In a growing number of cities, high-speed Internet is seen as another essential utility, like water, sewers, roads or electricity. If cable and phone companies don't provide faster web service, more ...
Editor’s note: This is part of a series about the fiber-optic internet revolution taking place in Bonneville County, where the cities of Ammon and Idaho Falls have used public network ownership to ...
Its “dark fiber” project in Huntsville creates a model that might finally thrust US Internet access into the 21st Century Illustration by Patrycja Podkościelny This week, Google launched what amounts ...
Ammon, a town of roughly 16,000, shares its entire western border with Idaho Falls, a town of roughly 62,000. The two towns share a sibling rivalry that at worst leads to bouts of squabbling, but at ...
Is the $600B AI Capex splurge repeating the 1999 fiber optic overbuild? Analyze the risks of an AI Bubble 2026, comparing the dot-com crash to today’s data center arms race.
It’s Ammon, Idaho, population 16,500, which offers residents performance, pricing, and options that inhabitants of a metropolis dominated by one or two internet service providers can only dream of.
In 2000, internet access was a bit of a luxury. It was useful, but you could easily get by without it. Today, that’s no longer true. Work, commerce, schooling and participation in the public sphere — ...
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