I worked on a isdn product in the early 90's. Isdn could have been an easy stop gap between analog and fiber but Telcos had made isdn impossibly convoluted. Later when I ran an isp we had ~10,000 analog customers and maybe 20 isdn.
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A place for discussion, videos, pictures, and other related content of retro and vintage technology of all kinds. Especially retro tech that is still in use today.
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I'll have to see if I can dig it up, but there was an article I read a good while back that's basically the long-form version of your comment. Something about ISDN being the stepping stone to broadband that never was.
The gist was that those who could get ISDN early-on loved it, but for anyone else, it was too little too late as DSL was starting to be rolled out.
I lived in the boonies throughout the dial-up era and had BoonieNet as my dialup ISP (couldn't even use AOL since every point of presence was long distance for us). Sadly, 33.6 was peak performance in my area, though more often, it was 26.4 Kbps due to our distance from the CO and crappy lines.
What I learned from this article is that the CO definitely wasn't using any kind of digital trunk at the time since even people in town right next to it never got faster than 33.6.