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To: jghutchison who wrote (11277)6/29/2001 11:26:41 AM
From: Rustam Tahir  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12623
 
Jack, the article basically squares with my impression: Roth fell on his face and exaggerated. There is a slowing of internet usage growth due to the lack of killer, bandwidth clogging applications. Eventually, over time, as content providers think of ways to make a profit and underfinanced distributors recover from debt loads to build the necessary metro links, the end users will finally have those killer apps. It's just a matter of time. But right now, and for the foreseeable future, it's a depression market.



To: jghutchison who wrote (11277)7/2/2001 11:58:50 AM
From: Rustam Tahir  Respond to of 12623
 
Broadband article from the Economist:

economist.com

“THE future is already here—it’s just unevenly distributed,” a science-fiction
writer, William Gibson, once joked. High-speed, or “broadband”, connections
to the Internet are a case in point. Although there is a widespread view that
broadband is the future of the Internet, figures compiled by the OECD reveal
an astonishing variation in the adoption of broadband across the rich world
(see chart). South Korea leads the table with 9.2 broadband connections per
100 inhabitants, compared with 2.25 in America and a measly 0.08 in Britain,
despite the popularity of the Internet in all three countries.

The irony is that, while the
world’s telecoms firms spend a
fortune building
third-generation mobile-phone
networks, even though they are
not sure that anybody wants
them, in many parts of the
world they seem unable or
unwilling to provide broadband
connections at reasonable
prices, even though customers
want them. Horror stories
abound of long waiting lists,
botched installations and
deliberate foot-dragging by
monopolistic incumbents. What
is going on?

There is plenty of demand for
broadband links, which come in
two main types: digital
subscriber-line (DSL)
connections and cable-modem
connections. DSL uses special
hardware to turn old-fashioned
telephone lines into high-speed
data links; cable modems
transmit data over the
fibre-optic and coaxial cables
used for television. Both
technologies are capable of
delivering data much faster
than dial-up modems, and both
offer the advantage of “always
on” connections.

The problem lies in the supply.
According to Merrill Lynch, an
investment bank, Deutsche
Telekom, Germany’s telecoms
incumbent, signed up 630,000
subscribers for DSL last year,
but managed to connect only
135,000 of them. In Britain, it
can take months to get a DSL connection, and cable modems are unavailable
in all but a handful of areas. In America, independent DSL providers such as
Covad and Rhythms are struggling; NorthPoint, another provider, went bust
in March.

So why is broadband more readily available in South Korea and Canada than
in other countries, even those with large numbers of Internet users?
According to Sam Paltridge, at the OECD, several overlapping factors affect
whether or not broadband takes off. The biggest is the degree of competition
in the market, which governments have generally encouraged by allowing the
construction of rival infrastructure to the telephone network, usually in the
form of cable networks.

But the existence of rival infrastructure is not enough. Ford Cavallari of
Adventis, a consultancy in Boston, points out that cable companies can make
more money selling high-margin services, such as premium TV channels, to
their subscribers than they can from offering cable modems. Meanwhile, the
telephone network is usually in the hands of a state-owned (or formerly
state-owned) monopoly that is reluctant to cannibalise corporate high-speed
Internet access revenues by offering cheaper broadband. The result can be
that nothing happens—as in Ireland, for example. In Scandinavia, says Mr
Paltridge, the cable infrastructure is often owned by incumbent telecoms
firms. The resulting lack of competition may explain why no Scandinavian
countries are in the top six for broadband penetration, despite having
unusually high rates of Internet usage.

To get things moving, regulators in most OECD countries realised that it was
necessary to “unbundle the local loop”—in plain English, to force incumbents
to give other firms access to the copper wires running into homes. New
entrants could then spring up to offer DSL over these wires, and so
encourage the cable companies to compete by offering cable modems.
Canada was one of the first OECD countries to unbundle its local loop; Britain
was one of the last. This is one reason for the vast discrepancy in the
availability of broadband between the two.

