"At Verizon, we don't wait for the future, we build it,"
As long as someone pays us to up front.
What arrant bu***hit.
Is anyone thinking the big difference is competition versus no competition?
Something to keep in mind, perhaps?
The US state of New York has unveiled a massive new project to provide broadband for virtually all of its residents. Governor Andrew Cuomo said this week the project, known as New NY Broadband Round III, will enlist 43 telcos that will set up satellite broadband coverage in the most remote parts of the state. Said telcos will …
Of course not. No promises before getting the money. Then there will be excuses and "unforeseen complications". The fact is simply that Verizon is coming aboard because the competition is getting a slice of new pie and Verizon cannot let than happen without moving in.
The fact that there's pork at hand might not even be the major factor in Verizon's sudden new interest, although it certainly sweetens the deal.
> I presume there aren't any areas of NY state without cell service?
Plenty of areas lack cell service, the Catskills and Adirondacks especially. Makes hiking potentially dangerous. I always sign the trail register because even at the trailhead, there is often no cell service.
Even at a 100:1 contention ratio they're going to need about 4Gbps of data capacity. How much satellite transponder bandwidth does that correspond to? And how much spare satellite capacity is currently available?
(I presume this is geostationary, i.e. they're not deploying moving dishes which track LEO satellites)
At Canadian prices "$1,709 per building" would be paid for in a year or two, but I suspect Americans tend to pay much less for Internet than Canadians. Makes me wonder what a fiber roll out would cost. Does New York state not have a fiber backbone that runs north to south? If it does you tap that to run to COs in these smaller areas and then maybe run fiber to the cabinet where DSL lengths start to get long.
There are only two options for satellite internet in the US. Hughesnet and Excede. Unless these other ISPs intend to recreate all the space and ground infrastructure, they will be reselling services from one of those two.
Given the number of subscribers involved, I expect it will overload the Ka spot beam for that area on the HTS birds used by each provider.