voomworker1 said:
I say your wrong because Verizon FTTP has more bandwidth than both cable and satellite. The FTTP rollouts cost money (about 1 to 1.5 grand per customer) which includes customers getting fiber to their house itself while using existing phone lines inside the house and using existing coax cables in the house for TV service. Unlike cable Verizon will not have every channel they offer going down the same cable. Verizon will be using a form of IPTV and QAM mix so that channels will be broadcast using QAM over their network but it would also use IPTV in that only one channel would be sent over the cable at a time and that is the channel that is tuned. Because only one channel will be piped down per room versus hundreds that means that Verizon can offer every channel available anywhere as long as they have enough encoders and satellites to receive the content. Now last time I checked its much harder to increase bandwidth than it is to get more encoders. They as in Verizon also don't have to over compress everything to add more channels because they still will only use the same amount of bandwidth per room no matter how many channels they offer.
How can you have more bandwidth than satellite? Fiber has a lot of bandwidth but a piece of copper has a limited amount bandwidth, no matter what you do it has its limits. There is nothing you can do, why do you think all they use Fiber now? Satellite is the way to go, everything will be wireless. Using a "cable" has its limits, thats all i'm saying.