wow, I'd think Seattle being a major tech hub would have better internet.
I live in a farming community 15 minutes from the nearest small city (Google: Paragonah Utah), and we have few competitors but for $90 I get 1 gig fiber. There's not many places in utah where you can't get at least 100-300mb.
The state had the forsight to lay tons of conduit a decade or two ago whenever they do road work so that there's plenty of space for bandwidth upgrades and what not across the entire state.
If you’d expect that of Seattle, try looking at domestic broadband options in Silicon Valley.
For huge swathes you can have lovely ancient old ADSL on your copper phone line or Comcast via cable. Oh and all Comcast plans in the Bay Area, regardless of what the marketing says, have a 1 TB bandwidth cap and charge for overages up to 200 dollars on top of your monthly bill, unless you pay them an additional 50 bucks a month to get the _actually_ unlimited option on all of the plans offered. As you can imagine, many of us living here routinely blow through a terabyte of bandwidth - just one cloud connected security camera can eat a third of it easily.
I wonder how much tech peoples’ views are shaped by the fact that Seattle/the Bay Area have such awful broadband. (After all, broadband construction is mostly regulated at the municipal level, and so varies greatly depending on where you live.) Here in Maryland, 60% of people have access to fiber. Verizon in urban/suburban areas, and in rural areas, the state government is building a fiber backbone for municipal fiber networks to hook into. Almost everywhere also has cable. 4G coverage maps are a sea of color. For the most part, our housing prices also aren’t crazy, because we don’t have crazy anti-development/historical preservation laws. I don’t think these things are unrelated. We have pretty good municipal government here, outside Baltimore. I paid well under $500k for a 4BR house on the water, less than 30 minutes to four train stations, and with two fiber providers. Silicon Valley, by contrast, seems like some parody of American municipal mismanagement.
I am sure there are rural areas in Bay Area that have coverage issues, but definitely not true for urban areas. San Francisco itself has a ton of providers including Monkey Brains, Webpass, Sonic etc. I am on AT&T Fiber and it straight up 1gig up and down at all times.
70% of the city proper has gigabit for $65 a month from Centurylink, OP is out in the fringes where they allowed VDSL2 deployment years ago (whereas Seattle was on ADSL), thus they missed out on upgrades in the last few years. Coverage map for the city proper: https://www.seattle.gov/tech/services/cable-service/cable-fr...
ex-Verizon areas that aren't rural generally have fiber coverage, excepting Finn Hill. They committed to a bunch of smaller suburbs to have 100% fiber coverage by 2008, which mostly got done. Sadly, they only go up to 300mbps symmetrical for $50/month iirc.
The state had the forsight to lay tons of conduit a decade or two ago whenever they do road work so that there's plenty of space for bandwidth upgrades and what not across the entire state.