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2 Davis cities join UTOPIA
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Debbie Miller | 3:31 p.m. Aug. 26, 2007
Congratulations on these two visionary cities. They may not have been as quick
as Centerville, but they can recognize a good thing when they see it and jump on
the bandwagon when they get the chance. I do hope Bountiful will join as well.
When my son was looking for a home in Davis county last year, all things being
equal he said he would prefer to buy in Centerville because of this progressive
technology. Once in place, it will be a definite drawing card for these cities
and should boost property values as more people demand high tech homes.
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Anonymous | 9:28 a.m. Aug. 27, 2007
This isn't news. They joined three years ago along with Centerville and
everyone else. The fact that UTOPIA is years behind schedule and is just getting
started isn't newsworthy. Why doesn't someone ask what's taken so
long and why are we still waiting. In the time since this whole UTOPIA project
has started the other internet companies have gotten their acts together and
UTOPIA is now poised for failure not success. UTOPIA's service isn't
cheaper than Qwest it's more expensive and even though it might be faster,
for most people like me, money is what it's all about.UTOPIA is years too
late and will lose millions just like iProvo and will probably end up bankrupt
and sold for pennies on the dollar. Too little too late and they'll never
get built out with the money they've got for a multiyear construction
project with construction prices increasing the way they are. Good luck, but
we'll all be reading about it like the headlines we've seen from
iProvo.
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Jesse Harris | 10:49 a.m. Aug. 27, 2007
Apparently Anonymous hasn't even bothered looking over the financial
statements from UTOPIA. If s/he had, it would become obvious that UTOPIA breaks
even with a 25% participation rate presuming an average of 2 subscribed services
per household. Given that the first-year take rate for fiber optic services is
often in the 40% range, I'd say this person needs to spend a lot more time
getting their facts straight.
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Mike Williams | 10:45 p.m. Aug. 29, 2007
The problem is, the telecommunications situation is not at all like an airport.
Airline "carriers" cannot each generally build their own airport
infrastructure in every city. However, most cities already have multiple
communications carriers, whether wireline or wireless, cable company or
telecommunications company. Those companies are competitive and in business to
make money in the free market economy that has made America great. What kind of
hue and cry would arise if the government tried to privatize them? And yet, the
arguments in support of UTOPIA are the same kinds of arguments that support
government-run utilities and infrastructure (e.g., airports). Don't look
just at financials on paper. Look around the country at actual results of
projects similar to UTOPIA, and you'll see struggling operations -- few if
any sustained success stories over time. Look at iProvo. Much better to let the
free market work. Encourage government to get out of the way even more and let
free enterprise compete to truly identify and meet real needs. That will do more
to accelerate newer and better services than a government-sponsored approach.
I'm afraid that citizens of cities involved in UTOPIA will eventually rue
the day they got involved in this.
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Scott | 2:35 p.m. Sept. 5, 2007
Imagine this for a moment, an outdated airport that doesn't even allow jet
aircrafts onto its runways. This is the type of technology that the current
vendors are offering to their customers. The future of telcom is not with
outdated copper lines, despite what all of the antiquated telcoms will tell you.
We are running our communications on a network whose technology dates back 100
years. I personally don't feel that I want to continue to subsidize the
continuation of this cash cow. For example, the way that technology is going is
to have direct "downloadable" movies in HD format available for
purchase or rent. This really doesn't work well under the current system.
There are other technologies that require decent upload speeds. Current
providers don't and can't offer this cost effectively. We should have
our information (phone, tv, internet) all come into your house in one pipe.
This is no different then our gas, electricity etc... This will only happen
when someone that isn't interested in "bandaiding" their own
outdated infrastructure is willing to build a forward looking network. With
fiber, only the speed of light is the barrier for advancement. By the way,
anyone can offer services on this network, there is plenty of competition for
service offerings. In fact, even ATT is already on the UTOPIA network as a
provider. The difference is that one service is speeding along on the autobahn
the other is not even off of the on-ramp.
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