We’ve already ran power and phone lines damn-near everywhere, it’s not that much harder to run fiber.
No, it can’t be done overnight, but this is something the government has thrown billions at telecom companies in various way for them to do starting decades ago. We should just about be at the point by now where everyone who wants fiber has it if the telecoms had done what they were supposed to do.
It’s not the first time we’ve had this kind of infrastructure rollout either. In the mid 30s, 9/10 rural areas had no electrical service, by 1953 that had flipped and more than 90% of rural areas were electrified, so about 20 years give or take to build out electrical infrastructure almost from scratch.
Now yes, there’s more people, more homes, etc filling up all of that empty space, but like I said, a lot of the necessary infrastructure is already in place, and we’ve come a long way technologically since the 50s, I’m sure the linemen and laborers setting up the grid almost 100 years ago would’ve killed to have a modern bucket truck and digger derrick at their disposal.
There’s a whole lot of issues you can use the “the us is a big country” for, but it doesn’t hold water on this one for me.
I think you all massively underestimate how much is required to run fibre out to everyone. It’s not impossible, but USA is a very big country by area.
We’ve already ran power and phone lines damn-near everywhere, it’s not that much harder to run fiber.
No, it can’t be done overnight, but this is something the government has thrown billions at telecom companies in various way for them to do starting decades ago. We should just about be at the point by now where everyone who wants fiber has it if the telecoms had done what they were supposed to do.
It’s not the first time we’ve had this kind of infrastructure rollout either. In the mid 30s, 9/10 rural areas had no electrical service, by 1953 that had flipped and more than 90% of rural areas were electrified, so about 20 years give or take to build out electrical infrastructure almost from scratch.
Now yes, there’s more people, more homes, etc filling up all of that empty space, but like I said, a lot of the necessary infrastructure is already in place, and we’ve come a long way technologically since the 50s, I’m sure the linemen and laborers setting up the grid almost 100 years ago would’ve killed to have a modern bucket truck and digger derrick at their disposal.
There’s a whole lot of issues you can use the “the us is a big country” for, but it doesn’t hold water on this one for me.