ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) Frank Paxhia's rural home in western New York is close to the high-speed information highway. But he has no access ramp. The retiree, who lives in the town of Friendship, is among hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers who remain on the wrong end of the digital divide.
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) Frank Paxhia's rural home in western New York is close to the high-speed information highway. But he has no access ramp. The retiree, who lives in the town of Friendship, is among hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers who remain on the wrong end of the digital divide.