I sure hope so. Fiber internet really doesn't exist where I live, and it feels to me like it exists in about every other city (I know this isn't true, but that's how I think about it). And even then, it's probably stupid expensive—but I hope one day it'll be as affordable as regular cable internet is.
My impression is that it is spreading rapidly and will replace cable in the near future, at least in developed areas. Living in the Houston Texas suburbs, we just got asecond company running fiber though our neighborhood. In rural areas, it might take a long while.Do you think it will be everywhere like cable is mostly one day ?
Even in rural areas outside of my city, they're still on DSL. I just know because I know people who live out there. I mean I get decent download speeds with cable here at home (we have the 300 Mbps Comcast plan), but the upload is kinda bad.My impression is that it is spreading rapidly and will replace cable in the near future, at least in developed areas. Living in the Houston Texas suburbs, we just got asecond company running fiber though our neighborhood. In rural areas, it might take a long while.
I live in Massachusetts and we're not fully using fiber-optic. My town for instance doesn't have it, and I abut Boston. I think Boston is mostly but not completely wired with Fiber-optic as well. Go farther out to the western parts of my state and I think there's less and less.My impression is that it is spreading rapidly and will replace cable in the near future
With cable we had outages constantly, since switching to fiber (different company) we’ve had one (noticed) short outage in a year.I'm torn on this one based on what I see around Raleigh, NC... AT&T keeps having multi-day fiber outages around here. And it's always occurred to me: it takes a specialist to repair or splice damaged fiber. It's not nearly as difficult to repair damaged copper coaxial cable. Do I really trust these huge corporate monopolies to have enough fiber techs?
I can get Spectrum cable or AT&T Fiber in my neighborhood. They just ran the fiber thru here last year. But I'm sticking with Spectrum for now based on everything I hear about AT&T Fiber (it's great IF it works). My Spectrum service is speedy enough and reliable. If it ain't broke...
Anyway, to answer the question: I'm sure fiber will become more ubiquitous long-term, but if it's all owned by various regional monopolies, I'm not sure it's gonna be all that great.
The key is competition. We currently have a cable company or three and two fiber internet companies in our neighborhood. This is what is needed instead of territorial monopolies.I'm torn on this one based on what I see around Raleigh, NC... AT&T keeps having multi-day fiber outages around here. And it's always occurred to me: it takes a specialist to repair or splice damaged fiber. It's not nearly as difficult to repair damaged copper coaxial cable. Do I really trust these huge corporate monopolies to have enough fiber techs?
I can get Spectrum cable or AT&T Fiber in my neighborhood. They just ran the fiber thru here last year. But I'm sticking with Spectrum for now based on everything I hear about AT&T Fiber (it's great IF it works). My Spectrum service is speedy enough and reliable. If it ain't broke...
Anyway, to answer the question: I'm sure fiber will become more ubiquitous long-term, but if it's all owned by various regional monopolies, I'm not sure it's gonna be all that great.
Interestingly enough, in NZ we do have territorial monopolies. But ~15 years ago the government made a pot of money available and the rules were something like this:The key is competition. We currently have a cable company or 2 and 2 fiber internet companies in our neighborhood. This is what is needed instead of territorial monopolies.
Many municipalities have signed an exclusive contact with cable provider, say Comcast. There's no incentive for Comcast to upgrade its infrastructure. Broadband cost and stability is not great in my town, but what am I going to do? Go with Fios? Nope, because my town signed an exclusive contract. The surrounding towns have Fios but not us.The key is competition.
Interestingly enough, in NZ we do have territorial monopolies. But ~15 years ago the government made a pot of money available and the rules were something like this:
1. You must use this money to roll out fibre.
2. You must only provide the network, with no services on top of it.
3. You must sell access to that network at the same price regardless of customer (ISP).
This resulted in the biggest traditional phone company breaking itself in two and splitting into a fibre company and an ISP. The two companies are now completely separate.
I've had it for a few years now, I am very happy with it. Switzerland is not high though.
Percentage of fibre connections in total fixed broadband
Speaking of competition, usually you don’t heat me talking up Texas, there are many issues here, including the politics…Many municipalities have signed an exclusive contact with cable provider, say Comcast. There's no incentive for Comcast to upgrade its infrastructure. Broadband cost and stability is not great in my town, but what am I going to do? Go with Fios? Nope, because my town signed an exclusive contract. The surrounding towns have Fios but not us.
The only thing that we have going for us, is the ability to use 5G from T-Mobile or Verizon wireless. Oddly enough, Comcast rebranded their broadband as "10G" Funny how that works as people are leaving them for 5G they just doubled the number, LOL
My impression is that with a territorial monopoly, you have to rely on competant customer friendly regulation.Interestingly enough, in NZ we do have territorial monopolies. But ~15 years ago the government made a pot of money available and the rules were something like this:
1. You must use this money to roll out fibre.
2. You must only provide the network, with no services on top of it.
3. You must sell access to that network at the same price regardless of customer (ISP).
This resulted in the biggest traditional phone company breaking itself in two and splitting into a fibre company and an ISP. The two companies are now completely separate.
Agreed. I realize my Spectrum experience is a matter of pure luck vs. them actually being a good provider. If I could switch to a smaller competitor that actually cared about customer service, I'd do it in a heartbeat. Instead I'm just choosing the smaller dumpster fire...The key is competition. We currently have a cable company or three and two fiber internet companies in our neighborhood. This is what is needed instead of territorial monopolies.
Sheltered little me assumed that was normal everywhere!But although the electrical grid has been critiqued as not being able to hack it in electrical supply straining weather, one thing I really like is that residents have the choice of choosing service through multiple electrical companies.
My understanding this is not the normal situation in the States. Sometime in the past, Texas resisted joining the national grid because they did not want the Feds meddling in their affairs? 🤔Sheltered little me assumed that was normal everywhere!
That was it and then there was a big crash IIRC.My understanding this is not the normal situation in the States. Sometime in the past, Texas resisted joining the national grid because they did not want the Feds meddling in their affairs? 🤔
I really like is that residents have the choice of choosing service through multiple electrical companies.
I guess the difference is accepting what is offered from a single supplier, versus some variability based on multiple companies. I agree that there might not as much competition as consumers might want.I feel that prices have gone up dramatically since power and gas was deregulated. If you were a restraunt or large building, you could get good contracts for electric and gas supply but its as expensive or more expensive for the every day household. And because the transport side isn't getting profit on the supply side, they have to raise pricing so its a net increase for most people.