September 6, 2016 6:00 AM
Morning Reads for Tuesday, September 6
Good morning! And if you’re in metro Atlanta, welcome to Traffic Season!
- Phyllis Schlafly died yesterday.
- SCOTUS Justices Kagan and Sotomayor discussed our “exceptionally homogeneous” Supreme Court.
- There was a dog show in Perry this past weekend.
- Gator season is open in Georgia – and no, I’m not talking about college football.
- In the New York Times, the mayor of the City of Tybee Island, who is a Republican, acknowledges that the sea level is rising.
- Tybee Island also has a plan to address rising sea levels as a result of climate change.
- SunTrust Park is 75% complete.
- What to do when your neighbor’s tree falls in your yard.
- The new FX show “Atlanta” premiers tonight.
- AT&T drops the mic on Google Fiber.
- Former Congressman Ben Jones (AKA Cooter from The Dukes of Hazzard) is mired in a multi-layered zoning dispute.
- Also – and this might be one of the oddest things ever – he owns Dolly Parton’s childhood outhouse.
- The most important professional advice you will read this week.
- The secret history of Tetris.
- Last weekend I saw an amazing show in NYC. Maybe I’ll stop talking about it now?
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Corporations have special sway in Hong Kong elections. Companies and groups like Air Canada, El Al Israel, King of Chicken Cake, French Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Hong Kong Economic Times and other ‘functional constituencies’ get to fill preferred seats. At least in the US we pretend that our legislatures are independent. But wouldn’t having carpet seats and chicken seats and colored carbonated water seats make government more streamlined and responsive?
http://qz.com/771739/vanuatu-national-travel-and-israels-state-airline-el-al-will-vote-in-hong-kongs-corrupt-election/
AT&T should pick the mic back up.
“Between 2011 and 2015, while Google Fiber was cutting its teeth on fiber, AT&T invested over $140B in its network, building to over one million route miles of fiber globally and deploying ultra-high-speed fiber-fed GigaPower broadband services, reaching over a hundred cities. Along the way, AT&T spent over $13B with minority, women and disabled veteran-owned suppliers in 2015 alone.”
Why? Because “February 2010: Google announces its intent to build ultra-high-speed fiber-fed broadband networks”
Gigabit fiber networks have long been possible. The existing cable/telco companies refused to provide it because they did not want to spend the money. They just wanted to sit back and collect the checks. It took competition from Google to force these guys to upgrade. Before then, as recently as 2010, AT&T and the rest were charging $100 a month for 750 kbps! Even now, 50 mbps costs $100 a month for most carriers, and it RARELY reaches 50 m at night and on weekends!
It’s expensive! Of course! Because these companies have spent billions on lobbying state and local governments to protect their monopolies, forcing you to rent cable boxes and modems with long-outdated technology and preventing competitors LIKE GOOGLE from being allowed to use existing utility poles. And this will continue so long as they continue to be able to buy off “pro-business” politicians with campaign contributions and perks, especially on the state and local levels.
I do not know who is worse with stuff like this: cable/telecom companies or energy companies. Living in Georgia with the likes of Cox, Comcast and Georgia Power we get the worst of the worst.
But hey, AT&T, enjoy it while it lasts. Because the big development to break up your monopoly is coming soon: 5G. 5G wireless will provide gigabit Internet service to mobile devices! So with 5G – and net neutrality – we will soon be able to bypass the cable companies altogether and provide gigabit Internet to all our devices using mobile hotspots. Some companies are beginning early 5G testing already, and have already started to make 5G equipment commercially available. Virtually all the major U.S. phone companies will start 5G testing in earnest in 2017, and it will start rolling out in some markets in 2018. T-Mobile is already gearing up for the 5G era by getting rid of data buckets.
So enjoy your “victory” bought by lining the pockets of politicians today. By 2020, your monopoly will be the equivalent of making carriages and whips for horse-and-buggy outfits because everyone will be using 5G mobile hardware and private routers, and will have replaced cable boxes with modern hardware from the likes of Apple, Amazon, Google and Roku.
Yes, AT&T is also a wireless carrier in addition to being a cable provider. But T-Mobile and especially Verizon have done a whole lot more to prepare for 5G than AT&T has. So 10 years from now when virtually no one relies on land lines for phone, cable TV or Internet we will see if AT&T and the rest of the utilities who have relied on the government protecting their monopolies will still be laughing.
“And if you don’t know – now you know.”
Iranian attack vessel harassing us in international waters? We had to swerve to miss them? Run over their a$$es. They’ll quit real fast. Why do we put up with their s**t?
https://news.usni.org/2016/09/06/iranian-boats-harass-another-u-s-navy-patrol-coastal-ship-persian-gulf