First, I need to preference this is that I’m answering this in terms of the US and the
issues are different elsewhere.
I’ve followed this issue over the years and there is a lot of mythology. The problem is
the US is primarily political and economic. If the communities own their wires they could
easily light up the copper to many megabits or gigabits per second. Unlike cities it is
far easier to add wired and wireless capacity. The real costs are actually very low.
What is expensive is taking a 1950’s type approach to use the facilities.
The other twist in the US is the cockamamie idea that the distribution system has to be a
profit center like railroad tracks rather than infrastructure like roads.
The other twist is that the 20 years of interesting using power lines goes back to the
power companies thinking there is money in “Internet” so they want to use their wires
which just happen to be copper – the same mineral that is used Ethernet thus they can make
big bucks selling Internet alongside electricity. But if you read their whole pitch it
becomes obvious that they are institutionally the worst choice. They make the phone and
cable companies look agile.
So we get back to the simple idea of communities owning their facilities. If they have
access to the poles and existing copper and the ability to invest in their own gear and
take Internet native (
http://rmf.vc/InternetNativePolicies) instead of use telecom pricing
and policies the limitations would disappear rather quickly.
From: dc3-bounces(a)listas.altermundi.net [mailto:dc3-bounces@listas.altermundi.net] On
Behalf Of Michael Oghia
Sent: Friday, February 24, 2017 07:08
To: DC on Community Connectivity (DC3) <dc3(a)listas.altermundi.net>
Subject: [DC3] Collaborating with local power companies
Hi everyone,
I just read this Interesting article:
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/08/technology/how-to-give-rural-america-bro…
I know the idea of providing Internet via power lines is more or less a defunct idea (not
due to technological constraints, but the lack of political will to invest in it to
protect existing revenues). However, has anyone on this list ever thought about working
with electricity companies, especially local power companies?
Best,
-Michael