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DSL Prime Editorial: Verizon's Potential DSL Prime examines the state of Verizon and finds much to applaud, but issues a plea for cheaper DSL ($30 per month) and points to other threats to the broadband dream.
My friend Steve at Verizon just got his first day off since 9/11, just one of the thousands who have been working seven days each week. Telco employees have time and again proven their abilitiesas peace comes, we hope they'll turn their efforts toward wiring America for the fast internet.
Only 30 percent of DSL subscribers are now in the U.S., and that will go under 20 percent in the next few years.
Verizon hits a million
Doubling installs this quarter
"We're going to beat cable" For years, I've been asked the question of whether cable or DSL will win, and always answered it was up to the will of the companies. Verizon now is saying they're ready to compete.
Service getting better
Questions to answer
NorthPoint suit getting serious
Verizon's failure to expand out of region is killing to their defense. The NorthPoint purchase was intended to extend Verizon out-of-territory, with a strong consumer offering. Verizon had previously promised to compete with SBC and BellSouth as part of merger agreements, and had active plans to do so. Verizon contends the deal was killed solely because of NorthPoint "material"
financial problems, but Verizon's failure to reach for consumers out-of-territory
implies a change in strategic plan. It is presumably more than coincidence that
Verizon's retreat was matched by SBC's virtual canceling of their "national-local"
strategy, and the dismantling of their 30 city sales effort. Note that both
raised their DSL prices a few months later, despite dramatic drops in costs.
That's damned persuasive evidence competition has broken down, whatever the
rhetoric.
Editorial: Broadband must be video speed The bills in Congress only specify 375K, without reliability. That's fine for
receiving your e-mail faster, but the technology is here for the Third Internet,
fast enough to watch. Use the respect you've earned to help us allmake
Congress and policymakers target broadband at reliable delivery at video speeds.
If you don't speak up now, the dream we shareany program, any time, anywheremay
take an extra decade to achieve. db
We are journalists, not investment advisers; invest at your own risk and
do further research. Copyright 2001 Dave Burstein. "The power of the printing press belongs solely to those who own the presses"
The Internet is the cheapest printing press ever invented.
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