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Wow! 50 Mbps for just $140 a month!

March 9th, 2009

The San Francisco Bay Area, home of Silicon Valley and the hi-tech supergiants, is getting super-charged, lightning-fast 50 Mbps Internet connections! And for just $140 a month, how can you beat that?

Of course, if you’ve read this blog a lot before, you know that this is hardly impressive. Japan had these kinds of speeds available more or less nation-wide about five years ago. And even when it first came, it cost nowhere near $140–50 Mbps ADSL has always hovered between $40 and $50 a month, roughly what I pay for 100 Mbps fiber-optic today. Even out in Inagi, a town out in the hills and forests, I got 70 Mbps fiber optic vDSL service in late 2004.

Somehow, I find it very hard to believe that the only reason is that America is a bigger place. Five years late, three times as expensive, in one of the more densely-populated and highest-tech corners of the country? More like a stunning lack of a government Internet policy coupled with Telecoms squeezing every penny out of systems both old and new,

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  1. March 10th, 2009 at 00:50 | #1

    This angers me beyond belief. This has nothing to do with the size of the country, it has everything to do with laziness and greed. I recently received a bump in my speeds from 5 mbps down/500 kbs up to 8 mbps down/500 kbs up, but that of course came with a price increase. I am paying $63 a month for these speeds. I feel like vomiting every time I see you are Danny Choo talk about your speeds and what you pay each month.

    This is going to become a major problem in the USA, and we are already seeing companies look elsewhere for offices due to our lack of a sufficient Internet infrastructure. It is going to cost us jobs and contracts if we don’t do something about this and soon!

  2. Trevor
    March 10th, 2009 at 01:10 | #2

    If I remember correctly, Japan is working on/has already completed a national coverage of 1 Gig/sec. I don’t think I’ve ever seen anything similar here in the States, privately or publicly. We have a whole lot of catching up to do. And while I agree that national coverage is far less doable for the US, there’s no excuse for the lack of coverage in major cities nationwide if we tried.

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