Tag Archives: broadband

Muni-Fi in the City of Brotherly Love

A few months back Verizon kicked up a lobbying storm in the Pennsylvania legislature when it came to be known that the city of Philadelphia were planning to build their own municipal Wi-Fi network. In a piece written for C|Net the CIO for the city shoots back. Whether you agree or disagree with her, this is a well-written, passionate piece.

I really think Verizon come out with some egg on their face in this one, and I say that as someone who is a strong advocate for free markets. City leaders in Philadelphia are struggling to a certain extent with economic development of their population, and the digital divide is a huge element of that development in today’s world. City leaders are right to step in and provide broadband infrastructure to their constituents when private companies either cannot or will not do it themselves. In this case Wi-Fi simply gives the city a cheap and easy way to provide basic infrastructure.

Verizon wasn’t going to do anything of the kind. We’ve seen incumbent carriers and cable companies refrain from deploying broadband facilities in locales where the market wasn’t there for a commercial service. They’re in business to make a profit for their shareholders, so that’s all fine and good. But the managers of the city are elected or appointed to serve even those people who are underserved by commercial services. If the taxpayers of Philly feel adequately served by these individuals, such that they’re re-elected to office, then that’s a vote of confidence that tax dollars are well spent on deploying broadband to serve under-served populations. Competing with commercial businesses may not be considered an appropriate use of tax dollars, but economic development certainly is. Its time telecommunications providers of all stripes (yes, this means YOU, too, Mr. Cable Company Guy) realized that the broadband services they deliver have quickly become necessary life blood for an information nation. Simply deciding an area is not economically viable for your service isnt the end of the concern for those who live there. If commercial leaders are not going to take on a roll, then what other choice do they leave municipal leaders? Once commercial operations walk away from an area, economic development becomes one of those externalities for which governments can and should be held responsible.

Verizon are showing that they’re missing the point on the value of broadband to customers who do pay for commercial services. Regarding free municipal Wi-Fi as a challenger to your commercial broadband offering is setting the bar REALLY low for your own service. Free Wi-Fi is, by its very nature, going to have spotty coverage, many points of congestion and a complete lack of security. Verizon and other providers have real competitive advantages over plain, muni Wi-Fi that should allow them to compete. Guaranteed levels of performance, reliability, security and bundled services such as e-mail are just a few competitive advantages commercial broadband will have. Verizon could even turn the situation around and to their advantage by offering value-added IPSec virtual private network (VPN) clients to their DSL subscribers in Philly so that they can use the muni Wi-Fi when they’re out and about with an added touch of security the general public won’t have.

Slashdot Got My Hopes Up

I saw this post on Slashdot yesterday evening that Verizon had put up a site where you could check your qualification for their FIOS fibre to the home service. It turns out, at least according to posts by Slashdotters who contacted Verizon that evidently the site was intended only for certain FIOS test markets. Myself I went right over to check availability, entered my phone number, and got one of three different types of runtime errors.

But it looks like the service will have a downlink of 15 Mbps and an uplink of 2 Mbps, at least according to that headline on the FIOS page. The price is $49.95 a month. Perhaps a bit pricier that I want to spend on broadband, but damn if that’s not a big connection, and I’ve read some reports that lead me to believe that FTTH is uncontended, so all of that capacity is yours. One would have to actively look for content to use it all up.

Tech Round-up

It seems that Sype are adding an API to their latest software, according to this piece. This would allow a Skype user to signal their presence in a blog or anyother web site to allow instant VoIP messaging. This sounds pretty darn cool and has some seriously excellent business applications provided you can route calls coming in via the web site to agents with the appropriate skill set. On the upside, the centralized call center could become a thing of the past. Why pay the overhead when you can have agents working out of their home using Skype softphones on their laptops?

To follow up on my previous VoIP comments, I did download Skype for my Mac but have yet to use it. Anybody wanna help me test it sometime?

And the Washington Post ran a piece on how broadband is becoming a major selling point for houses in the suburbs. I’ve seen it have impact on property values– not so much that your house is worth more if it’s available, but that your property value is less if for some reason it’s not. Please, Verizon, roll out fiber to MY home!

One comment in the article took my by surprise, though. It comes from Gene Kimmelman, director of the Washington office of Consumers Union. He is quoted as saying that most all-inclusive packages of television, telephone and Internet cost more than $100 a month, a total that is beyond the means of many.

$100?!?! Hell– I pay almost that much for TV service before you count NFL Sunday Ticket. Throw in the phone service (which still is that all-you-can-eat LD package– I NEED VOIP!) and cable Internet and you have a dollar amount well above what Mr. Kimmelman quotes for all-inclusive packages. I would do a dance of joy if I could have all of that for around $100.

Bring Fibre to MY Home!

There’s not too much insightful here, today. Just a bit of techno (or telco) lust.

This article has some very detailed coverage of Verizon’s announcement today to release Fiber to the Premesis (FTTP or FTTH) in six Eastern states, including my home state of Virginia. This comes on the heels of FTTH announcements from SBC and others just days after the FCC ruled that the regional bell companies wouldn’t have to lease these assets to competitors. I actuallly have to say that I agree with that decision, since any new market entrant would be just as free to make an investment in those assets as the RBOCs.

According to the piece Loudoun County is near the top of the list for the rollout in Virginia. Hopefully that will mean a big fat Internet pipe for cheap coming to my home real soon. This, combined with the prospect of Adelphia being sold to a more competent management, could mean the next phase in broadband (which was the last phase of broadband if you live in South Korea) might finally come to my neck of the woods.

And to think just six or seven months ago we were trying to suck the Internet down a 144 Kbps IDSL straw.