You'll be like a kid with a new toy, David.
The smile will spread across your face.
I plan on doing exactly that. I'm going to download the entire internet! (Not really, as that'd be impossible.)
Fortunately, I have sleepy meds. So, I'll be able to sleep the night before.
I never had any complaints with my original DSL and POTS copper wire service.
I had DSL. The company failed me, and I was put into a position where I had to get a satellite connection. At the time, Starlink claimed it was not available at my address. I ended up with HughesNet. I have pretty much nothing good to say about that company.
As for the DSL, we had an ice storm that took out the phone line. That was in early January of that year. They refused to repair the line until spring, which would have been at least April. It could have been later in the year, as we have a long winter where I live.
I found that unacceptable. I no longer wanted to support that company. The idea of giving them more money was just not an idea that I was willing to entertain. I had good service. I had 24 MB/sec down. This was adequate for my needs.
I do find it relatively amusing that the satellite ISP suddenly stopped with bandwidth caps right about the time that the upcoming fiber service was made public. We'd burn through the allotment in under a week and would have really slow internet after that. Streaming 420p videos would consume all of the bandwidth.
I mostly saved said bandwidth for the missus and used a tethered cellphone for my connection. That was unreliable but was adequate when I did get a signal. I'd sometimes get no signal at all, so I'd use the satellite during those outages.
FCC mandate to eliminate copper wire internet and phone service.
I have opinions about this, purely from a technical standpoint.
I've yet to see how reliable this fiber is going to be. I've seen the telephone wires encased in an icy snowbank and still had a solid connection. The above-mentioned outage was a complete disconnection, as in the telephone line itself was severed. Other than that, it had been extremely reliable.
There are people who live in remote areas (such as myself) who can't afford to pay for them to run fiber up their private roads. There are whole small communities that are going to go without service when DSL would have been perfectly adequate. There are still people who don't even have access to DSL.
Getting rid of a giant chunk of infrastructure and leaving it up to the providers is going to result in areas that still won't get access to broadband. The network of phonelines is very robust and very resiliant. It is my opinion that this will result in many areas being continually underserved.

