A Good Internet Solution for Rural Business and Home Owners

(Mon Jan 25th, 2010, by Laura Williamson )

If you are someone who owns a home or business in a somewhat rural area you may be among the millions without a realistic solution for receiving high-speed Internet service. Believe it or not, roughly twenty-five percent of the households and buildings in the United States are still without access to DSL or cable Internet options.

What does this leave them with? The only two answers are low-speed dial-up services that can be more of a problem than they are worth or high-cost satellite Internet that faces blackouts due to weather and offers only limited band width that slows the performance with each additional user.

Fortunately, the rapid expansion of the 4G networks is going to quickly provide one of the finest solutions available. Consider that a 4G network is going to operate at roughly four times the speed of the current 3G offerings. This means that an account holder could stream video or TV, conduct video chats, and even take pictures remotely while sending them back to the office or emailing them, and all without a single wire.

It helps to understand that a building that uses a 4G wireless Internet system will receive their service via something such as a WiMAX network. This is the latest innovation in telecommunications and it relies on a variety of modes to manage data. Basically, it is what is known as a point-to-multipoint network that looks to the many cellular towers and transmitters to keep a rich connection to a network. This is the reason that someone on a train or in the car could watch a movie without interruption, or someone in an office could conduct a video conference through their laptop’s onboard camera.

So, how could 4G Internet provide a superior experience for the rural business or homeowner? Such a service would provide the same speed and performance as a broadband network connection, but would come with the added benefit of continuity. What is continuity in an Internet connection? While a cable or DSL connection can be easily interrupted in a rural location due to downed lines or bad weather, when services are received via the air waves there are rarely any issues or problems with connectivity.

Of course, most 4G services do not end with access to the Internet and can also include phone services too. These are known as the VoIP services and they use the Internet to convert standard phone calls into data that is sent instantly to and from a computer. For example, a rural office that relied on a 4G service could make and accept all of its local and long-distance calls through the network. This same office could use a router to connect all computers and suitable devices to the network as well. All of these things could be accomplished without the need for wires, cables or standard cords of any kind. There wouldn’t even be a line from outdoors coming to a central hub or access within the building, and this is due to the fact that the service is received via a wireless connection.
Laura Williamson