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Tom lives in Fulks Run, Virginia, on Peake Mountain Road, near Harrisonburg. He has a dial-up internet connection. The nearest house with a cable connection is ¾ mile away, and houses are not numerous along the road. He has attempted to obtain a broadband connection, but so far the cable company lacks enthusiasm, saying that their cable-stringing cost is on the order of $30,000 per mile.

So, he will be doing business with dial-up. At present I am doing the web page chores, and don’t find it to be a burden, but at some time I’ll pass it on to him.

Anybody have an idea about how we should deal with this?
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I've been checking, and cable is out. It seems the folks who own the poles rent them for $7 per year for the utility companies to hang stuff on.
3/4 miles at 200'/pole, 20 poles, $280/yr or $25/month. For one user, it isnt viable.

Satellite advertises "high speed", but only delivers 2x to 3x my typical dial-up speed at 50666bps.The cost is $80/mont to start, I think $120 after that.

DSL is my next pursuit. I'm too far from the swithces to get it, but, I know a few years ago someone ran fiber-optic across my driveway. I've called "Miss Utility" to find out who to blame for my off-kilter mailbox. Since I'll be diging in the area to straighten it out, they will locate it for free.
Connecting to it is a different story.
At least one of the race timing companies around here has access to a mobile broadband service that allows him to upload race results to his website before he leaves the site of the event. It uses cellular technology of some sort.

I wonder if something like that is available in metropolitan Harrisonburg- how fast it is, and how much it costs.
Ntelos (formerly CFW, which stands for Clifton Forge - Waynesboro, cities I'm sure most have never heard of) advertises the high-speed cellular connection, but I live in the shadow of Little North Mountain, and service isn't available at the house. Hence, my cell phone is useless at home.
I've considered mounting a Microwave repeater in a nearby tree that is easily taller than some cell-towers, but I don't like the idea of having a lightning-rod grounded to my house.
If you're curious, Google "Pringles can microwave antenna Wi Fi". Some small communities use them quite effectively to create a home-brew Wi-Fi network using antennas made from Pringles cans.
Finding out who owns the fiber under the drive way sounds like the best bet.

But don't overlook out of band transmission:


  • You could become a ham radio operator and run a link to some new friend who is close enough to have a high speed link.
  • You could purchase a long haul point to radio link. You may have to have line of sight to a friends house and pay the up front cost of the kit, cost depending on distance.
  • Solve this as a community. Maybe pool together for a shared antenna, or a local bond to cover getting your 'children' into the 20th century.

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