longweekend58 wrote on Nov 30
th, 2013 at 6:32pm:
... you have NO IDEA WHATSOEVER what you are going to do with it. ...
Me? Probably nothing. I live in a rural area. By all accounts, I'm out of range, even of fixed wireless.
The exponential rise in demand for bandwidth proves that there are uses. I don't attribute any great significance to my ignorance of them.
longweekend58 wrote on Nov 30
th, 2013 at 6:34pm:
... tends to suggest ...
The fact that you can't substantiate your case proves conclusively that it lacks substance.
longweekend58 wrote on Nov 30
th, 2013 at 6:36pm:
... how many jobs can be done by telecommuting??? ... education? health?
...
Yes, seeing as how you asked.
longweekend58 wrote on Nov 30
th, 2013 at 6:38pm:
... something to do during the long unemployed days downloading porn and movies.
I'm retired, actually. Your usage pattern is not necessarily representative; your porn addiction limits your perspective.
# wrote on Sep 10
th, 2013 at 8:21pm:
longweekend58 wrote on Sep 10
th, 2013 at 1:04pm:
...
NOT ONE CREDIBLE RESIDENTIAL application at all.
We've
been down this rabbit-hole before, longweekend58. When challenged, you did your customary disappearing trick. I'm intrigued by what your fondness for the question reveals about you.
For the record, I'm quite content to say that I don't know. In reality, we're all in the position of that bloke who couldn't figure out what use a telephone might be. Our frame of reference is telegrams delivered by bicycle.
Anyway, back to your peculiar question. The question implies that you believe that what you don't see cannot be. The corollary to that is that you believe that, all that
can be, you see. The term for that is
omnscience; a characteristic normally restricted to deities.
So how long have you had this God complex?
The healthy question is the one you ran away from:
what will halt the rise in demand for bandwidth? Last I heard, residential demand was projected to hit 1Gb/s around 2020. I have no idea what will generate that demand (I don't consider myself omniscient), but that doesn't affect the trend.
Of course, the higher the speed, the shorter the length of copper over which the signal can travel. We'll soon pass the point where a node will be required for every house. Sort of makes fibre to the premises more sensible, doesn't it?
Do come up with some new tactics. The old ones simply won't work.