Let $I = [0,1]$ and consider $I^{\omega}$ as a topological space under the dictionary order. Are all path components of $I^\omega$ trivial? Otherwise I expect $I^{\omega}$ to be path connected since I think it, without its endpoints, is $2$-transitive. This seems odd since $I^n$ are not path connected for finite $n > 1$.
I proved (Do linear continua contain $\mathbb{R}$? Can a nontrivial connected space have only trivial path components?) that this is true for $I^{\omega_1}$ but that proof uses the fact that $\omega_1$ has uncountably many elements.
I realized by cardinal arithmetic that the set of points between any two points of $I^{\omega_1}$ has cardinality equal to that of $2^{\mathfrak c}$ and so there cannot be a path between them since the cardinalities don't agree. Closed intervals of $I^{\omega}$ do however have the right cardinality so this argument doesn't work.