Good article — check my blog at http://www.fiberroad.blogsp... for my response to the NY Times article. Also, check my website, select first item--21st Century Broadband, to view a PP outline of a proposed new infrastructure management policy that would reduce costs for fiber-to-the-premeise by 70% if deployed in nationally mandated conduits in public right of way. The costs for FTTP in conduit: $10,000/rural mile, $30,000 per/urban mile.
http://www.teledimensionspu...
Harold, some of your arguments are reasonable. But given that your assessment still dodges the big one — take rates which is the core problem. It does not matter that there is 50% who WOULD want it, even as Mr. Stull suggests at $10k per mile. It cannot make economic sense to spend $60-100k for a maximum take rate of 22 people of which you will only get half of them. When you get out to places like rural Iowa, Nebraska, and Wyoming that is what is reality. That becomes a telecom equivalent of a 'Bridge to Nowhere'. Those logistical situations are best solved with wireless, not fiber.
My second observation is pricing. Sadly telecom costs per household should be going down as a retrospective of the total cost of plant decreases over time. But it is not. That is, in areas currently served by the incumbents in dense take rates. So how do you manage the cost for a rural installation? Short of direct subsidy you can't. The price will be prohibitive as cable. The higher the cost, the lower the take rate, the higher the cost becomes yet again.
I would recommend a different approach. Bust up the Verizon-AT&T monopoly. Immediately halt any effort by AT&T buy up displaced AllTel properties. Get some competition back in the telecom space. No it won't solve all the problems either. But as it stands right now Verizon is positioned to be the largest recipient of any telecom stimulus package hand outs. They are more than happy to sit on their haunches and rake in the Cargo Cult manna from heaven.
One other comment if I may. Lest someone think I am a fiber/cable hater, I am not. But at the cost structures that the legacy providers are billing I am.
Case in point is Lafayette, LA. Not exactly a back water city. But its not LA or NYC either. Yet they have a municipal fiber system — <a href="http://www.fiberforthefutur...">lusFiber.</a> Anybody in the city can fiber service. Ready for the shocker? $29/month for 10mb/10mb, $58 for 50mb/50mb. Siting here in Dallas I am charged $48/mo for .768mb/15mb. Rumor is TWC is getting ready to institute caps here as well. Something wrong with this picture.
Done right a community with the right engagement can do it correctly. Lafayette proves that. But what you are proposing won't get done right with the likes of Conyers shilling for the RIAA/MPAA and second level people at DOJ coming from the BSA and RIAA. <a href="http://gizmodo.com/5146966/...">link.</a>
JohnMc:
We agree on a lot here. I don't imagine this solves every problem or suddenly makes fiber everywhere profitable. You are quite right that deployment will depend on economics, and I agree completely that in areas of low density it will most likely be wireless, not fiber, that does the trick. We need a good mix of technologies that provide service. The stimulus package does try to push both wireless and wireline.
As for whether it will be “done right,” that depends on whether we as the interested people step up to the plate. Don't get me wrong — we will see plenty of waste and we will see lots of undeserving projects get money. The question is not whether the system proposed by the stimulus bill can prevent all bad results. The question is whether it is structured in the way that makes the most sense to maximize the chance of delivering good results. Here, I think the answer is yes. The grant programs have significant guidance to the grant administrators and have significant transparency mechanisms so that grant applicants know they are being watched.
Not everywhere will be Lafayette, or North Lawndale, or Wireless Harlem. But they won't all be boondoggles either. And I see a lot more Lafayettes coming out of the proposed stimulus than boondoggles — more than enough to justify the program.
Ooops. We both might be wrong, Harold.
“The compromise Senate economic stimulus bill reduces funding for broadband grants from $9 billion to $7 billion while retaining tax breaks for high-speed Internet deployment in underserved areas,...” — RCR.
Only $3.6bn for rural. That's pretty thin, even by my standards.
Well, it's a minimum of $3.6bn for rural. It's not like the rest is earmarked explicitly for urban. And we need to see which version ultimately gets adopted, the Senate or the House.
Still, it is much better than a poke in the eye with a pointy stick. Even $3.6bn for rural broadband would do a powerful amount of good — especially if invested in wireless technologies (which, like you, I think are the more logical choice for rural).
For the love of heaven, would people stop claiming my comments in the NY Times are against the broadband investment!! I had a 30-minute interview in which I laid out a strong case for why this investment should create jobs.
The sentences that were printed in the story were part of my criticism of Congress people putting stipulations and conditions into the bill that prevent the $9 billion from helping communities. Basically, they're crippling good legislation because they don't understand the needs of the people Congress says they're trying to help. But because of how my words were presented, I sound like a critic, when in fact I've spent 3 years advocating mightily for broadband in all communities.
If you want to understand where I stand on this issue, as well as read some strong testimonials to the value of these investments, go here - http://tinyurl.com/dlr6yg. Or read my reports and books - http://www.successful.com/m... Just don't misstate my position and certainly do not even insinuate that I take money from opponents of community broadband.
Craig:
Thank you for engaging on this. I have now edited this piece and posted a separate apology.
Hmm. Craig's links are broken, and it's only been 8 days. Why do you suppose that is? Peculiar.
Harold:
Wireless is not always the solution for rural areas either. Mountainous areas are not helped by wireless. My parents' summer place is way up a hill on a small road. They had an antenna that worked OK, but most people in their area went for satellite, particularly the year-round residents.
The telephone company, which had cable in town, down in the valley, offered to run cable up the small roads for $1k/household, if everyone paid. That didn't work - it didn't happen. They did finally put up cable for free, some years later, and then charge an arm and a leg. And you can get cable modem on it. But they still don't have cell service on the mountain, and never will - the houses are too far apart, and the terrain gets in the way. You can get cell service in town, if you're on certain providers. Verizon works, T-Mobile doesn't.
The city of Oneonta, NY, had cable in the 1970s and probably before. They had a city antenna on top of a nearby mountain, with cable to customers' homes. Look at it with Google Terrain, you'll see why it was necessary.
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I think this is a reasoned and balanced explanation of the current situation. The focus now should turn to making the program work as well - or better, and certainly faster - than the DOC TOP program did. By the way the TOP demonstration projects related to innovation in telecom ought to be made available to all of the public and private interests promoting local broadband networks and operations. This article is well worth reading, thinking about and discussing.