Internet 2
Internet 2
Whatever happened to it? Wasnt it supposed to be the big revolutionary thing to increase speeds by multitudes and magnitudes?
If I remember right. The internet 2 was a government funded project to run fiber into every house and home in america. The collages, army bases, air-force bases would be the major back bone. Distributing internet to jcs, and other major cites buildings. Witch in-turn would distribute internet services to every around them.
I think they successfully ran fiber into many majors areas. But then they encountered heavy resistances. Phone companies, cable companies, and their subsidiaries tied the project up in court. Preventing further work, and depleting funds. Mean while they used their economic might to get the government to roll over and cut funding for the project.
A few years later the dark fiber defaults and is put up for sell at a fraction of the installation price. Guess who buys the dark fiber? Cable, phone companies and their subsidiaries. In short the us public payed for fiber, and then had it stolen by the phone companies. Witch has, or will, uses the fiber to make lucrative profit of the us public.
I think they successfully ran fiber into many majors areas. But then they encountered heavy resistances. Phone companies, cable companies, and their subsidiaries tied the project up in court. Preventing further work, and depleting funds. Mean while they used their economic might to get the government to roll over and cut funding for the project.
A few years later the dark fiber defaults and is put up for sell at a fraction of the installation price. Guess who buys the dark fiber? Cable, phone companies and their subsidiaries. In short the us public payed for fiber, and then had it stolen by the phone companies. Witch has, or will, uses the fiber to make lucrative profit of the us public.
-
- Posts: 17020
- Joined: Fri Dec 01, 2000 8:00 am
-
- Posts: 17020
- Joined: Fri Dec 01, 2000 8:00 am
As far as the fiber being there, that's a fact. There are thousands of miles of dark fiber in the US. There's no real need for the added capacity at the moment, at least not one that's going to make any serious money.dzjepp wrote:I think viruseater was the one that said the fiber infrastructure is already there, but it's gonna take big bucks to light it all up.
-
- Posts: 17020
- Joined: Fri Dec 01, 2000 8:00 am
Yea, that's a good point. If a project came along that would enable them to make a lot of profit off of high-speed connectivity I'm sure they'd see good reason to start using it then.Nightshade wrote:There's no real impetus to employ all the added bandwidth. At least none that I can see. I doubt major ISPs care that nerds like us want to download shit THAT much faster at the moment.
They're probably waiting for the next inter-cash cow to come along and kickstart the need for fatter pipes.
Hmm, I wonder what that will be. It seems inevitable.
-
- Posts: 17020
- Joined: Fri Dec 01, 2000 8:00 am
Exactly. You squeeze a lot of bandwidth out of plain copper, but it's all the h/w required to do so that's spendy. With no immediately visible return on their invesment, there'e no reason for providers to upgrade.Canis wrote:Isnt it the switches and interconnects that cost so much? I'd expect the switching hardware in place just isnt capable of using all the available fiber, and adding more switching/routing capability would cost quite a bit.
I don't know how much the B2B internet market has grown/diminished, but I would hazard a guess that it's still not where it was before the dot com bust.
I remember seeing ads for all sorts of streaming video stuff and how Akamai especially was going to deliver tons of content to your home, and it all just sort of faded out.