My wife's mother and sister were staying with us last week. We also had two other house guests. And our Internet service went out. Not just momentarily, but for days. Catastrophe!
Is Internet access becoming one of our basic human needs?
In 1943, psychologist Abraham Maslow published his famous “Hierarchy of Needs”. The idea was simple: the essential survival needs in the lowest level of the pyramid must be satisfied before the individual can turn his or her attention to the next level, and so on. Maslow’s “essential needs” are physiological; food, water, shelter, and physical safety.
Today, as we approach the 2020s, perhaps we need to add one more layer to Maslow’s pyramid: WiFi.
OK, humans probably don’t really need WiFi more than food, but without it, we feel frustrated and "twitchy".
My solution: dual providers and a fail-over router.
On a higher level, is Internet access a "basic human right" that should be handled like the New Deal treated electricity at the beginning of the 20th Century?
Expect to hear more about this (and not just because Bernie Sanders made it a campaign issue).