  neowulf
join:2000-10-20 Port Orange, FL
| reply to pnh102 Re: Bah
quote: This alone proves that broadband will do very little if not anything to increase employment. Over the course of the past 10 years it would be impossible to argue against the fact that broadband deployments have expanded significantly in North Carolina as well as in every other state. Simply put, more people can get broadband in 2009 than in 1999. However, unemployment has risen and fallen independent of broadband deployments.
While I can not really agree with that assessment based on broadband does give people new opportunities a connection with the outside world, new ideas, new information.
I have a farm in rural West Virginia, guess didn't have to add rural to West Virginia... Where I was planning on building cabins for vacation rentals. Having a high speed connection out there would help my business access to the outside world, best way to advertise something like that, lots of pictures and media. I would also be able to offer a connection to vacationers as there is not even cell service out there.
A lot of farmers live around me there, I would say it is a 50/50 split on them wanting broadband out there. The ones who don't are the old timers, people who have been living there, never left the county in the 70+ years they have been there and don't even have phone service or electric. Then there is the other half, who get whatever service they can, sadly that means dial-up or satellite.
There is DSL service one town away about 7miles. Which even surprised me, and after talking to one of the guys in town after he got DSL, he said "I never thought about broadband before, but now that I have it I wouldn't be able to live without it"
I think a lot of people who use dial-up in those studies that say they would never use broadband. Have never even been able to use broadband or don't understand what broadband even is. I bet as soon as they had a chance to use it they would want it.
I just do not get why people fight against rural broadband, and every time there is talk about rural broadband there is this fight of it is just a waste of time and money. While people in the city cry that they don't have 50Mbit service where they live, while there is still plenty in this country stuck with 56k.
I am just lucky enough that I live in the city 10 months out of the year, and only stuck without broadband for 2 months. I just don't know how those people stuck out in the rural areas with dial-up wanting broad band do it. |