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![]() "mike" wrote in message ... It's appeal is mostly for high graphics content websites (porn) and newsgroup binaries (porn, Software, MP3's) which BTW have all largely fueled the growth of the Internet. This is not to say broadband is its own right is a bad thing. In some areas such as Vermont, local calls are expensive. Here broadband widely apeals because it costs the same as dialup when you add in local call charges to link to the ISP. mike Yeah, right now, it seems broadband doesn't become really attractive until it gets price competitive with dial-up. The "Broadband Nirvana" comment reminded me of a silly article I read which claimed the high tech recession was due to old fashioned regulation holding back broadband access. Maybe regulation was holding back the manufacturers and suppliers in the broadband industry, but, as I remember, he also implied that the US economy really needed broadband somehow. He wasn't specific as to how. It just did. The FCC commissioners are taking that tone, as well. Broadband must be ten times better than dial-up because -- well, just because. And the commissioners won't be caught roadblocking the future. But right now, for lots of people, the internet works just fine with dial-up. They won't contribute ten times as much to the economy with broadband. They won't be ten times as entertained. The connection sits idle most of the time, anyway. Broadband won't be a necessity until there's something better than the usual e-mail, chat rooms and lite internet surfing people do. In a way, it looks similiar to the way most of the new UHF TV and FM radio stations struggled in the early 50s. There was a huge increase in bandwidth, but there was little extra to fill it with. People got what they wanted from their AM radios and VHF TVs. It took about 25 years before the extra bandwidth was filled. I was at the library and found a book called "SST here it comes - ready or not!" So I checked it out. Figured it would be good for a laugh, at least. Actually it was a pretty good book. The author was an avation writer who gave a good accounting of the SST debate of 1969 or so. Of course, we abandoned the American SST program, and it didn't matter much. Few travellers wanted to pay the extra price to go faster. Frank Dresser |