Given how essential Internet is to life these days (and how much money they
spend on Internet related services and devices), people are amazingly
ignorant about it.

 

I'm also amazed how ineffective a Google search is for finding an Internet
provider.  You'd think after all the money the govt puts into the National
Broadband Map they would call somebody at Google and get them to link into
it, maybe add some of their AI super sauce.  If they think people are going
to broadbandmap.fcc.gov, they're kidding themselves.

 

From: AF <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Trey Scarborough
Sent: Monday, August 25, 2025 1:05 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] rural areas and fiber

 

We  are seeing the opposite people from the urban areas are moving farther
and farther out. They mostly aren't keeping the 40+ year old houses just
buying the land and building new ones. Then someone from out of state buys a
house moves in with the plan of working from home and is dumbfounded that
they can't git gigabit+ internet for $30 a month. 

On 8/23/25 11:13 AM, Ken Hohhof wrote:

In some areas we serve where houses are a mile apart and the nearest town
with a Walmart is 15 miles away, people tell me that when a homeowner dies
(many are in their 70's and 80's), they won't even list the house because
nobody wants to live in the middle of nowhere.  It will be abandoned, or
torn down to and turned back into farmland.  We no longer have small family
farms with the farm family living in a house on the land, because you need
to farm so many acres to make a profit.  If a farmhouse is near a town, it
may become a rental house, but not when it's 10 miles from the nearest town
or school.

 

But I expect some company will be awarded $15K+ each to pass these houses
with fiber.  If it takes 4 years to complete, the house might not even be
occupied by then, and in any case, the 80 year old occupant probably doesn't
care if they have gigabit Internet.

 

So will fiber make these houses suddenly desirable, and work from home
people will move there from the cities, towns and suburbs?  Reviving these
rural areas where the younger generation has moved away?  I guess that's the
vision, I'm not sure I buy it.  Well and septic and propane, quarter mile
driveway to plow in winter, but blazing fast Internet, and you can have
horses and chickens.

 

Will they start building subdivisions out there once fiber is available?
I'm not buying it.  Am I wrong?





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