These people are fictional at this point.

Starlink has changed the equation such that there are basically no places in the continental US that can't get service which is usable for most internet needs.  I have starlink for backup purposes and don't notice any meaningful practical difference between this and my main connection which is about the same raw speed as starlink.   I use it for typical work from home purposes including streaming, voip, and web usage.

If the government is going to fund anything at all anymore, it needs to be fiber all the way to the home which is built and managed in a way that any provider can use it.   This probably means a single strand from each home to some concentration point no more than 10km from the home and then a backbone/middle mile supporting several carriers from that point.   The position of this concentration point to be determined by the density in the area.  


On Tue, May 24, 2022, 8:21 AM Josh Luthman <josh@imaginenetworksllc.com> wrote:
CAF nor RDOF required IPv6.  BEAD doesn't say anything about IPv6.  I seriously doubt v6 gets included into the conversation because even NANOG can't agree it is needed.  The bigger concern are the people that have no connectivity at all (no 1 mbps, no 25/3, no 100/20, no gigabit, etc).

On Tue, May 24, 2022 at 9:41 AM j k <jsklein@gmail.com> wrote:
With this funding, does the FCC require IPv6 and/or dual stack?  If not, it could cause a new IPv6 digital divide.

Joe Klein

On Tue, May 24, 2022, 9:21 AM Max Tulyev <maxtul@netassist.ua> wrote:
Do they help with a local government ("we do not need your cables, go
avway")?

23.05.22 21:56, Sean Donelan пише:
>
> Money, money, money.
>
>
> On Mon, 23 May 2022, Aaron Wendel wrote:
>
>> The Fiber Broadband Association estimates that the average US
>> household will need more than a gig within 5 years.  Why not just jump
>> it to a gig or more?
>>
>>
>> On 5/23/2022 1:40 PM, Sean Donelan wrote:
>>>
>>> https://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-proposes-higher-speed-goals-small-rural-broadband-providers-0
>>>
>>> The Federal Communications Commission voted [May 19, 2022] to seek
>>> comment on a proposal to provide additional universal service support
>>> to certain rural carriers in exchange for increasing deployment to
>>> more locations at higher speeds. The proposal would make changes to
>>> the Alternative Connect America Cost Model (A-CAM) program, with the
>>> goal of achieving widespread deployment of faster 100/20 Mbps
>>> broadband service throughout the rural areas served by rural carriers
>>> currently receiving A-CAM support.
>>>
>>
>>
>