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DSL Prime: Statistics and Lies Dave Burstein
[July 2, 2008] The numbers show that ILECs in North America are falling behind those in Europe and Asia, and they can also tell you some things you did not know already.
DSL Prime: Cable Wants a Worldwide Deal Dave Burstein
[June 23, 2008] Cable companies seek to standardize the set top box. Some CEOs face charges with substantial evidence, while Congress appears ready to pass a law to let others go free.
DSL Prime: New York City's 100 Percent Broadband Plan Dave
Burstein
[May 9, 2008] It looks like Verizon will deliver fiber to 100 percent of New York City without any subsidy or tax credit. If so, it could set a positive pattern for the rest of the world.
DSL Prime: 50 Mbps Docsis, 200 Mbps GPON Dave
Burstein
[April 15, 2008] Good plans to deploy real speeds, unless Wall Street prevents investment.
DSL Prime: Underperformance in Closed Markets Dave
Burstein
[March 11, 2008] Kennard's Carlyle fails to grow subscribers in Hawaii. In Britain, government intervention will be required in order to equal the high standards in the rest of Europe.
DSL Prime: Tanks Protect Broadband President Accused of Corruption Dave
Burstein
[February 28, 2008] If ZTE actually spent $100 million to obtain a $300 million contract, they overpaid—the going rate for graft worldwide is closer to $1 in bribes per $10 in contracts, with even better rates available in the U.S. and Saudi Arabia.
DSL Prime: Wall Street Falls Dave
Burstein
[January 23, 2008] DSL Prime examines the future of the Bells as Wall Street slowly passes its own flawed judgment.
DSL
Prime: FCC Chief: "I Failed My President" Dave
Burstein
[January 8, 2008] Martin attempts an honest examination
of his legacy, as technology improves and more of the world gets connected.
Also, Apgar's data suggests the U.S. internet runs faster than previously
believed.
DSL
Prime: Full Length HD Video Dave
Burstein
[July 30, 2007] With innovative delivery methods
and ever-increasing end-user bandwidth, the future of internet video looks
nothing at all like the YouTube present.
Do
Your Database Queries Yourself Best
of ISP-Lists
[July 20, 2007] CLEC managers discuss avoiding
LNP query fees.
DSL
Prime: Closing the Internet to the Poor Dave
Burstein
[June 28, 2007] While lack of competition partly
explains why broadband is available in some places and not in others,
poverty and corrupt government could explain the rest in places such as
the U.S. and Japan.
DSL
Prime: 100 Mbps Gunslingers Dave
Burstein
[June 7, 2007] Companies like AT&T that plan
to deliver only 6 Mbps will be shot down by the competition.
DSL
Prime: Showdown Between AT&T and Alcatel Dave
Burstein
[March 21, 2007] Two companies used to delivering
monopoly pricing and monopoly lack of service start an argument, and the
governments of France and the U.S. may get involved as layoffs loom for
thousands.
DSL
Prime: Competition's Everywhere But Here (and China) Dave
Burstein
[March 9, 2007] The triple play in France is one-third
to one-half the price in the U.S., and for a single reason. Meanwhile,
China follows the U.S. re-monopolization pattern.
DSL
Prime: Telecommunications Saves Lives Dave
Burstein
[February 7, 2007] Keeping service affordable
as well as available helps save the lives of people going through everyday
events as well as those in disaster areas.
DSL
Prime: VDSL's Problems Dave
Burstein
[January 12, 2007] Crossover and backward compatibility
issues mean that ADSL2+ is being deployed even though VDSL should be the
superior technology.
DSL
Prime: AT&T's Net Neutrality Offer is Just Hot Air Dave
Burstein
[January 4, 2007] AT&T promises to deliver bits
without traffic shaping, but the agreement excludes the parts of the network
it can control.
DSL
Prime: Pricing Lies Continue As Bell Labs Dies Dave
Burstein
[December 8, 2006] Whenever the phone companies
ask the government for more money, less competition, or permission to
merge, they promise more investment and innovation, but in fact they are
cutting back as fast as they can.
