Chris Adams wrote: > Once upon a time, Kevin Kofler <kevin.kofler@xxxxxxxxx> said: >> If the infrastructure sucks where you live, what needs to happen >> is that the infrastructure needs to improve, not that the whole >> world adapts to stone-age infrastructure. Bandwidth is required >> for many more applications than just fetching Fedora updates. > That is just completely out of touch with reality. We live in the > real world and have to deal with real problems; you can't just wave > a magic wand and make them go away. While many third-world countries have made high speed connections a priority, these countries are often densely populated. In more rural areas, high speed connections are economically impractical. Here in Michigan, which is one of the more populous states, terrestrial high speed connections are simply unavailable in about half the state. Satellite connections are expensive, not terribly fast, and because of the weather, very unreliable. Much of this state has a population density less than 5 people per square kilometer, and that is crowded compared to many of the western states. At those population densities it will be some time before technology will be able to deliver high bandwidth connections economically to much of the population. If you are sitting in the crowded cities of western Europe, it may be hard to imagine a world where your nearest neighbor is a kilometer away, but that is how it is in much of the world. The distances can be vast, and hard to picture from inside Europe (or Manhattan, for that matter). --McD -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel