What Happens When Everyone Becomes A Server?
Originally published: June 22, 2009
Last updated: June 22, 2009 - 9:53pm
[Commentary] Consumers are embracing new server-like devices and therefore demanding a lot more upstream capacity. We need broadband networks that can deliver robust and reliable enough upstream service to be able to handle supplying these growing demands for bandwidth. And quite frankly, no broadband technology other than fiber has proven itself capable of fully supporting these new demands for upstream capacity. Every other broadband technology has clear capacity and reliability constraints that limit their ability to welcome and nurture the growth of upload-intensive applications. If we want to have a country where every computer can become a server, where every consumer can become a producer in the digital economy, then we need to set the goal of becoming a Full Fiber Nation otherwise we will never realize the full potential of this class of next-generation Internet applications.
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Umm, DOCSIS 3.0 is capable of delivering upload speeds well in excess of 100 Mb/s. At rates even half of that, the bottleneck will be wherever your data is going, not the line out of your house.
It seems unlikely that 95% of home users will require (and be willing to pay for the costs of) even higher upload speeds anytime in the next five years at least.