DSL
Prime: AT&T Willing to Risk BellSouth Deal Dave
Burstein
[November 28, 2006] While the Alcatel-Lucent deal
is done, waiting only on rapprochement between two sets of spooks, the
BellSouth deal might be over.
DSL
Prime: Remarkable Margins in Telco DSL Dave
Burstein
[November 6, 2006] As the buildout comes to a
close, most of DSL revenue is pure profit.
DSL
Prime: AT&T Dissing the President Dave
Burstein
[October 19, 2006] The phone company thinks it
can offer as "concessions" the things it's already doing, but observers
are not surprised, because cable is already getting away with the same
hoax.
DSL
Prime: Apple Video = IPTV Crisis Dave
Burstein
[September 13, 2006] Content offered over open
networks will be cheaper and superior to content available over closed
networks. Offerings from Amazon, Apple, and Google will use different
delivery mechanisms to achieve a lower cost. The TelcoTV model is fragile,
perhaps broken.
DSL
Prime: AT&T's Ashcroft Dave
Burstein
[September 11, 2006] In the latest news: AT&T
and Verizon may need the best legal talent in the industry.
DSL
Prime: China as Number One Dave
Burstein
[September 7, 2006] China's top ILEC has more
subscribers than the entire U.S., and almost all use DSL. China also leads
the world in DSL manufacturing, and is moving upmarket into engineering.
DSL
Prime: Forecast: Telcos and Cablecos Collude With Winks and Nods
Dave Burstein
[August 25, 2006] As the EU acts to open yet another
European market to telecoms competition, Canada and the U.S. act to close
theirs.
DSL
Prime: Telcos and Governments Dave
Burstein
[August 3, 2006] DT puts pressure on the German
government, BT fears new competition, and in the one nation that faced
down the pressure, South Korea, a truly 21st century network is being
augmented. In the U.S., confident telcos and cablecos cut deployment and
jobs while raising prices, pleasing the stock market.
DSL
Prime: India Blocks Yahoo, Google, Blogs Dave
Burstein
[July 27, 2006] As the net neutrality debate heats
up, a relatively liberal nation implements censorship. Of course, totalitarian
regimes do this all the time, with U.S. equipment, without facing the
press.
DSL
Prime: Growth Will Slow Dave
Burstein
[July 24, 2006] As broadband reaches the 75 percent
mark in many customers, many of the remaining customers don't have it
because they don't want it.
DSL
Prime: AOL's Death Revisited Dave
Burstein
[July 13, 2006] Bad government policies assassinated
what was once the world's largest ISP.
DSL
Prime: 100 Mbps VDSL Dave
Burstein
[July 3, 2006] Only one U.S. telco even has plans
to deliver 100 Mbps, and cable won't be at 100 Mbps in the U.S. until
2008.
DSL
Prime: Tears in Munich, Sadness in Murray Hill Dave
Burstein
[June 21, 2006] It's a changing of the telecom
guard as Siemens and Lucent are acquired. Only the companies that invest
in innovation will win the future, and right now few U.S. telecom companies
are thinking beyond the next quarter.
DSL
Prime: DSL Declines in Japan Dave
Burstein
[June 9, 2006] While some nations are struggling
to achieve nationwide DSL, the most advanced and most competitive are
moving on to 100 Mbps fiber.
DSL
Prime: Free Nationwide Wireless Dave
Burstein
[May 22, 2006] One company has applied to the
FCC for 20 MHz of spectrum in return for providing 95 percent of U.S.
customers free coverage (after CPE purchase).
DSL
Prime: Build Your Own NSA Computer Dave
Burstein
[May 19, 2006] Supercomputers are cheap, and every
phone call record can be stored in much less than a petabyte.
Book
Excerpt: Next-Generation Network Services Robert
Wood
[May 11, 2006] In this excerpt from a Cisco Press
tome, we provide fundamental technical information about Ethernet technology.
Book
Excerpt: Next-Generation Network Services Robert
Wood
[May 9, 2006] In this excerpt from a Cisco Press
tome, we provide fundamental technical information about DSL technology.
DSL
Prime: AT&T, Verizon Promise Net Neutrality Dave
Burstein
[April 5, 2006] If these telco CEOs are telling
the truth, it would be good for the future of the United States.
