AT&T kills DSL, leaves tens of millions of homes without fiber Internet

“Across the predominantly rural counties in AT&T’s national footprint, only 5 percent of households (217,284 out of 4,442,675) have access to fiber,” the report said. In urban areas, the situation is better but not problem-free. “Seventy percent of households in urban counties still lack access to fiber from AT&T because the company has made fiber available to only 14.7 million households out of 48.4 million total households in these counties,” the report said.

Just 5% have access to real high speed data.

In today’s report, the CWA and NDIA said that “AT&T should commit to capital investment in fiber deployment that would double the number of households passed by fiber in two years. If AT&T invests one quarter of its annual free cash flow (projected to be more than $25 billion) into rapid fiber deployment, it could deploy to more than 6 million locations per year.” That figure assumes a cost of $1,000 per household, which it said “should be realistic as an average cost, given the widespread fiber backbone already deployed.”

Just a one quarter of it’s annual cash flow can reach 6 million with an “M” every year. It is frustrating that everything is there for this to happen. Customers willing to pay, the technology and workforce to make it happen, but it goes because the profit margin isn’t high enough. Not that it’s not profitable, simply that it isn’t profitable enough for AT&T’s time.

AT&T now offers a prepaid 100GB data-only plan for $55 per month - The Verge

AT&T says it will now offer a prepaid 5G data-only plan with up to 100GB of data for $55 per month — a big upgrade from its previous offering of 40GB for $75

I tend to be hard on ISPs, and for good reason. So I figure I should call out when they do something good too. I’ll leave the argument for data caps on a consumable that is not a finite resource for another day 😉.

AT&T promises fiber-to-the-home expansion in 90 metro areas this year | Ars Technica

While 3 million locations is a substantial buildout, there are tens of millions of homes without fiber in AT&T’s 21-state wireline service area. There were 52.97 million households in AT&T’s home-Internet service area and 14.93 million of them had fiber-to-the-home access, the Communications Workers of America (CWA) union told Ars in October 2020 when AT&T announced the discontinuation of legacy DSL services over copper phone lines.

Every house, every adult, every child, everyone has a right to high speed Internet access. In the same way you expect power and clean drinking water to be affordable and readily available, the same for fast internet access on a multitude of devices anywhere.

A good start, but only the beginning Accessible Affordable Internet for All Act

ATT CEO Against Municipal Broadband

That “commitment to serving entire communities” is important because private providers focus on building in the most profitable areas while municipal providers strive for universal service. City and town governments that build their own networks often take that action because private providers failed to give everyone affordable high-speed service.

Won’t service everyone with high speed, doesn’t want anyone else to either.

Automattic Buys Pocket Casts

“As part of Automattic, Pocket Casts will continue to provide you with the features needed to enjoy your favorite podcasts (or find something new),” the post states. “We will explore building deep integrations with WordPress.com and Pocket Casts, making it easier to distribute and listen to podcasts.”

A good home for a good app.

Biden economy and stock market have defied Trump predictions of doom - The Washington Post

rebounding economy is headed for its best year since 1984, according to the International Monetary Fund. The U.S. economy likely expanded in the first quarter at an annual rate of 6 percent and should accelerate in the months ahead, economist Ian Shepherdson of Pantheon Macroeconomics told clients this week. More than 1.3 million jobs have been added since the election.

Shocking

Biden silent on municipal broadband as he makes $65B deal with Republicans | Ars Technica

Biden’s plan immediately drew opposition from Republicans and private ISPs such as AT&T, which has argued that the US should not subsidize fiber-to-the-home deployment across the US and that rural people should be satisfied with non-fiber Internet service that provides only 10Mbps upload speeds. AT&T John Stankey called Biden’s plan to fund municipal networks “misguided” and said he was confident that Congress would steer legislation in the more “pragmatic” direction that AT&T favors.

So, don’t subsidize fiber-to-the-home, not because the market will take care of it, but because those people should be happy 10Mbps! Who could possibly need more than that? 🤷‍♂️

😤

Biden’s American Families Plan could make America less terrible for parents - Vox

Among the world’s wealthy countries, the United States is, by many measures, the worst place for parents.

Yep. And I don’t expect that to change anytime soon. It just doesn’t benefit those who are in a position to make a change. They simply don’t see it as a problem.

Binance Labs leads $1.6M seed round in DeFi startup MOUND, the developer of Pancake Bunny | TechCrunch

Built on Binance Smart Chain, a blockchain for developing high-performance DeFi apps, MOUND says Pancake Bunny now has more than 30,000 daily average users, and has accumulated more than $2.1 billion in total value locked (TVL) since its launch in December 2020.

I really want to make something with an awesome name like “Pancake Bunny”.

Also, I’d be hard pressed to find another paragraph stuffed with so many buzzwords.

