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Broadband Internet Access
T
T-1/DS-1
T-1/DS-1
is a type of service which is possible for a rural customer desiring broadband
speeds, but the cost can be in the hundreds or thousands of dollars per month
depending on the distance from the provider.
These are highly-regulated services traditionally intended for businesses,
that are managed through Public Service Commissions in each state, must be fully
defined in PSC
tariff documents, and have management rules dating back to the early 1980s
which still refer to teletypes
as potential connection devices. As such, T-1 services have very strict and
rigid service requirements which drive up the provider's maintenance costs and
may require them to have a technician on standby 24 hours a day to repair the
line if it malfunctions. (In comparison, ISDN and DSL are not regulated by the
PSCs at all.)
People attempting to establish rural service via a Wireless ISP, ISDN, or T-1
will run into an additional cost issue, where the physical connection (or local loop)
is considered separate from the actual Internet service provided from a
Point of Presence (POP). This is as if you had to pay the water utility to
rent the water main in the ground, in addition to paying to get water delivered
through the main from the tower. For a T-1, for example, in the US the loop
alone may cost $1200 per month, and the 1.5 megabit per second business-class
Internet service (with fixed a IP address
and a subnet)
may cost an additional $1000 per month. Attempting to reduce monthly costs by
establishing your own non-profit Wi-Fi network and sharing the T-1 connection
costs has an additional pitfall: your service provider may want to charge you an
additional "ISP reseller's fee" of $800 per month.
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