DSL
Prime: BellSouth's 20,000 Percent iTunes Markup Dave
Burstein
[February 15, 2006] As competition declines around
the world, the Bells look to the next monopoly battleground, fighting
the first skirmishes for total control of the internet.
DSL
Prime: Proprietary VDSL Dave
Burstein
[February 1, 2005] VDSL equipment is being shipped,
but it is not necessarily interoperable between vendors, creating headaches
for the industry as carriers need to test equipment themselves, slowing
purchases and deployments.
DSL
Prime: A Truly Worldwide Web Means Less for U.S. and European Backbones
Dave Burstein
[December 22, 2005] A further price collapse in
the backbones, caused by regional links obviating the need for all internet
traffic to pass thorugh the U.S. and Europe, means even more problems
for carriers.
DSL
Prime: 100 Mbps in North America and Europe Dave
Burstein
[December 5, 2005] Technology originally designed
for Asia, which leads the world in broadband speeds, is finally arriving
in the broadband backwaters.
DSL
Prime: Telcos Ready To Scrap Old Iron Dave
Burstein
[November 30, 2005] The telcos of the world are
now ready to admit that IP is cheaper. As the old buildings full of physical
switches vanish, a new telecommunications world arrives.
DSL
Prime: Moore's Law Too Fast For D.C. Dave
Burstein
[November 18, 2005] Lower prices and greater bandwidth
are a winning combination around the world, but regulators still have
much to learn.
DSL
Prime: VDSL Gear Drops to $66 for 100 Mbps Dave
Burstein
[October 24, 2005] Now that even Walt Mossberg
is complaining about DSL download speeds for iPod music, surely nobody
doubts that customers want speed, and at current equipment prices, there's
no excuse for failing to deliver.
DSL
Prime: After Katrina Dave
Burstein
[October 12, 2005] Washington D.C. needs to be
willing to think outside the telco box in order to learn the telecommunications
lessons Katrina taught.
DSL
Prime: Politics Intervenes, Again Dave
Burstein
[September 21, 2005] While Paris sees 100 Mbps
service, SBC's representative in Congress thinks corporations should be
allowed to block content on their networks. Luckily, citizen journalism
is working, even as the big news outlets fall for the press releases.
DSL
Prime: 50 Mbps VDSL for Germany Dave
Burstein
[September 7, 2005] It was doable in 2003, but
only now is Deutsche Telekom rolling out 50 Mbps VDSL service. Higher
speeds are possible where the telco commits to a rebuild, shrugging off
the copper shell in a massive writedown. Things are getting interesting
in telecom.
DSL
Prime: Sony's Unlimited P2P Deal Dave
Burstein
[August 29, 2005] Now that content from Sony (and
the BBC too) is finally available for broadband, surely residential users
will be allowed true fiber speeds?
DSL
Prime: BellSouth Fantasies Dave
Burstein
[July 29, 2005] Surely everybody agrees that fiber
is the right diet for DSL?
IPTV
Grows in Europe Gerry
Blackwell
[June 30, 2005] A well-funded startup has managed
an impressive start, growing in part, ironically, thanks to the monopolies
that rule its nation.
DSL
Prime Mega Issue Dave
Burstein
[June 29, 2005] We combine two issues of DSL Prime
into one massive collection of data that shows that broadband can be deployed
everywhere, and deployed faster. Also, a farewell to FCC internet guru
Robert Pepper.
DSL
Prime: New York Demands Dave
Burstein
[June 10, 2005] New York City might be the next
city to get a municipal broadband plan today, but Dave Burstein is telling
the New York City Council today to work with private industry, not to
try to go it alone.
DSL
Prime: 100 Mbps Bell South VDSL2 Dave
Burstein
[June 3, 2005] Don't try to order it tomorrow,
but the nicest of the RBOCs plans to deliver real speed in the future.
DSL
Prime: $10 VDSL Chips Dave
Burstein
[June 2, 2005] The technology to deliver television
over DSL is here—as is the technology to block competing VoIP and video
feeds.
DSL
Prime: Subscriber Numbers Dave
Burstein
[May 18, 2005] The rate of growth of both DSL
and VoIP continues to impress, but please don't overhype the numbers.
