民視新聞說立委促電路費降至100元

要選舉了嗎?

選前能通過最好, 拖到選後又要再等3年囉
哪位立委 一定要露臉一下阿
這樣才能獲得廣大網友的推崇

趕快降趕快降
網路費變貴又怎樣
反正我家又不是用種花

所以 趕快換家吧
雖然目前只是換一半
總比被綁架好
CPU: AMD Athlon64 X2 6000+ RAM: DDR2-667 6G GPU: ATI 4670 1G DDR3
利委的話聽過就算了吧

誰知道他背地裡想幹什麼

絕對當他的道具被利用

看戲吧
ishtar wrote:
要不然就是仿效美國,沒有電路費。
不過....家中的線路要自己負責,電信商的線路只到你家門口,好處是,你想換哪家都方便,壞處是,萬一家中的線路有問題,修起來很貴
恕刪)


你這建議,我覺得不錯

家裡線路遷一條,電信公司價錢大概在600-1200,施工困難或土匪一點價錢大概在1500-2000,若是簡單的線路300都有人做
說真的線路根本不容易壞,網路有問題大多伺服器端的問題比較多,比起每個月收費,一次解決,便宜太多了
再說網路業者遷線進屋裡也只遷到播接網路那台機器,不包含整個家裡整個網路線路,進不進到屋裡根本沒差
這樣業者有龐大的工作,就會請很多員工,也可解決失一點業率的問題,業者多的話為了生存一定會降價拉線路價錢

但困難啦,肥水不落外人田,中華電信連交換機(總機)系統,都要搶民間業者的生意了,怎麼可能會放棄這塊肥田

試問大家,網路用那麼多年了,屋裡線路壞掉的機率高嗎??

我反而認為要對網路與有線電視課徵奢侈稅!!

這2項物品不是必須,但卻成為增加子女養育費的藉口之一!

尤其失蹤少女的房間一定有能上網的電腦,家長居然不知道這樣是非常危險的事!
都是講講拉....

這種話講了幾次.....

每次講,講到後來就沒消息了.....

立委因該從這裡下手:

CHT六月營業收入153.6億元~
累計一至六月營業收入917.7億!

[坑很大]~~~
一山還有一高,雞蛋還有雞蛋糕...!!!
大家有算算看,自從用寬頻以來
繳了幾萬元給中華電信了嗎
說真的
真是暴利
(有些人一年繳的稅,還沒給中華電信多)
皮很丘 wrote:
我反而認為要對網路與有線電視課徵奢侈稅!!

這2項物品不是必須


其實現在和以前不一樣了,
以前或許覺得有沒有沒差,但現在有時候甚至要透過網路交作業。

想想看你現在會選擇去圖書館查資料還是網路查資料?

如果擔心應該是將電腦擺在客廳。
01不給改暱稱,請叫我柚子 Blog: http://www.3cblog.idv.tw

pettter wrote:
CHT六月營業收入153.6億元~
累計一至六月營業收入917.7億!


中華電信的業務不只網路 還好市內電話 手機電話
有單項網路的收入嗎
皮很丘 wrote:
我反而認為要對網路與有線電視課徵奢侈稅!!

這2項物品不是必須,但卻成為增加子女養育費的藉口之一!

World leaders agree: The future will be Built on Broadband

As high-speed networks transform our world,

New York, 19 September 2010 - ITU Secretary-General Dr Hamadoun Touré today challenged global leaders to ensure that more than half of all the world’s people have access to broadband networks by 2015, and make access to high-speed networks a basic civil right.
Dr Touré threw down the challenge to politicians, UN agency chiefs and industry heavyweights at the second meeting of the Broadband Commission for Digital Development, which delivered its final outcome report earlier today to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in New York.
“Broadband is the next tipping point, the next truly transformational technology. It can generate jobs, drive growth and productivity, and underpin long-term economic competitiveness. It is also the most powerful tool we have at our disposal in our race to meet the Millennium Development Goals, which are now just five years away,” said Dr Touré.
The Commission outcome report, which includes a High-Level Declaration calling for ‘Broadband Inclusion for All’, comprises a detailed framework for broadband deployment and ten Action Points aimed at mobilizing all stakeholders and convincing government leaders to prioritize the roll-out of broadband networks to their citizens.
Recent research suggests a strong link between broadband penetration and economic growth. “In the 21st century, affordable, ubiquitous broadband networks will be as critical to social and economic prosperity as networks like transport, water and power. Broadband will serve as tomorrow’s fountain of innovation. It represents the ripening of the digital revolution, the fruits of which have yet to be invented or even imagined.”
The report was presented to the UN Secretary-General during a side-event held in conjunction with the UN MDG Summit, which is set to begin tomorrow at UN headquarters. Receiving the report, Mr Ban noted the power of technology to inject new impetus into the development paradigm.
“Information and communication technologies are playing an increasingly important role as drivers of social and economic development, but it will take partnerships such as the Broadband Commission to ensure that those technologies live up to their extraordinary potential,” said Mr Ban. “The Commission’s report is an important contribution to our efforts to ensure that the benefits of information and communication technology can further the United Nations goals of peace, security or development for all.”
The report stresses the need for leaders to focus on building a ‘virtuous broadband development dynamic’, noting that broadband has the power to “cut a swathe through the silos associated with health, education, energy, transport, the environment and other key sectors.”
It also asks: “What price will be paid in the brave new world of digital opportunity by those who fail to embrace broadband inclusion for their citizens?” – a stark warning in light of huge disparities in broadband affordability worldwide, which means that those who can least afford it pay the most for access, relative to average national monthly income.
While subscribers in the developed world – for example the UK, US, Canada or Australia – pay under 1% of average national monthly income for a fast broadband connection, in many of the world’s UN-designated Least Developed Countries, such as Ethiopia, Malawi or Niger, even a relatively slow broadband connection costs many times an average monthly salary.
Affordability has a clear and direct correlation to take-up, so that while fixed broadband penetration stands at around 30% in many of the highly ‘wired’ countries of Western Europe, Oceania and North America, it is closer to 10% in BRIC countries, and under 1% in the world’s poorest nations.
The Commission outcome report stresses the importance of promoting cultural diversity and multilingualism in the online world. It urges governments not to limit market entry nor tax broadband and related services too heavily, and to ensure ample availability of spectrum to support mobile broadband growth. ITU forecasts a total of 900 million broadband subscriptions by 2010 – and predicts that mobile broadband will be the access technology of choice for millions in the developing world, where fixed link infrastructure is sparse and expensive to deploy.
“The new realities and opportunities for digital development must be firmly fixed in the minds of world leaders as a leadership imperative,” says the report, urging leaders to replicate the ‘mobile miracle’ of the first decade of the 21st century in a ‘broadband boom’ that will created shared high-speed resources accessible and beneficial to all.
If you do not go within, you go without.
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