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Luck and the Last Mile Dallas TX

Getting broadband from the backbone down to the last mile--homes and businesses--is fraught with difficulty. Here is an article on broadband internet access.

Mortgagedaily.Com
(214) 521-1300
3811 Turtle Creek Boulevard # 700
Dallas, TX
N Form Interactive
(214) 468-0855
2608 1-2 State Street
Dallas, TX
Lone Star Web
(214) 443-2200
6730 Oakbrook Boulevard
Dallas, TX
Samuth Associates Inc
(214) 421-3020
1402 Corinth Street Suite 136
Dallas, TX
DRM Laboratory
(214) 891-1800
5950 Berkshire Lane # 550
Dallas, TX
Northern Computer Systems
(469) 576-0707
1035 Levee St
Dallas, TX
Groomstop
(214) 747-1270
501 S 2nd Avenue # B108
Dallas, TX
N Form Interactive
(214) 821-8000
3800 Commerce Street # 124
Dallas, TX
Grand Pass
(214) 891-1800
5950 Berkshire Lane # 550
Dallas, TX
CK Trends Com
(972) 247-0201
11429 Harry Hines Boulevard
Dallas, TX
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Luck and the Last Mile

Posted by : Nelson King

It's what consumers want--high speed and always-on access to the Internet. At least it now has a generally accepted name: broadband. Broadband services cover just about any form of technology that can deliver interactive Internet content, up to and including streaming multimedia such as movies. Broadband is a big deal because it will shape the future of computing and communications. Even so, for the home owner or business, getting broadband service continues to be a matter of luck, like a game of chance that only some can play.

Take a dart and throw it at a map of the United States. If it sticks in a big metropolitan area (such as New York or Los Angeles) the chances of getting broadband are good. If the dart lands in a secondary metropolitan area (such as Denver or Memphis), there may be broadband service but maybe not. Hit a regional city or a rural area, and chances of broadband are very poor, or very expensive. Geography is important, but it's not the whole game. For any particular household or business, the transmission of broadband service such as cable TV or the telephone line may or may not work technically. A lot also depends on who provides the service. Some cable or phone companies are successful at providing broadband; others are not. While broadband coverage is now being distributed across the country, getting it from the main lines (backbones) down the last mile to homes and businesses is fraught with technical, polit...

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