They're impressive enough as they are.
DSL
Prime: DSM Doubles Speeds Dave
Burstein
[May 5, 2005] This is truly nifty. Dynamic Spectrum
Management really can double DSL speeds.
DSL
Prime: Google TV Dave Burstein
[April 19, 2005] One again, google redefines the business
paradigm, this time altering the telecom universe, and peering experts might
be interested in a job offer posted on the google website.
DSL
Prime: Faster, Verizon! Go! Go! Dave
Burstein
[April 12, 2005] A big, big backbone upgrade at Verizon
shows that the U.S. could follow the broadband path blazed by Korea and Japan.
DSL
Prime: One Added Every Second Dave
Burstein
[April 1, 2005] DSL's global subscribership passes 100
million, and one more DSL subscriber is being added every second.
DSL
Prime: Cable's Gigabit Modems Dave
Burstein
[March 10, 2005] If cable continues to increase
speeds while phone companies fail to change, the cable gigabit modem will
prove to be a DSL killer.
DSL
Prime News: Every 10 Seconds Dave
Burstein
[February 18, 2005] With one new customer every 10 seconds,
Britain proves that people want DSLthrough anyone but the telco if the
regulator will permit it.
DSL
Prime: ST Out, Electriphy In Dave
Burstein
[February 7, 2005] As one equipment maker drops out
of the DSL business, another comes out of stealth mode.
DSL
Prime: Every Village in Andra Pradesh Dave
Burstein
[January 7, 2005] In India, they're planning to deliver
DSL at a price that many will be able to afford. If they can wire every poor
village in India, it's pretty obvious the telcos in Maine or Indiana can do
the same thing.
DSL
Prime: Forty Percent Faster With MIMO Dave
Burstein
[January 3, 2005] New technology will allow telcos to
cram even more data down that copper pipe.
DSL
Prime: VDSL 2 or ADSL 3? Dave
Burstein
[December 8, 2004] As networks around the world investigate
new technologies, we can begin to guess who the winners and losers will be,
though much remains to be seen.
DSL
Prime: A $29 Billion Spending Gap Dave
Burstein
[November 30, 2004] SBC has finally revealed in public
a policy that many had privately suspected.
DSL
Prime: Commissioner or Dogcatcher? Dave
Burstein
[November 17, 2004] DSL Prime revises its nominations
to the FCC, examines real CPE costs, and shows how other countries are
plotting a path to nationwide broadband availability.
DSL
Prime: Headlines for a Happy Company Dave
Burstein
[November 16, 2004] As SBC prepares to risk it all on
unproven technology, some companies around the world are rolling out real broadband,
as shown in the happy headlines.
No
Old Iron Alex Goldman
[November 4, 2004] Take a look at what you get when
you build a VoIP service with the new technology of softswitches and SIP, incorporating
the lessons of the CLEC buildout.
DSL
Prime: Masayoshi's Threat to Regulators Dave
Burstein
[November 3, 2004] The story of how one entrepeneur
changed the regulatory climate in Japan is little known, but instructive.
One person can make a difference.
DSL
Prime: France Turns On 15 Mbps Dave
Burstein
[October 27, 2004] It's just another reminder
of how backward the broadband industry is the in the United States. We're
certainly not number one in broadband.
DSL
Prime: As Regulators Retire Dave
Burstein
[October 14, 2004] In South Korea, a global pattern
continues: when regulators retire, they get high paying jobs in the industry
they regulated.
Startup
Promises New Carrier Class DSL Hardware Alex
Goldman
[October 4, 2004] Out of Canada, which (in DSL terms)
is more advanced than the U.S., comes a startup with a nifty little DSLAM that,
the company says, goes way beyond next generation DSL to deliver a network designed
for services.
DSL
Prime: China Down Dave Burstein
[September 23, 2004] While questions are being raised
about China's economy, France's ILEC prepares to deploy 6 Mbps this year, and
speeds up to 16 Mbps next year.
DSL
Prime: 30 Mbps Is Not Enough Dave
Burstein
[September 9, 2004] If you're an RBOC looking to the
future, you're rolling out 30 Mbps access right now.