California Unanimously Passes Statewide Fiber Middle Network

The California legislature unanimously approved a plan to build a statewide, open-access fiber network yesterday. The legislation was supported by Democrats and Republicans in votes of 78-0 in the California Assembly and 39-0 in the state Senate.

This is just fantastic to see. I really wish every state would get behind publicly available fiber for middle and last mile build outs.

CenturyLink, Frontier missed FCC broadband deadlines in dozens of states | Ars Technica

Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) recently urged the FCC to block Frontier’s new funding, saying that “Frontier has a documented pattern of history demonstrating inability to meet FCC deadlines for completion of Connect America Fund Phase II support in West Virginia.” 

I agree with Senator Moore. Enough is enough. Frontier has shown time and time again with their inaction and inability to complete projects they are incapable of delivering results. Stop any new funding and force them to settle and pay all failed contracts.

Clarence Thomas blasts Section 230, wants “common-carrier” rules on Twitter | Ars Technica

Thomas acknowledged that private entities usually aren’t constrained by the First Amendment but added that the First Amendment may apply on a private company’s online platform “if the government coerces or induces it to take action the government itself would not be permitted to do, such as censor expression of a lawful viewpoint.”

This is not even remotely the right point in the stack for content moderation. Twitter, Facebook and other platforms are not public spaces affording guarantees of free speech. People removed from the platform, I would argue are not even censored. They are free to continue to spread whatever message they would like on the Internet. No one can silence your ability to spread your message on the internet. That’s what makes it great, and sometimes terrible. Using a personal domain, or any other service where they have not been removed for violating terms of service or code of conduct, everyone is free to put whatever they’d like out there. No one is entitled to access on another service.

Coffee Heart Machine Learning

Still, it’s not definitive. Rather, it’s part of a growing body of evidence that, at the moment, can say little about how much coffee people should drink. “It may be good for you,” says Dariush Mozaffarian, dean of the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University. “I think we can say with good certainty it’s not bad for you.” (Additives are another story.) Getting more specific will require more research. Last year, Mozaffarian and others called on the National Institutes of Health to establish an institute for nutrition science that could coordinate those efforts and, crucially, help people interpret the results. “We need a well-funded, well-organized, coordinated effort to figure out nutrition,” he says. “No single study gets to the truth.”

The short answer is YES!, more people should drink coffee, it’s delicious.

Comcast is doubling the speed of its low-income internet plan - The Verge

This is the second time in a year that Comcast’s program is getting a speed bump: it was upgraded from 15Mbps in March of last year.

The cynic in me thinks it’s more expensive for Comcast to run equipment that old and slow then it is to “upgrade it” to 50 / 5Mbps for customers. It simply isn’t out of the kindness of their corporate heart.

COVID unit doctor low on compassion for unvaccinated people - Los Angeles Times

My patient died nine days later from a fatal stroke. We, the care team, reconciled this loss by telling ourselves: He made a personal choice not to get vaccinated, not to protect himself or his family. We did everything we could with what we had to save him. This year, this tragedy, this unnecessary, entirely preventable loss, was on him. The burden of this pandemic now rests on the shoulders of the unvaccinated. On those who are eligible to get vaccinated, but choose not to, a decision they defend by declaring, “vaccination is a deeply personal choice.” But perhaps never in history has anyone’s personal choice impacted the world as a whole as it does right now. When hundreds and thousands of people continue to die, when the most vulnerable members of society, our children, cannot be vaccinated — the luxury of choice ceases to exist.

It is not a personal choice when the lives of those around you are at stake, it is a selfish act of cowardice.

Day 1: Finding Product Ideas

I have probably started dozens of projects over the years with the intention of selling it as a product or tutorial. Number of projects that have made it across the finish-line and available for sale? A whomping zero 🥚. ☹️ so when Gumroad put out a 14 day course to get people like me through the process, I jumped at the chance.

Pick a Topic You Already Have Expertise In

  1. Web development
  2. Testing setup and start with React
  3. Next JS Testing
  4. React Native Setup
  5. NextJS setup
  6. TailwindCSS
  7. Emotion JS in CSS

Keep Your Scope Small

Those are all pretty good sized topics. I am would like to focus on testing is some shape or form, it’s a matter of what the scope will be to launch in 14 days. 🤔 let’s focus on testing specifically in NextJS, something where I think there is a real need in the community.

Deactivation of Flash may have crippled Chinese railroad for a day | Ars Technica

staffers were reportedly unable to view train operation diagrams, formulate train sequencing schedules, and arrange shunting plans

Alternative tile includes: “Flash Reaches Out From the Grave 🧟‍♂️”

Don’t Be a Schmuck. Put on a Mask.

