Scott i had once a issue just like you with one of my old customers, he had to hire a lawyer to keep his dish he won, next year he died of a heart attack maybe caused by the stress
I don’t have to fight. It’s dead.
Scott i had once a issue just like you with one of my old customers, he had to hire a lawyer to keep his dish he won, next year he died of a heart attack maybe caused by the stress
I have 4.0Mbps/512Kpbs DSL from CenturyLink, I also have HughesNet Gen 5 and an AT&T Wireless hotspot to supplement that.Lone Gunman and bobvick: What sort of Internet do you have out in the boonies?
Lone...If I ever come to your house for a visit... I'll watch where I step.
Don't hold your breath. Something else may come along like it did for me. Back around the turn of the century I was told that DSL was pretty close. Even today the best they offer my address is 512k. Comcast fibered my neighborhood fully 10 years before Centurylink managed to install their copper-based multiplexer and I still get two Centurylink flyers per month promising "up to" 20Mb.Next year they are supposed to be going up the State highway that is about 2 miles from me with fiber, so hopefully it won't be but a couple of years until they extend out the county roads off of that main highway.
Don't hold your breath. Something else may come along like it did for me. Back around the turn of the century I was told that DSL was pretty close. Even today the best they offer my address is 512k. Comcast fibered my neighborhood fully 10 years before Centurylink managed to install their copper-based multiplexer and I still get two Centurylink flyers per month promising "up to" 20Mb.
I used my situation as an example where the apparent incumbent didn't pull off what they had said they were going to do. Electrical coops aren't really much better situated to expand their services than the telcos as niether has a lot of buried fiber. The RUS money is available to whomever steps up.CenturyLink is not doing this. It is the rural electric cooperative that serves our area.
I used my situation as an example where the apparent incumbent didn't pull off what they had said they were going to do. Electrical coops aren't really much better situated to expand their services than the telcos as niether has a lot of buried fiber. The RUS money is available to whomever steps up.
When the number of customers added per kilometer of fiber added declines to a low enough point, interest wanes.
In my area, various mom and pop cable operations made lots of promises but in more than a few cases, microwave providers came in and sniped many of the potential customers. Wi-max was supposed to do that but it never really materialized on the projected scale.
Finally, there was a fairly large push to install Verizon FIOS service for a while but when they lost interest in many areas (and sold them to Frontier), it seems to have trailed off considerably as a "most wished for" provider.
Fiber rocks
Hopefully they rock it out and get you guys going. 512K DSL is not usable and you deserve better.