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Best
of the ISP-Lists
Politics
The Ultimate Power of Deregulation
As the regulation of the phone company is eliminated in
the U.S., a glimpse of what it's like to run an ISP in Central America
could be a taste of the future.
During a discussion on the ISP-Wireless
list of Verizon's latest crimes, Viva Libre
(live free) warned list members that conditions are even worse for competition
in places like Central America where the phone company is not regulated.
Hi listeroos,
While I am not a USA WISP like the rest of you,
I will chime in on behalf of Central American WISPs :)
If you think Verizon etc. is bad, don't come here!
I worked with Verizonfor years running a regional ISP on the East Coastback
to when they were Bell of Pennsylvania, then Bell Atlantic, and finally
Verizon. Wehad the usual problems that most ISPs have when dealing with
the ILECpoor customer service, a huge sticky morass of tariffs
and rules, and longdelays between orders and installs on high-speed
circuits.
In the third world, it's even worse. In countries
like Honduras where there is a government-authorized monopoly (which
thankfully is changing here), you often can't even get high-speed circuits!
You get excusesour network is full, so-and-so is on vacation,
we're not accepting ordersright now, etc. And the circuits you do manage
to get installed fail frequently, and with no recourse. And support?
Good luckthey are only open until 3:30 pm, and on weekdays only.
Forget about night and weekend support! And the cost of a single E1
(2.0 Mbps) is extreme by USA standardsa 100 km E1 will cost you
about $2,000 a month, and YOU have to supply the ILEC with the termination
equipment for their CO!
This topic is timely for us because we today switched
our network to be completely independent of the ILEC. We built an 80
Mbps wireless network stretching over 100 miles from our network to
the landing point for the undersea fiber to the USA (ARCOS-1). Our wireless
network now handles all our data traffic. Our only dependence on the
ILEC is for our SS7 traffic (we're also a competitive telephone company),
and even there we run our own fiber to carry that traffic to the ILEC's
CO.
In the general sense, it is the advantage of ISPsnot
just WISPsto control all infrastructure. If you depend on a competitor
for a critical part of your own network, you are just asking for problems
IMHO.
[KC agreed that you have to own your own network]
"That is why we went through the cost, time, and effort required
to build our own towers."
[WM asked] "I am assuming you ran licensed
RF from the landing station to tour POP. That would be best given the
environment. Nice to hear from someone in this business, that is south
of the border. I am heading that direction myself."
[Viva Libre responded] "Our original
plan was to use licensed RF, but the process to get licensed RF here is
lengthy (read: it takes years). We are still in the process of applying
for licensed spectrum. We used unlicensed 5.8 GHz gear for our link, although
here you still need a 'Data Transmission License' even for 5.8 GHzbut
that we already have. Our longest single link is 111 km, and it runs five
nines at much greater than DS3 bandwidth. Granted, we used big antennas
:)"
[BB asked] "What gear are you using
for this hop?"
[Viva Libre replied] "Orthogon Spectra
radios, RadioWaves parabolic antennas in a spatial diversity setup."
End
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