Some people are complaining, “Well, my freedom is being kind of disturbed here.” Well, I told them, “Screw your freedom.” You have the freedom to wear no mask. But if you exercise that freedom, you’re a schmuck—because you’re supposed to protect your fellow Americans.

I would go further than calling these people schmucks. Selfish, short sighted, willfully ignorant, vial, these people have turned their backs on facts, science, and their community. And for what?

As Americans, we have agreed to vaccinations to eradicate diseases since George Washington mandated the smallpox inoculation for his troops. “Upon the principle of self-defense, of paramount necessity, a community has the right to protect itself against an epidemic of disease which threatens the safety of its members,” the Supreme Court said in 1905, in a ruling supporting vaccine mandates.

Physically able to get vaccinated and refuse? Fine. Proof required to fly, no more traveling. Proof required to go to work, you’re out of a job. No public spaces, amenities, or resources. Want to go see your favorite sports club? Nope. You can stay home and watch it on TV. Kids need to go to school? Nope, you’ve chosen home school. You’ve refused to do the minimum to protect others in you community, you are no longer welcome. Feel free to complain about it being unAmerican or fascist, you’ll simply have to do it from the confines of your own home.

Dying in a Leadership Vacuum | NEJM

But truth is neither liberal nor conservative. When it comes to the response to the largest public health crisis of our time, our current political leaders have demonstrated that they are dangerously incompetent. We should not abet them and enable the deaths of thousands more Americans by allowing them to keep their jobs.

Just 90 days or so into the changeover of administration and Congress, it is increasingly clear that we the public did not clear house nearly far enough.

F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy - The New York Times

There are many challenges. Broadband maps, for instance, notoriously overcount how many households have access. If an internet service provider such as Charter or AT&T reaches just one home in a census block, the entire block appears connected on federal maps, even when all homes aren’t given the option of broadband.

Hopefully just the beginning.

Fight over hospital’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate ends with 153 workers out of a job | Ars Technica

“We all knew we were getting fired today,” Bridges told the AP. “We knew unless we took that shot to come back, we were getting fired today. There was no ifs, ands, or buts.”

From earlier in the case

Hospital suspends 178 health care workers for failing to get COVID vaccine | Ars Technica

Still, the small faction of vaccine holdouts is vocal—and feisty—about its objections to the mandate. Dozens of people, including hospital staffers and supporters, gathered outside of Houston Methodist Baytown campus Monday evening to protest the mandate as some unvaccinated employees completed what could be their final shifts at the facility. People held signs reading “Vaxx is Venom,” “Don’t Lose Sight of Our Rights,” and “No Forced Vaccines.”

The safety of the general public is not now, or ever, eclipsed by your personal rights.

House Republicans propose nationwide ban on municipal broadband networks | Ars Technica

PCMag recently named Chattanooga, Tennessee, the best work-from-home city in the nation, citing in part the city’s “widely available broadband Internet” provided by the Chattanooga Electric Power Board. Comcast initially tried to block that public network from being built but eventually upgraded its own service to better compete against the public option.

Literally the best way to push the market of ISP’s forward is for cities and other municipalities to build a better option. 🤔

Housing prices are out of control. Can Biden’s infrastructure bill change that? - Vox

Where are all the houses?

Restrictions like minimum lot sizes, mandatory parking requirements, and other prohibitions on multi-family housing that Biden’s plan references have the effect of reducing the supply of housing. For example, if there is a requirement that for every unit a developer has to provide two parking spaces, that ensures they have to set aside land for parking that could otherwise have been used for building more homes. Frequently, this leads developers to build fewer units — and more expensive ones at that.

According to the Urban Institute, by the end of 2020, there was only 2.5 months’ supply left of housing, meaning “at the current sales pace, the inventory of homes nationwide will be exhausted.”

Make no mistake about it. These restrictions are not in place on accident. They are purposely enacted to be exclusionary.

In 2021, we need to fix America’s internet - The Verge

As FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel wrote for The Verge last March, as many as one in three US households doesn’t have broadband internet access, currently defined as just 25Mbps down and 3Mbps up — which feels like the bare minimum for a remote learning family these days. Even before the pandemic, that statistic might have been shocking; now, it’s the difference between whether millions of schoolchildren can attend classes and do their homework or not. Nearly 12 million children don’t have a broadband connection at home, the Senate Joint Economic Committee reported in 2017. And the “homework gap” hits harder if you’re poor, of course: only 56 percent of households with incomes under $30,000 had broadband as of last February, according to the Pew Research Center.

What would it actually take to get viable, affordable internet to each and every household in America? 5 billion? 10 billion? Great. I say pay it. ISP’s are required utility like clean water and electricity, they should be treated as such, rather than for profit companies hiding, lobbies, and defeating efforts for access at every turn.