Future
of TV Jennie Bourne and Dave
Burstein
[August 27, 2004] We are pleased to offer the inaugural
issue of the Future of TV newsletter to our readers—you'll need to subscribe
to obtain future issues.
DSL
Prime: Don't Let the Research Die Dave
Burstein
[August 26, 2004] While South Korea surges in high tech
DSL deployment, an icon of U.S. research is probably for sale.
DSL
Prime: VDSL2 Dave Burstein
[August 20, 2004] DSL Prime reports that even though
the standard is not final, elements of the technology are showing up in products
that are already on the market.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source Dave
Burstein
[July 30, 2004] DSL Prime reports on competition, technology,
and financial markets around the world.
DSL
Prime: Count Real Speed, Not Angels on Pinheads Dave
Burstein
[July 19, 2004] While nations such as Chile and India
report progress, the RBOCs resort to rewriting the dictionary with the aid of
their pet legislators.
DSL
Prime: Buildouts Without Spin Dave
Burstein
[July 7, 2004] In the U.S. different RBOCs have very
different buildout plans. Don't listen to what they say; look at the capital
expenditure plans in the SEC financial filings. This is also true of MCI.
Should
I Buy a Softswitch? Max
Smetannikov
[June 24, 2004] Connecting analog and digital
voice networks is cheaper than it used to be, but that doesn't mean that
a softswitch is for everyone.
DSL
Prime: BT's New World Dave
Burstein
[June 22, 2004] In big VoIP news, BT embraces VoIP,
Japan's VoIP deployments continue, SUPERCOMM is here, and Om Malik's scoop is
just part of a good VoIP blog. Apple shows what's next with its video iPod.
Also, DSL stats from Point-Topic and the DSL Forum.
DSL
Prime: TI Boosting 100 Mbps Dave
Burstein
[June 22, 2004] U.S. users are ready to switch to broadband,
just as vendors and ISPs begin preparations to bring 100 Mbps service to the
U.S. On the other hand, Q2 subscriber adds in the U.S. are likely to disappoint.
Predicting
the Shape of TV Over IP Gerry
Blackwell
[June 18, 2004] TV over broadband is coming, but it
could manifest itself in any of several different forms, with significant consequences
for ISPs large and small.
DSL
Prime: Unreliable Speeds Hit AOL UK Dave
Burstein
[June 8, 2004] While AOL delivers much less than advertised,
Britian (for the best of reasons) and China are censoring the Web. Companies
and nations need to do more to deliver the real broadband Internet.
DSL
Prime: Local Telcos and the Mob Dave
Burstein
[June 4, 2004] While CenturyTel is caught up in
a mob scam and should have known better, the telcos are preparing to ask
D.C. for $60 billion. DSL Prime says there should be no price rises—and
no USF.
DSL
Prime: Verizon Unbundles DSL Dave
Burstein
[May 28, 2004] DSL Prime praises Verizon, loses an SBC
subscriber because of previous comments about the CEO, and anticipates 100 Mbps
DSL as envisioned by Bell Canada. The DSL future is television, music, and more.
DSL
Prime: Explosive Growth Dave
Burstein
[May 19, 2004] DSL is growing very rapidly, especially
in nations like France, Japan, and Canada, whose governments are encouraging
competition.
DSL
Prime: The World Turns Dave
Burstein
[May 3, 2004] Competition comes to France, China and
India are starting a massive growth spurt, and Japan and South Korea may have
reached maximum penetration.
Security
at Fiber Speeds Alex Goldman
[May 3, 2004] It's no secret that a gigabit network
can challenge the processing power of gigahertz microprocessors. So when local
fiber ISP Dalton Utilities started looking for a gateway security solution,
there were few options.
DSL
Prime: Better, Faster DSL Dave
Burstein
[April 29, 2004] In this issue of DSL Prime, we talk
about all that's working to encourage DSL deployment—and the one thing that
isn't: the U.S. government.
GWI's
Big Lucent Buy Alex Goldman
[March 29, 2004] GWI, one of the oldest ISPs on the
planet, has just invested in a significant DSL infrastructure upgrade. We spoke
to the company's founder and president to find out why.
