MrAbyss wrote: » Why? Colossal money to spend on fiber to every rural home when 5G is around the corner. Billions for something that will obsolete in a year or two.
OneEightSeven wrote: » 5G is useless in rural areas and fibre will never be obsolete, it's the pinnacle of internet connectivity, but Starlink will be available next year and unlike conventional satellite, these are low-earth orbit so latency is much lower. It's around 30ms, which is comparable to Virgin Media. It a disgrace that the taxpayer should have to subsidise the broadband of those who built cheap bungalows in the backarse of nowhere, when high speed broadband is commercially viable in urban areas. This country doesn't have a broadband problem, we have a one off housing problem We're about to waste €3bn on something that technology will solve in the near future and it will be commercially viable. The only reason why the government are doing is for votes, they don't have the testicular fortitude to explain to bungalow dwellers that us urban dwellers pay more money for our homes to get services like high speed broadband. Instead they make bogus comparisons to the electrification of Ireland to play up the importance of this project. Another thing, it's mostly Dublin who is paying for this. County Dublin makes up 28.3% of our population, but generates 57% of our tax revenue and only 2.3% of homes in the intervention area are located in County Dublin. Basically, what the government are doing is taking urban dwellers tax money and using it to buy votes from people who built cheap bungalows and have much larger gardens than urban dwellers.
Tangatagamadda Chaddabinga Bonga Bungo wrote: » There needs to be a defined cut off point in place so this isn't a blank cheque. This project could double in price very easily, as we've seen over and over with these big state projects. I think there is an economic argument to be made to bring high speed broadband to every population centre. Let's say the cut off is a rural village with at least 100 people living in it. But trying to connect every single one off house in the country is madness. Connecting up a home on the side of a mountain makes no financial sense. There are many advantages to living on the side of a mountain compared to living in a built up urban area. Low crime, low pollution, more space, more greenery, cheaper and bigger accommodation ect. The compromise is that servives won't and can't be as good. That's the deal. There's pros and cons to both sides of it. I'm sick of 'rural' Ireland complaining that they are not being looked after. Yet by every reasonable measure, they take a hell of a lot more than nearly any other segment of Irish society. If you want high speed broadband while living on the side of a mountain, that's fine, but pay for it yourself.
Plumbthedepths wrote: » Get over yourself.
Wildsurfer wrote: » What about farms and rural buisness there Jackeen.... will we move them all up to Dublin so we can avail of all your wonderful city has to offer?
cjmc wrote: » ... Most one off country housing are farms. Or people who work and live In agricultural areas. ...
Eggs For Dinner wrote: » Dublin is dysfunctional when it comes to infrastructure such as transport, services and housing. Anything that stems the flow of people and businesses to the capital helps the national economy
Wanderer78 wrote: » can you make those pie charts bigger please, im struggling to see them? thanks
realdanbreen wrote: » Ah come on you're not going to begrudge us broadband are you. I mean it would be different if we were already getting cheaper home insurance, car insurance, less crime, no traffic jams, less pollution, cheaper drink !
cjmc wrote: » Also pumping your own water at a significant cost. The septic tanks at a significant cost. No waste collection . Most one off country housing are farms. Or people who work and live In agricultural areas. Poor dubs me hole !
beauf wrote: » I don't get the anti countryside agenda. .
biko wrote: » Can you quote large images and add a one-liner more often? I want to add lots of scrolling to my thread experience.
tom1ie wrote: » He’s dead right though. If ya want high speed broadband, move to an urban centre.
Plumbthedepths wrote: » He's not, you plus him need to understand the concept of society.
listermint wrote: » Hi. I'm a poster who doesn't have a clue about the technologies involved..and things 5g is a panacea for connection. I suggest you research 5G and how it works. And what the limitations are. Otherwise no point embarrassing oneself.
Roger_007 wrote: » Why can't all rural areas be serviced by using the existing telephone poles to bring fibre to every home which already has a landline connected? Surely this couldn't cost €3 billion?
Tangatagamadda Chaddabinga Bonga Bungo wrote: » There needs to be a defined cut off point in place so this isn't a blank cheque. This project could double in price very easily, as we've seen over and over with these big state projects.
I think there is an economic argument to be made to bring high speed broadband to every population centre. Let's say the cut off is a rural village with at least 100 people living in it. But trying to connect every single one off house in the country is madness. Connecting up a home on the side of a mountain makes no financial sense.
There are many advantages to living on the side of a mountain compared to living in a built up urban area. Low crime, low pollution, more space, more greenery, cheaper and bigger accommodation ect. The compromise is that servives won't and can't be as good. That's the deal. There's pros and cons to both sides of it.
I'm sick of 'rural' Ireland complaining that they are not being looked after. Yet by every reasonable measure, they take a hell of a lot more than nearly any other segment of Irish society. If you want high speed broadband while living on the side of a mountain, that's fine, but pay for it yourself.
tom1ie wrote: » Nope. You need to understand the concept of value for money. Offer fbb to urban centers. If people want fbb, move to urban centers or get people to pay for a fbb connection to their premise themselves. Urban centers in this instance can still mean small villages.