Yet unbundling is not sufficient to get broadband going either, since it is
dependent on the co-operation of the telecoms incumbent. In both Britain and
America, incumbents have hindered adoption of DSL by being deliberately
unhelpful towards new entrants, many of which have given up or gone under.
Regulators in America can impose only puny fines, which incumbents regard
as a price worth paying to keep the market to themselves; Britain’s telecoms
regulator, Oftel, has been criticised for failing to crack the whip over British
Telecom.

Another problem is a shortage of technicians to install DSL connections. Some
countries where the incumbent is keen on broadband, notably Belgium, have
got round this through the use of “plug-and-play” equipment that subscribers
can install themselves. This equipment is starting to become available in
other countries, too, including France and Germany. In South Korea, the
incumbent, Korea Telecom, took a different approach and trained an army of
2,500 technicians to install DSL. South Korea is a special case in other ways,
too. Its population is highly concentrated, which made the construction of
rival infrastructure cheap and easy. The result was fierce competition
between cable and DSL providers: over 2m new DSL connections were
installed during 2000 alone.

In short, the wide variation in the adoption of broadband is the result of
several overlapping political, regulatory and technical factors. There is no
simple way for governments to copy South Korea, much as they would like
to. All they can do is to unbundle the local loop and keep a close regulatory
eye on the behaviour of their telecoms incumbents, which can drive or delay
the adoption of broadband pretty much as they choose. And in Europe, says
Mr Paltridge, there is evidence that the old guard is finally yielding to change.
The OECD’s latest figures show that, in the first quarter of 2001, the number
of DSL lines grew by 73% in France, 90% in Britain and 113% in Germany.
The signs now point to a surge in growth—even if it is not on the scale of
South Korea last year. Could it be lift-off at last?



To: jghutchison who wrote (11277)7/2/2001 12:00:50 PM
From: Rustam Tahir  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12623
 
We're not alone. The Valley understands what's needed. Hopefully this recession will get people's asses into gear.

Project Broadband Fights For Fast Net
By Michael Singer

"Broadband is central if we are going to continue the digital revolution plain and simple."

Most people have dial-up Internet access at home to surf the net, with speeds that are generally
restricted to about 52 Kbps.

But, if Americans are to get faster Internet access, there are going to have to be some major
changes in our broadband policies. So finds a panel of experts at a conference Monday hosted by
Hewlett-Packard (Nasdaq: HWP) at its Palo Alto-based campus.

The Progress & Freedom Foundation's "Project Broadband" is bringing together leaders from the IT
sector, including top telecommunications and computer industry executives and policy leaders from
government and academia.

"Broadband is central if we are going to continue the digital revolution plain and simple," says
Progress & Freedom Foundation chairman and science advisor to former president Ronald Regan,
Jay Keyworth.

Projections for high-speed access in the US seem to have missed. Currently, less than half of the
1996 estimated projections for broadband access have come to pass.

In the broadband world, the US ranks a mediocre fifth this year behind Korea, Canada, Singapore
and Hong Kong for homes with broadband access.

"At the same rate our forecast for 2005 would bring us from mediocre to an even more mediocre
number nine," says Les Vadasz, executive vice president for corporate development at Intel. "At our
present rate in the US, it will take us more than 10 years to bring broadband access to 65 percent of
the homes. We can't even get TV quality video on the net."

To fix the problem, Vadasz recommends a mere $100 billion investment to help the US target a
third-generation broadband infrastructure and get the US back in the game.

So, who is to blame for the slow adoption rate?

Intel's (Nasdaq: INTC) Andy Grove blames the Telecom Act of 1996. The chip making giant chairman,
last week complained that the legislation is failing. Grove is now urging more deregulation of the
Baby Bells in order to encourage faster broadband deployment - even at the expense of
independent telecommunications providers (CELECs) or long distance providers.

Combine that with consumer's fears of the current high prices for DSL and cable access and
equipment as well as an "always on" attitude that requires constant firewall protection.

Many in the sector also say that without some type boost to broadband policy, an economic
upswing might stall.

"It has been our belief that the tech sector is the center of the American economy and that the
broadband sector is the lynchpin that holds it together," says Progress & Freedom Foundation
president Jeffery Eisenach.

The group will be bringing the same argument to Aspen, Colorado, Fairfax County Virginia and New
York City in the next four months.