Forum Moderators: phranque
We ended up finding a third party phone company that was willing to do the work to get us hooked up as long as we used them for long distance, local phone service and internet. (Business DSL)
It may be that you just haven't found the company who is willing to work a little to get you as a customer.
I would check with them to see if they offer DSL before any of the above. They are the ones that will rent the service to the other providers.
I looked at other vendors, but to no avail.
This is a newly constructed community, wouldn't it have benefited the phone company to lie pipes down?
I currently have cable, but Com* is using old lines from AT&T which lead to terrible connection speed.
I live in a very rural setting. Nearest town is a bit over 5 miles, and it only has a population of a little over 600. Nearest town over 50k pop is about 25 miles away.
Local phone cooperative is a happening thing. I just got fiber to my front door this year. No installation fees whatsoever.
Anyone want to move?
WBF
wouldn't it have benefited the phone company to lie pipes down?
About a year ago, I called several ISPs to check on DSL service in my area. A couple of them stated that our local phone system's equipment still dated back to the 1950s and that Verizon had no plans to upgrading anytime soon as there weren't enough customers to justify it.
Unfortunately the same can be said for our cable system as well. There is a piece of equipment that is going bad at one of the offices, resulting in very bad reception on half of the channels, but the cable company can't seem to justify the expense of replacing it.
High speed internet, pizza delivery, TV cable, all of it stops when you turn onto my road, it's like stepping into the Twilight Zone. :-)
The bottom line is they're not going to lay lines (here) until it's profitable. A developer has to put an apartment complex in our area before they'll run the lines. Frighteningly enough, they project that's going to be in about five years.
Though I'd never suggest it, the only viable option other than dialup (for us) was sattelite internet. You can get specials, but it costs between $400-$800 for the intitial setup and is $59/month. Ignore all their transfer numbers, that's a joke, the speed comes and goes with the number of users on it at any given time. There is a 3 second latency and while dowload speeds are decent, upload is horrible.
But it is better than dialup, I will say that.