Message from @Grenade123
Discord ID: 455834077044539412
jokes aside i cant tell if your asking a rhetorical or not
there is pretty much limitless ground you could put cables in (and you don't have nearly as much problems when bad weather is about) and after enough cables are run through it would probably have a big enough enough hole that you could put in a lot for just the cost of running the physical cable, not even need to dig.
sure, its not the cheapest option, but that isn't even an option
you dont have limitless ground
for cables?
the fact you see poles completely wraped in hundreds of cables is evidence you dont have limitless ground
actually no, the poles are just cheap
sure, and they are on everyones property weather they are using the service or not
just like pipes, just like roads
yeah, now imagine if the local government decided only 2 car companies got to drive on your local road. and for you to drive your own care it would be 20k now, and 1.8k a month
If you have an already established community (say a subdivision in the US), you have a limited area that you can dig those cables (typically the stretch of lawn/grass between the sidewalk and street. And if you have ever increasing numbers of companiies wanting to come in and dig to install additional cable lines then sooner or later those homeowners are going to get fed up with that
*
Eventiually the next installer is going to "accidentally" cut another company's cable while they are in the process of installing their owb
@Chijohnaok as my previous point, imagine how many cables could fit in something like a city storm drain. Those big ones that people can easily stand in
that probably already happens
that is what i meant by "have enough companies"
but it would be more frequent
but the alternative is only like there be 1 or 2?
you want CABLES in stormdrains?
you ancaps really are crazy
@Arch-Fiend more like something the size of a storm drain, but a whole different system.
Well, in the commuiity that I live ( a subdivision suburb of Tampa) those storm drains are prbablt about 18 inches in circumference. Now I grew up in Chicago and I realize that some underground utility tunnels there are man sized but that is not the rule everywhere
well youd need a second stormdrain then
we are not even allowed to have that option
all im saying is this seems to be an infastructural problem
Arch...those storm drains in Chicago can sometimes be man sized in height so the utlilities are run through a smaller pipe within the larger underground storm drain tunnels
all of this is just possibilities but are barred by local governments leaving your only option to basically by your space FROM a huge ISP.
this is how they get a monopoly
all of these options are expensive
they are not even options
thats my point
because they are expesive and public nusances
how are ISPs not already a public nuisance?
name a single ISP who's customer service is steller
none, because they don't need to be
they are, your talking about making them bigger nuisances without any payoff
A competing company can't even worry about expense if they can't even explore the option due to regulation
you install a new large storm-drain like pipe line once, then get a lot of space to had lots of new lines for a while, any that is a nuisance?
these pipes which could be used to put power lines in so that you don't lose power every time a tree falls or a drunk driver takes out a light pole
yeah customer service may increase by 10% now that theres 3 competing isps and not just 2 but then you also have a 30% increase in infastructural problems which will effect the overall service of all 3 that rely on that infastructure