If there's one thing that I am grateful for, it is the time we changed to wireless rural broadband. We live about 20 minutes southwest of Whangarei where the nearest neighbour is several hundred meters away and dairy cows inhabit paddocks around us.
It's an isolated bliss that came with internet nightmares. Broadband over the copper lines through the exchange was teeth gritting.
My wife and I, although not farmers, work from our rural home several days of the week. We dial into work through remote access and work on tasks via cloud software. We upload and download large files that would often get about halfway through before freezing, stalling and starting again.
In some cases, we would have to take turns working on the internet because our connection was not strong enough to deal with us both.
But now we are all a little more relaxed thanks to the better speeds we can get on wireless rural broadband. We've also had no faults.