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Pricing and Internet Architecture

Frisky070802 writes "The Politech list recently posted a pointer to a new paper (pdf) by UMN prof Andrew Odlyzko, which compares the telecom industry to the historical transportation industry (railroad, bridges, and such). One quote, from the conclusion, is particularly interesting: '... the networking industry [has] devoted inordinate efforts to technologies such as ATM and QoS, even though there was abundant evidence these were not going to succeed. One can go further and say that essentially all the major networking initiatives of the last decade, such as ATM, QoS, RSVP, multicasting, congestion pricing, active networks, and 3G, have turned out to be duds. Furthermore, they all failed not because the technical solutions that were developed were inadequate, but because they were not what users wanted.'"

225 comments

  1. 3G a dud? by SinaSa · · Score: 4, Informative

    In traditional /. style, I havn't read the article, so I don't know how this guy can already claim 3G as a dud. Here in Australia, Hutchison is doing fairly well, almost all of their handsets sold out within a couple of months of opening their "Three" stores and I'd say thats a pretty big indication of being exactly "what users wanted".

    --
    --
    The last digit of pi is four.
    1. Re:3G a dud? by BigHungryJoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't understand this claim -

      The wireless industry, in particular, has often boasted that it managed to avoid the mistakes of the Internet by avoiding the open architecture and flat-rate pricing of the latter.

      Isn't it effectively flat-rate pricing when they give you X minutes for Y dollars a month? Most people pick a plan that gives them more minutes than they'll use, so they never incur the overage charges.

      I think for the majority of customers, it's effectively a flat-rate system.

    2. Re:3G a dud? by Smitty825 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Here in the US, it's just taking off. Currently, the pricing is too expensive for most people to take advantage of the 3G advantages.

      It is still advantageous for operators to roll out 3G networks. The usage of the spectrum is better, so more people can make higher quality calls using the same space as before.

      Also, ATM is very commonly used in cellular networks. I'm not sure how anyone could claim it is a dud...but, like the parent, I didn't read the article...

      --

      Doh!
    3. Re:3G a dud? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I recently looked at getting a 3G phone here in the UK. The only operator (as far as I know) that offers them is imaginatively enough called `3'. All of their price plans are geared towards people who want to use video features, and make calls. Not only do they not offer any kind of plan aimed at people who just want to be able to send data, I couldn't even find out how much it would cost /MB. I can't help thinking that the biggest market for this kind of thing in the short term is going to be people who need to be able to connect to the 'net on the road, but so far these people have to use GSM/GPRS.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    4. Re:3G a dud? by rsborg · · Score: 4, Informative
      Isn't it effectively flat-rate pricing when they give you X minutes for Y dollars a month? Most people pick a plan that gives them more minutes than they'll use, so they never incur the overage charges.

      No, Flat rate, means there IS no overage. Flat rate is usually synonymous with "unlimited usage" (tho lots of ISPs have their own ideas about what "unlimited" means). Flat rate service is like your local calling plan from your RBOC (unlimited local calls for a fixed price), or for example, as the article states, cable/DSL providers who charge fixed monthly fees for effectively unlimited bytes. X minutes for Y dollars is by no means flat rate. Overage exists, and most mobile users have been burned by it.

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    5. Re:3G a dud? by DavidinAla · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You and other customers might see it that way, but the carrier is ONLY obligated to give you a certain number of minutes for that price. From a business point of view, the issue is whether the provider has limited his liability to having to give someone an unlimited supply at a flat rate. Just because you commit yourself to a higher number of minutes than you know you want doesn't mean it's a flat rate. It just means that you're willing to commit yourself to paying for more than you'll use -- in order to have a predictable bill. That's something like telling your grocery store that you'll pay them a flat $300 a week for your groceries -- even if you buy less -- but you'll still pay extra if you go over that amount. Obviously, that's a little bit of an exaggeration (and obviously there is a presumed discount built in for the phone user who commits to a higher number of minutes), but cell phone pricing is NOT an example of flat-rate pricing -- unless there is a carrier I'm not aware of who provides unlimited service for one price.

    6. Re:3G a dud? by tengwar · · Score: 3, Interesting
      unless there is a carrier I'm not aware of who provides unlimited service for one price.

