6/23/2006 9:53:45 AM
the monopoly is about to be over once the telephone companies enter the competition
6/23/2006 10:16:19 AM
if we ever get fiber to the curb, cable will disapear.
6/23/2006 10:19:52 AM
6/23/2006 10:23:24 AM
^ Your comments don't follow.What are you saying, that telcos aren't bringing fiber to the curb, or that they don't have an answer for cable or what? I'm not enjoying reading between your lines.
6/23/2006 10:40:36 AM
Who the fuck cares if people out in the stix don't get broadband? Thats what they get for living out in the stix. Move to civilization, and you will have access to these amenities. If a place doesn't have access to broadband, it isn't worht living in IMO
6/23/2006 10:45:41 AM
they are bringing fiber to the curb - i'm working on a project that's one of the implementations of how the fiber is going to be used iptv/hsia/phonei'm saying that there will be competition once it gets rolled out later this year to the first marketscurrently they don't have the answer - the first iteration won't even have hdtv - and the 2nd iteration is only going to allow 2 hdtv streams per housefew people will switch to a service that doesn't at least match what they have now
6/23/2006 10:45:48 AM
I live in the (pretty much) sticks in Eastern NC in a town of 2200 and I have broadband DSL.I'm all for this though as the local cable companies up here suck a big ol' fat dick. Charge out the ass and have shit for quality. I went with satellite and am moderately happy with what I have, just hate when the weather messes up my signal.
6/23/2006 11:05:12 AM
I'm still confused, I apologize, but let me try to get this clear.
6/23/2006 11:06:03 AM
6/23/2006 11:19:08 AM
I'm not sure the name of it, I think 3GPP cellular's 4G is a form of it, but the cell phone companies in a few years will become fierce competitors for internet service as soon as we free up the channels currently being used by standard TV. If you can get a TV signal then your cell phone company will be able to offer you high-speed internet access comparable to cable and DSL.I suspect the technology will get over-stressed for bandwidth in dense urban environments, places where cable and DSL thrive, but will service remote rural areas remarkably cheap with impressive capabilities. [Edited on June 23, 2006 at 11:54 AM. Reason : (wrong technology, ish)]
6/23/2006 11:49:39 AM
Towns and municipalities get huge fucking perks/bribes from cable companies for exclusive rights to bury cable in the area. Ethical issues aside, towns and their citizens usually profit in some way from the current system(public access channels, etc). But hell, as long as they still service my ghetto, I'm all for letting them fight it out free market style.
6/23/2006 5:08:35 PM
6/23/2006 5:30:05 PM
we need to do whatever south korea is doing. Fuck this monopolistic bullshit we have now. Fuck Time warner. Fuck comcast. Fuck verizon.
6/23/2006 8:40:18 PM
Yea, I started to post another link in here about Seoul brining WiBro online in the past week, but I got lazy.
6/23/2006 9:25:22 PM
I think some have overlooked an odd feature of non-net neutrality: Even if every ISP went to tiered service, it would then look an awful lot like today’s Cable-TV service. What many have overlooked is the fact that popular channels are not paying money to be carried by the cable companies, they are being PAID money.So, if we assume people love google.com, just like they love DisneyTV, then we must assume the results will be similar: SprintDSL will pay Google for the right to re-broadcast http://www.google.com.This eventuality is obvious with a little thought: some parents sign up for cable simply to gain access to Disney programming, which means even a Cable monopoly must worry because to some subscribers pay-TV without Disney is not worth the money. Conversely, Pay-Internet without E-Bay may also not be worth the money.Given this fact, I don’t think it is proper to worry that the cable company will seek to restrict access to google.com, we should worry that E-Bay is going to wake up and threaten to cut off service to Road Runner Customers if Road Runner doesn’t pay up. This, BTW, is an eventuality that the current proposed legislation would not prevent. http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m3169/is_22_40/ai_62499768
6/24/2006 9:53:01 AM
this thread could be VERY bad for the local governmentand for public access televisionhmmm and under this new system its not required that these companies provide cable access to impoverished areas - that's not good[Edited on June 24, 2006 at 11:31 AM. Reason : -]
6/24/2006 11:30:37 AM
6/24/2006 12:13:02 PM
6/24/2006 1:37:46 PM
Why doesn't the government just implement a fair tax, this way they don't have to enact draconian legislation to get their peice of the pieshttp://tinyurl.com/omtv7
6/24/2006 1:53:45 PM
6/24/2006 2:05:11 PM
I just don't seeing the two models being the same for your point to be valid. I already pointed out a case where ebay/google, etc wouldn't willfully cut off customers. Can you think of an internet example that actually works.Myspace might be a start. As long as cable monopolies are in place at the local level, I don't think ISPs have too much to worry about.
6/24/2006 2:28:36 PM
6/24/2006 5:00:08 PM
6/24/2006 7:07:51 PM
Why? I realize the two markets are so far operating very differently, but one of them is only 10 years old. I suspect in the beginning Disney had to pay to get carried by cable companies, amazing what time can change.Both Disney and Google earn money directly from their customers through advertisers. The more viewers the more ad-revenue. Neither can reach their customers without being carried through the network of a 3rd party, Time Warner Cable or Road Runner Online. Both 3rd party networks earn connection fees directly from customers. For Internet, the market is 10 years old. For CableTV the market is several decades older. In CableTV the ultimate result was Disney getting paid large sums of money by Time Warner Cable. As far as I can tell the two comparisons are exact, there is no functional difference between the two situations except one is a TV channel and the other is an Internet web-site. So, again, please, point out the fundamental differences that will render such a comparison impossible. Now, the Internet is different, Google will have trouble blocking all access by Time Warner subscribers thanks to the existence of remote proxy servers. Is this the type of reason you were alluding to?[Edited on June 24, 2006 at 10:43 PM. Reason : .,.]
6/24/2006 10:40:09 PM
people treat their opinion as fact too much in soap box
6/25/2006 11:29:15 PM
Updatehttp://www.wral.com/news/9429696/detail.htmlAlso
6/27/2006 1:05:22 PM
6/27/2006 3:53:10 PM