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The competitive Internet got killed off by the 1996 telecom deregulation act, along with long-term trends away from anti-trust enforcement which started with the Reagan era. In 2000, I was contemplating new services for Shore.Net, inspired by the already-doomed prospects for DSL (that old Ma Bell copper we're discussing now was supposedly open for third-party use, but Ma Bell had more of an interest in obstructing repair work than improving it). One prospect was medium-range fixed wireless, which I had installed at home before the cable-modem companies started to launch their services. One company set up about 3 antennas around greater Boston, with a service radius of 10-15 mi from each. (My Somerville home was something like 6 miles from their antenna on the 41-story building next to South Station, from which I got a download-only 2-megabit service.) But in short order, what I saw was the likes of Cisco buying up and killing off the medium-range radio companies I talked to at the time. (Then Shore.Net itself was bought up...) Economic trends favored elimination of these rival products sold to small/medium Internet companies, to create opportunity only for big equipment companies to sell radios to the big cell-phone companies which mainly sought short-range mobile radio rather than medium-range fixed. I can only think of one survivor of this trend, Monkey Brains here in San Francisco, which sells an affordable ($35/mo or something like that) 8-20 meg medium-range fixed wireless service. All this is rapidly starting to feel like ancient-history. Few will mourn the passing of copper wire strung on telephone poles. It's a little like the time I was hiking the woods somewhere north of Boston and saw on the ground what were obviously hardware components from a long-fallen telegraph pole. -rich
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