The Silicon Shoreline
Alpena pioneers use silicon and soil. Data travels through glass fibers in the dirt. Look at the shift.
Tools change. Residents manage international labor agreements from kitchen islands. These workers harvest carrots between meetings. Wealth flows into the clearing. Communities thrive.
Solar panels on cabin roofs produce electricity for the grid of the region and bank accounts grow from the surplus.
Listen to the hum of the inverter. Growth happens in the woods.
Investors look at the northern woods and they see profit margins instead of timber; meanwhile the fiber optic expansion continues across the peninsula and it connects the cabin to the exchange. Staff of the office file reports from the cedar grove and they avoid the commute to the city.
The March Momentum
State agencies issued new grants for the final miles of connectivity on March 5. Truth or dare, the technician climbs the pole to link the farmhouse to the satellite.
This labor brings the stock market to the tractor seat. I’m very skeptical about the timeline for total coverage. But you do see the expansion of the grid. The density of the city loses its grip on the talent pool.
Michigan High-Speed Internet Office
The Unforeseen Trajectory
The hobbyist now competes with the farm of the industry.
Automation removes the barrier of the chore of the body. A robotic arm weeds the garden while the owner drafts a contract. This efficiency allows the amateur to flood the market with produce. Competition thrives.
Costs in the city push the population toward the lake. Proximity to the headquarters no longer dictates the salary.
The worker chooses the view of the water. This migration changes the economy of the region. Families stay. Success follows.





