Or you could copy something like Australia's NBN model. A single wholesaler builds and maintains the cables. They *must* run a cable if required for anyone in their service area. But they are only allowed to offer and charge for a link layer transport between end points. Any ISP can then include the rent of the link in the price for internet access and other services for their customers.
Though of course the NBN has screwed up. They bowed to pressure from the incumbents in a number of ways that made running a small ISP unprofitable. They based the pricing of link capacity on the current cost of bandwidth over existing services. And the new government has been trying to compromise the quality of the network by building curb side nodes instead of running fiber end-to-end.
Most of the companies that built rail, went bankrupt. After they were built, nobody was willing to pay the rent they needed to break even. Sometimes construction should be paid for from general tax revenue, because nobody can make money from it.
A couple of little easter eggs in bespoke software;
Hold a couple of modifier keys and click on the icon in the about dialog, "The developers [names] would like to present you with a complimentary cup holder" followed by opening the CD ROM tray. Every new developer checked in a change with their own name once they'd passed their probationary period.
Leave the about dialog open for 5 minutes, the dialog goes black and the developers names start floating around like the game asteroids. Click on a letter and it will disappear, splitting the name in half. With both parts moving slightly faster. Probably should have made it slightly hard to start though. The customer had a ball, but the manager was not happy.
Yeah, yeah. The sky is falling.... Except that it isn't. With signed bootloaders like shim, you can install or run any operating system yourself without changing the BIOS to disable Secure Boot at all.
Not being able to run a 3rd party OS was a concern with Windows 8. But the open source community have solved that problem. So being able to disable Secure Boot is no longer required.
... if a whole bunch of people internally at Valve said they wanted to do it
He's being quite literal there. Valve doesn't force people to work on particular projects. If nobody wants to do it, it wont get done.
All seems condemned in the long run to approximate a state akin to Gaussian noise. -- James Martin