DSL
Prime: British Telecom Cannibals Dave
Burstein
[March 24, 2004] BT embraces VoIP, even though it admits
the technology will hurt sales on its legacy network. Even the U.S. RBOCs are
finally running fiber.
DSL
Prime: As AOL Dies Dave Burstein
[March 1, 2004] As AOL exits dialup, and U.S. RBOCs
continue to fail to invest in broadband, the DSL market in China grows because
that's where the investment is, not because of China's cheap labor.
DSL
Prime: Qwest DSL Unclothed Dave
Burstein
[February 23, 2004] Recently, we suggested that Qwest
was obstructing DSL sales by requiring DSL customers to also buy phone service.
Last week, much to our joy, Qwest proved us wrong.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source Dave
Burstein
[February 13, 2004] A rare victory for small business
in VoIP should not obscure the fact that DSL competition is fading across America.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source Dave
Burstein
[January 30, 2004] A close look at what news is real
in the DSL industry—and what isn't.
UNIX
at the Core of the Net Alex
Goldman
[January 9, 2004] Extreme Networks' latest product
is the result of over three years of secret research. The company aims to enable
a revolution in the delivery of converged services.
DSL
Prime: Qwest Prices Kill DSL VoIP Dave
Burstein
[January 5, 2004] No other observer has noted this
salient fact: at some telcos, DSL prices and monopoly bundle strategies will
hold back the VoIP technology wave, harming independents like Vonage.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source Dave
Burstein
[December 29, 2003] Thanks in part to the DSL Forum,
a global DSL industry is cooperating on standards as speeds increase and innovation
continues. This week, the pace is being set by South Korea—and Canada.
Netopia
Brings DSL and Wi-Fi Together ISP-Planet
Staff
[December 26, 2003] Always looking for a DSL CPE advantage,
Netopia has added easy WLAN installation to the portfolio of services its equipment
enables telcos to offer.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source Dave
Burstein
[December 19, 2003] The Bells may have finally gone
too far this time. Do they know it? Also: the uncertain finances of Masayoshi
Son, and how RBOCs buy regulators.
ISPs
Tie Regulatory and Voice Strategy Into
Softswitch Max Smetannikov
[December 19, 2003] ISPs can join the gorillas by buying
a $170,000 box and taking on the challenges of a vast array of new services.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source Dave
Burstein
[December 4, 2003] Voice and even television over DSL
are being deployed abroad, and the telcos may even allow it to happen in the
U.S.
Drool
Boxes on the Show Floor Alex
Goldman
[November 17, 2003] Now playing in Phoenix, Arizona:
A trade show on whose show floor is a greater amount of bandwidth than
is available to many of the nations of the world.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[November 3, 2003] As Japan goes to 40 Mbps, Masayoshi
Son challenges the West to deliver one-tenth the speed.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[October 6, 2003] The next generation of DSLAMs costs
$60 per port. Prices are dropping, but there are doubts about vendors' tests.
And Michael Powell has a secret.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[September 19, 2003] Technology itself, and deployment
in Britain and Japan, are bright spots in the DSL industry, but strange accounting
continues to darken the DSL future in the U.S.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[September 10, 2003] The new DSL deployment numbers
from telcos and equipment makers include some surprises, while promising new
DSL technologies may help DSL compete with cable.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[September 4, 2003] Covad should be able to raise money
on the equity markets, SBC is stabbing its CEO in the back, VDSL2 is coming,
and Yahoo BB adds games.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[August 22, 2003] The Bells continue to solicit bids
on their purported fiber build while competition is actually working in Japan—the
only major DSL market in the world where the incumbent is far behind.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[August 20, 2003] As VDSL technology continues to advance,
and speeds increase around the world, ILECs in the U.S. and UK are cutting jobs,
denying that doing so will reduce service quality.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[August 4, 2003] Subscriber numbers were roughly flat
in the U.S. Competitors with good service, such as Speakeasy and Bulldog, still
have a chance in the monopoly-friendly environments of Europe and the U.S.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[July 16, 2003] The markets seem to believe that a
cable-DSL duopoly will provide price competition, but the ILECs seem to disagree.
