There are solutions coming.  We have used NS2M’s with window mounts inside 
houses.  Mimosa has the C5i coming out, etc… Of course, if the FCC would 
actually cooperate and cared about the 50% of the population that can’t afford 
internet (and still growing) by giving us some sub 1GHz bandwidth to work with 
and take away all the excessive regulations, there might be more options.  The 
Chromebooks are definitely going to drive some of this.  It got us off the 
table.

Rory


From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Eric Kuhnke
Sent: Monday, November 9, 2015 9:26 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Unsurprising news: Rural Mississippi broadband sucks

Until somebody cuts launch costs ($ per kg to a 450 x 450km orbit) to 1/10th of 
its current price, satellite will always be the worst option unless you're in a 
truly remote place. For example a mountainous region of Idaho in a town with 
population 70 people.
o3b is a step in the right direction, and has been revolutionary for some 
pacific island nation states.
I think I've said this before: You can aggregate all of the transponder 
capacity of ALL the C and Ku-band transponders on a single large (6000 
kilogram) geostationary telecom satellite, and even if you're generous by 
assuming that everything operates at very tight 16QAM or 32APSK modulations 
with huge dishes on the ground, the total throughput of that satellite is less 
than you can push through two strands of fiber with a few thousand dollars of 
DWDM gear on each end, and some $150 SFP+ modules.

On Mon, Nov 9, 2015 at 8:06 AM, Ken Hohhof 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I’m waiting for the geniuses at Google Fiber to show us dummies how to solve 
that one.

You could say advertising supported or walled garden services like Facebook is 
promoting in the third world might be the answer, but with those trees, drones 
and balloons might not be a solution, even satellite might be tough.  And if 
people can’t afford or don’t want a computer, connectivity is not the only 
obstacle.  Schools sending kids home with Chromebooks might break through that.


From: Eric Kuhnke<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, November 09, 2015 4:12 AM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [AFMUG] Unsurprising news: Rural Mississippi broadband sucks

http://www.wired.com/2015/11/the-land-that-the-internet-forgot/

yeah you're not going to get a lot of subscribers in a county where 90% of the 
children qualify for free school lunches...   no matter what the population is, 
hard finding a sufficient number of people to pay $50/mo.

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