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Technology Stocks : The *NEW* Frank Coluccio Technology Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: axial who wrote (17156)10/10/2006 2:25:33 AM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 46821
 
Jim, in the Gilder testimony of 2004 that you cited, he made a number of statements that I believe he wouldn't make today, given the events and developments of the past two, short years. He's got the calculus for the three basics right: storage, bandwidth, processing. But, I don't believe he's quite got it right when it comes to applications and the moving parts of the delivery of services. In some ways his praising of Google in 2006 demonstrates my last point, since Google's content delivery at the upper layers, using other peoples wires (and routers and switches) at the lower layers, is now regarded as the model to beat. Yet, it runs contrary, if not down right antithetical, to the pro-silo leanings he voiced back in 2004.

Likewise, his regard for Huber's Corvis, for whom I have a good deal of respect, is replete with interpretations and errors that only Gilder could make (and usually get away with), where he confuses "content" and connectivity. He also makes some statements about what an all optical network can do, which I agree with as futures, but not today.

During these last several years a little company named Infinera has demonstrated dispersion compensation capabilities that were once reserved for optics only. Also, by keeping things "electrical", or supporting OEO at a very low power scale, it is delivering many benefits still not achievable in an all optical model, especially with respect to signal handling and mediation that won't be achievable in photonics-only elements for another decade, at least.

I began posting about Infinera on the gildertech.com forum back in 2001 and it never received traction because it was always in the shadow of Corvis. Today Infinera is considered an ascendant play in those quarters, and Infinera has, with its OEO design, become the choice of Broadwing, as well. See:

"Infinera Gets Corvis (Sort Of) JULY 18, 2006 - Corvis, the all-optical company, sees its gear end up in the hands of anti-all-optical startup Infinera"
lightreading.com

The last third of the testimony he gave reads like a monthly GTR (Gilder Technology Report), dilled with pointers and details about his ascendant stocks.

In fairness, I still believe he's on the right track w.r.t. the ultimate dominance of the lightpath model, but like other aspects of his testimony, he's talking in the present tense about technologies that won't be ready for mass market adoption until sometime beyond 2010.

The remainder of your post was both inspiring and in some ways provocative, but also confusing in places. For example, what did you mean by "denigrate the per-bit life-cycle cost of fibre?", when we were discussing wireless bits. In any event, wired or wireless, assigning attributes to bits can be considered a fool's game at times, when you think about it. Bits sometimes exist in the absence of a signal (e.g., 0 vdc during a prescribed period, absence of a zero transition, pause), and can actually be encoded to mean eight or more bits during quiescent times, as well, depending on the convention used in an encoding scheme.

I've got to hand it to you that your characterizations of sloth, foot dragging and sloppiness in attention paid towards developing cogent policies were very much in line with my own thinking. I'll leave it at that, except to state: Well done! and Thanks.

FAC



To: axial who wrote (17156)10/10/2006 12:11:35 PM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Respond to of 46821
 
An interesting telecommunications policy analysis from today's New York Sun: Ignore it and it will go away?

"Much of the reason for predictably stable laws is that Congress is designed to preserve inertia."
---

On Telecommunications, a Healthy Failure
BY HAROLD FURCHTGOTT-ROTH New York Sun
October 9, 2006

"Just wait until next year!" is the defeated October cry of not just Chicago Cubs fans. Advocates of major federal legislation to overhaul telecommunications law have the same autumnal expression. This year, new telecommunications legislation came closer than usual, but still all too predictably short. Many telecommunications businesses invested heavily in lobbying for legislation, but legislative failure does not necessarily mean a bad investment.

--snip

The issues for telecommunications legislation change each year. Three years ago, the topic was broadband deregulation, now passé. Now, the issues du jour are federal pre-emption of local cable franchising authority and network neutrality. Neither issue was widely discussed until two years ago, much less familiar to members of Congress.

Some members of Congress convincingly state that the fate of America hangs in the balance on these two issues. In a few years these topics, like so many before them, will be outdated and forgotten, and not because they were resolved by federal legislation. Instead they will more likely be resolved by federal regulation, by state and local legislation, by new technologies, or simply by the passage of time. Telecommunications policy will have moved on to other topics.
--snip

Full story:
nysun.com

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