents agreed to sign up for their service. Everyone said, “fuck Spectrum” in our neighborhood and lots of other neighborhoods and signed up and now they’re doing great.
The part that pissed me off was that once they started putting the signs in our neighborhood offering this, Spectrum tripled the neighborhood’s broadband speed. Meaning they could have done that any time, but didn’t.
And now the locally-owned ISP is laying fiber down rural roads.
The part that pissed me off was that once they started putting the signs in our neighborhood offering this, Spectrum tripled the neighborhood’s broadband speed. Meaning they could have done that any time, but didn’t.
Spectrum did this when Frontier fiber came in. Spectrum 100Mbs at $80/month became 300Mbs at $80/month overnight. Frontier fiber was still faster and cheaper with 500Mbs for $50/month.
Yep, the local ISP is still faster and cheaper here too. Anyone outside that minimum 40% who decided to stay with Spectrum is an idiot, but I haven’t seen a single Spectrum van in the neighborhood since it happened, so I have a feeling it was closer to 100% than 40%.
One of the benefits to getting StarLink is that I never have to be a pawn in those kind of games anymore. Not that I recommend it for most people but if you’re mobile or living in the sticks it’s pretty great. I’ve hit 400Mb per second at times.
Yeah, Fuck Spectrum is right up there with ACAB and other popular creeds. But good on your ISP for being true to their word. It really is for the best anyway. Everybody wins; except Spectrum. Fuck Spectrum.
Good news, speaking of, moving from Spectrum to Frontier soon. Anyone care to comment on their services? Frontier is already looking faster on uploads, downloads and pricing. Concerned there’s a hidden negative lurking around the corner lol.
Ur fucked mate. Spectrum is god tier next to frontier. And spectrum is rotten dog shit. Sorry.
Well, shit… 💩
If it makes you feel any better I love your username
It does help a little bit lol.
FUUUUUUUUCK SPECTRUM. FUCK THEM SO MUCH. FUCK.
They wanted 26,000$ to extend the Cable line 1000feet, from the end of their line, from our neighbors house to ours. This was in a rural town in NY that was supposed to get 100% access to spectrum (only other option is phone line Frontier). The state gave them a ridiculous amount of money to do this, and nope can’t be bothered. It’s 2024 we still have the same phone line Internet there that we had in 1998…
If youre friendly with your neighbor, point to point wifi is cheap and very effective. You can share their interent if they are okay with it.
You buy 2 wifi antennas for $200, set one up at the point of origin and line it up with the other at the end point. Plug each end into a router and you’re all set.
You dont even need perfect line of sight, although it does help. Range is 5 miles, so 1000ft shouldn’t be a challenge. They are preconfigured, so basically just plug and play.
Edit : they have an even better set for $400 if you want 1.5x the speed above.
My mom is in a rural area, and her internet is basically just a wifi connection to a tower on a hill nearby.
Very common in rural areas. She is most likely a customer of a WISP, or a wireless ISP. They will often partner with a township to set up on a water tower or grain silo or some other high point, then have a fiber internet line brought to that tower.
From there, they will deploy pretty much this exact device for each client, sometimes piggy backing on client sites to extend their range.
5G cell service modems and starlink are making wisps less common, but they are still out there.
Here’s a great older article about a home grown WISP setup in the rural islands near Seattle. After years of terrible and unreliable internet service, the neighbors got together, paid for a microwave tower internet stream from the mainland, and rigged up relays and wireless access points in trees in order to get good, reliable internet to everyone involved. Most everything described here would be considerably easier today.