When we moved to this house 33 years ago, there was no cable (still
isn't available), and wired POTS was it. About 12 wire miles from the
CO, so 56K was just a dream. Maybe 15 years ago, I was approached by
the local telco because they wanted to replaced deteriorating buried
copper with fiber and needed some land for a terminal.
I sold them about 300 sq. ft. that I didn't even know that I owned.
They poured a concrete pad and set up some boxes on it. Initially,
connection was 5 Mbps; a few years ago, I was offered 20 for a lifetime
rate of USD$40/month. It was gradually bumped up to about 55 Mbps. It
works for me--if I wanted to pay more, I could get 100. This is a rural
area. If I go a half-mile up the road, the people there are still 12-13
wire miles from the CO with no broadband at all.
If that weren't enough, cell coverage there is maybe a bar-and-a-half of
2G. Some use satellite, but during windy or wet weather, I understand
that their speed falls to nearly worthless. Lots of big evergreen
(Doug-fir and Ponderosa pine) trees here to lay waste to comms.
A utility from a county south of here has been stringing fiber along the
road, which has promise--but no estimates of when connectivity will be
available.
People evidently don't recall the bad old days of POTS where calls
outside of your calling area was billed as long-distance and reception
was noisy and slow. Back then, a leased line connected to a 208 modem
would run you about 5 kilobucks/month for 4800 bps, sync.
--Chuck