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Look to History, See the Future of Telecommunications continued
Once wireless broadband cost disruptions reach urban areas, the equations that govern the telco business model will be destroyed. A word of caution, however. We have not yet reached this point. The telco is not yet obsolete. There are still a number of services that the telecommunications industry provides that none of the alternative technologies can match. For all their faults, the telephone companies have managed to provide a very reliable, nearly universally available service for the better part of a century. We have grown to expect that service will be available whenever we pick up a handset, with outages the exception instead of the rule. We expect that the audio quality to be good, calls to not be dropped and that anywhere we try to call will be available to us, at any time. While a case could be made that cell phone service does not measure up to this level of service, the fact remains that we seem to be willing to accept that trade off because the advantages that mobility provide outweigh the added expense and inconvenience inherent with today's cell phone service. We can only assume that cell phone service will improve as time goes on, but changes here do seem to be governed by market forces (Dave Burstein argues that this market is becoming a monopoly, however, in DSL Prime Editorial: Enable $19.95 Per Month Cellular). Let's not forget that the telecommunications industry provides very important services besides voice. Metropolitan Ethernet services are an ever more important service as is videoconferencing, remote medical diagnostics and monitoring, and now video delivery services including Video on Demand. Almost all of these advanced services cannot be delivered by untethered service providers at this time. But perhaps the wireless technology, the protocols, are capable of delivering the service even though the equipment currently on the market cannot. As we mentioned earlier, equipment improves every year. The radios of 2006 will be better than those of 2005. The monopolies that remain Cellular providers have two problems: low throughput and poor coverage. I do not believe they can overcome them, but if they can solve both problems they will survive. WISPs have been the unknown in this industry for several years. WISPs are not public companies. Many are small. There is no accurate data on the size of the WISP market or the number of WISPs. WISPs range from small amateur efforts using a single DSL or cable connection and consumer wireless gear to very large business-oriented companies that use fiber and licensed microwave equipment. This latter group may be a real challenge to the telcos. Ironically, the last challenge to the telcos was also based on microwave. MCI Communications was founded as Microwave Communications, Inc. in 1963. Recently, Verizon acquired MCI (an Internet access conglomerate that now includes WorldCom and UUNet) in a much-criticized move (see, for example, Group Blasts Verizon-MCI Merger). Re-monopolization in the telephone industry parallels that of the oil industry, where the components of Standard Oil are being reassembled. The breakup of Standard Oil in July, 1911 is described in The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, & Power, the famous history of the oil industry, in a way that hints at just how powerful Standard Oil really was (p.110):
The number of Bell phone companies is shrinking. The number of cell phone companies is shrinking. The number of cable companies is shrinking. But wireless continues to grow. The common good is a positive externality For that future, bigger is not necessarily better. Look at the sparse network map of national VoIP provider CommPartnersit's no telco. Wireless is the last mile component of an internet revolution that includes VoIP and softswitces. It will shake the phone companies at just the moment they have reassembled Ma Bell. It is a revolution that will free small business to compete with big business, free innovation to compete with monopolies, free startup software companies to compete with established brands. It will bring ideas to market. As long as the government does not intervene to prevent change (see We, The Internet, about a speech by Susan Crawford, recently nominated to ICANN's board), the future will not be the past. In a free market, those building new networks for new services will be able to overcome those who look backward. In a free market, democracies innovate and dictatorships decline and fall, stifled by nepotism, corruption, and groupthink. As Marlon Schafer wrote earlier this month (see Wireless Regulation Matters Even More, Now), "Competition keeps prices down and quality up. It's the free enterprise way of keeping companies honest." This is the WISP revolution. It's a 21st century revolution. No shots will be fired. Instead, professionals will work together fulfilling market mandates and, along the way, as a positive externality, make the world a better place. It began a few years ago. It continues in 2006. End
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