Originally Posted by
Grant H.
They are just another WISP, similar to Rise, Hill Top (who Rise just bought), etc.
They will likely work well until they get to a larger customer base, and then it will start to drop off. (Seen this cycle with several WISPs that have been around).
Actual fiber to the home? Or just replacing the main backbones with fiber, but still copper to the home?
If that's the case, that Thornton said it would HAVE to include all homes, then that was a poor decision on the city's part.
FTTH is usually prohibitively expensive. Longmont got away with it because they are their own electric power utility, so they own all the power poles, and could string fiber along those.
The other problem that may be part of this is that opening up more and more cities with FTTH is creating a very different load on the existing backbones. I know guys that work for the company the feeds Longmont, and Longmont keeps asking for more bandwidth (not surprising with a city wide fiber network), and they are struggling to keep up.