Meanwhile, hundred million dollar scandals at the telcos continue.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[July 14, 2003] Will the markets prevent the Bells
from investing? The answer appears to be that the markets will reward companies
that invest billions in the future. And the future is now.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[July 3, 2003] As alternatives to DSL proliferate,
the Bells need to choose to invest in the future while they still can, before
the cable companies take their customers, and wireless becomes viable.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[June 19, 2003] DSLAM prices are now so low that even
industry holdout SBC may invest in new equipment. Meanwhile, the VDSL standards
storm continues with a new development: lawsuits.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[June 11, 2003] Cable should maintain its advantage
over DSL in the near future, but only in the U.S. where the RBOCs seem determined
to price themselves out of competition and maintain monopoly margins.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[June 9, 2003] Bundles will begin to harm the competition
in the U.S. Europeans know that their DSL will soon be one-fiftieth the speed
of Korea's—has the U.S. even noticed?
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[June 3, 2003] Price wars between DSL and cable are
nothing new. What is new is the possibility of an actual fiber deployment
after two decades of broken promises.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[May 28, 2003] Brian Roberts, CEO of Comcast, seems
determined to build the telcos' worst nightmare: a network, built today, capable
of serving future demand for personalized video on demand, including HDTV, through
multiple 5 Mbps connections.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[May 22, 2003] Verizon gets ready to build as one company
that bet on the CLECs is bought out by a buyer of distressed enterprises.
Level
3 Tees Up VoIP Launch
Max Smetannikov
[May 15, 2003] Almost a footnote in its press releases,
Level 3's ISPCON announcement that it will replace 800 numbers with local
phone numbers is actually the first step in an ambitious, sweeping plan to
introduce VoIP-enabled services.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[May 7, 2003] DSL Prime reports that the world is
going to broadband—but the U.S. and the UK will continue to lag as competition
is stifled. Also, Bells should not count as "subscribers" anyone whose line
doesn't work.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[April 28, 2003] Recent price drops in DSL do not
eliminate the price rises since the start of Powell's reign—and leave DSL
more expensive than cable, even before factoring in RBOC DSL's lower bandwidth.
Shared
Hosting Automation for Big Data Centers
ISP-Planet Staff
[April 9, 2003] Sitepak's new software plugs into
an existing network, providing a layer of automation to any data center that
already has all of the Internet functions (such as mail, billing, and DNS).
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[April 2, 2003] Brand new DSL technology could—really—provide
subscribers 100 Mbps in each direction. Verizon tries to please the FCC by
planning a buildout, while SBC refuses to build as it lobbies the states for
total domination.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[March 28, 2003] AOL is spending $35 million on ads—enough
money to double the speeds of every broadband customer—but even that would
be slower than the speeds now common in Japan.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[March 21, 2003] The Bells continue to claim that
they're not committed to DSL, but their actions outside of Washington, D.C.
contradict what they're saying to Tauzin and the regulators.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[March 12, 2003] The Bells, if they are smart, will
invest to provide better services and better rates. Qwest's DSL price is half
that of Verizon, but still twice the rate common in Japan.
DSL
Prime Reports from the FCC
Dave Burstein
[February 26, 2003] Extra! Extra! U.S. telcos get
DSL monopoly, must share some local voice! Early comments, mine included,
were wrong. Rather than a setback, the Bells won a massive victory.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[February 21, 2003] All around the world, DSL deployment
continues. Prices are lower and speeds are faster outside the U.S. One ISP,
Speakeasy, does, however, manage to provide real customer service.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[February 12, 2003] All around the world, DSL deployment
continues. A viable, competitive market is emerging in France. But the future
is in question as standards development starts to bog down.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[January 30, 2003] A leak from the FCC says a deal
on line sharing has been reached because the RBOCs are about to build fiber,
and therefore no longer hate sharing their outdated copper networks.
DSL
Prime News: The Inside Source
Dave Burstein
[January 9, 2003] While the United States makes do
with speeds of 1.5 Mbps, the rest of the world delves into VDSL. As churn falls
elsewhere, certain U.S. companies are more hated every day as they fail their
customers but continue to bill them.
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