‘No longer a luxury’: As life moves online, the offline fall behind
Apr 07, 2020
4 minutes
When Amy Olsen wants to have a video chat with her family, she has to drive four miles to the parking lot of the Lowell, Vermont, town clerk to use the free Wi-Fi.
None of Lowell’s 879 or so residents have access to direct broadband service, according to BroadbandNow, a company that helps people find and compare internet service providers. The closest anyone there can get is “fixed wireless,” which uses outdoor directional antennas to broadcast radio signals to residential Wi-Fi gateways. But for that, you need to live close enough to an antenna. Ms. Olsen doesn’t.
Instead she uses a sluggish satellite connection, which is fine for sending email and downloading web pages, but not for much
A vicious cyclePrerequisite for modern life?You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days