Now up to 4 buried communications utilities. i3broadband bought
Now up to 4 buried communications utilities. i3broadband bought
‹ BackJoined:
X days ago
# Posts:
X,XXX
Contributor Points:
X
Now up to 4 buried communications utilities. i3broadband bought out by T-Mobile last year. Now Frontier by Verizon is putting in their own fiber along side T-Mobile. They're tearing up yards and I think they hit the gas line earlier today. POTS, Comcast cable, T-Mobile fiber, and now Verizon fiber is 4 communications. Electric and gas makes 6. Water and sewer are deeper but that makes 8. It must be harder and harder to not hit an existing utility each time a new one is added. Why can't we have one larger buried conduit that multiple utilities can all use? I believe the city could make this happen. It may not be too late for your neighborhood. Imagine the mess when fiber company #3 decides to come in.
mypeez and PeoriaIllinoisan reacted Replies:
That is a similar count to our neighborhood, just a few different providers in the mix. Ironically Verizon is queuing up for a similar install. We didn't want their landline or DSL service, what makes them think we'll want their fiber?
What they're not saying is that they may be planning for future 5G street corner level mobile access points. When T-Mobile bought out i3, that might have been a sign to Verizon that they better act now or risk being left behind. That's where the big money is in the younger generation, that plugs their parent's "wifi cable" (yes really) in to their xbox, or connects it through their own mobile hotspot and then downloads a 50GB game and is stuck paying the extra data charges. Anyway, could something be done at a political level? Not having a shared conduit also limits future companies who could come in cheaply without tearing up the neighborhood.
Who is POTS? Never heard of that company. Do they provide same Internet, TV/streaming/voice services as Comcast/Xfinity? As far as buried cables, anytime someone needs to dig, the property owner or the company is supposed to call USIC or similar firm to come out, detect where the cables are, and put down those multi-colored flags we see when construction is about to happen.
** Would you be interested in keeping up to date with news & events going on in the Peoria area? Consider supporting an alternative social media platform for Peoria by creating an account today! (it's fast, easy, privacy focused, and free!)
« Back to Chat
Views: 35
# Replies: 3