      It's rare. One company I know of is Vodafone Sweden, for corporate customers who want to be able to predict their comms bill for the next year. It's one of the few cases where it makes sense for both the provider and the customer.

    7. Re:3G a dud? by bluGill · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, but my cell phone with more minutes than I ever use per month (by about 5 times in a typical month) is still cheaper than my local phone service is for unlimited local calls. (I live on a border area, we pay extra to be part of a nearby cities local calling area. Those closer in don't pay as much) I could go for a cheaper plan, but I like knowing I'll never go over, last time I was on a cheaper plan the cost the one time I went over was large, so I'm shy about doing it again.

    8. Re:3G a dud? by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "Isn't it effectively flat-rate pricing when they give you X minutes for Y dollars a month?"

      Not when they economize by cutting convos short.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    9. Re:3G a dud? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The reason why it is successful is because it's based on CDMA, and provides more capacity for voice calls and works for users far from the base station, as opposed to TDMA based GSM, which has a maximum distance before transmission lag places you out of sync with the base station.

      3G (the European backed UMTS/Wideband CDMA flavour that Hutchison has rolled out) offers little else that users actually want. At its core, it is still a crummy data network dumped on top of a voice network, and voice calls always take priority, causing latency that is only tolerable for simple web browsing or IM. Data rates are meager; despite the claimed megabits of access, realize that all of that bandwidth must be split between many users, some of whom are consuming bandwidth by making voice calls, and then there is the radio protocol overhead, and then the internet packet overheads, and the true data rate is not so hot.

      UMTS also has battery life issues (not as if other CDMA based networks don't). And then the carriers are pushing colour displays, polyphonic ring tones, mini cameras, mp3 functionality, and other MIPS hogging features, all in a disturbingly small form factor, which implies a smaller battery.

      All of this will contribute to a poor user experience. If anyone reading is from Japan and has signed up with NTT Docomo for their UMTS network, I'm interested in reading your experience.

    10. Re:3G a dud? by schouwl · · Score: 1

      From Japan:

      There was a lot of problems in the start with the FOMA (3G) phones.
      Now things are starting to heat up and lot of providers give free bandwith.

      I am not sure if IP phones will come in and overtake 3G. DOCOMO are running tests now.

      In 2007 we will get 100 mbps phones. They are testing that now in a lab now as well.

      Lars

    11. Re:3G a dud? by schouwl · · Score: 1

      Also in feb 2004 we will get new 900i phones with longer talk and stand by time.

      http://900i.nttdocomo.co.jp (japanese)
      http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie =UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=900i+foma

    12. Re:3G a dud? by schouwl · · Score: 1

      http://www.nttdocomo.com/presscenter/pressreleases /press/pressrelease.html?param[no]=403

      Some specs

      100k Macromedia Flash
      Video phone live o another phone
      2Mpixes camera
      record short video sequenses and send them via email from the phone
      Html e-mail
      Smaller and lighter. 115 gram. 300 hours standby and 115 talk
      2.2 inches display with 262144 colours
      better online games
      I guess the price around 30000 yen ~ 280 USD
      Mini media card that can be taken out
      Show your recorded videos directly on the tv from yur mobile

    13. Re:3G a dud? by schouwl · · Score: 1

      You can translate from Japanese to English using babelfish on altavista
      http://babelfish.altavista.com

    14. Re:3G a dud? by simbiotic · · Score: 1

      You can't find a cost per Mb because you can't use their network to get full internet access. It has been advertised as "coming soon" on their web site since the network launched (and even then it isn't clear what is "coming soon") but no sign of a start date. It's a shame because you are right that that would be a big market. It was the reason I thought about buying a 3G handset but I'll wait until it works. You can access email and their own conent but it is a walled garden at the moment.

    15. Re:3G a dud? by LinuxHam · · Score: 4, Interesting

      but cell phone pricing is NOT an example of flat-rate pricing -- unless there is a carrier I'm not aware of who provides unlimited service for one price

      You know, I was about to reply with "don't they ALL do it?" and I decided to check. I was wrong. Nextel does "unlimited everything" (24x7 cellular and nationwide 2-way radio) for $200/mo. There are 43,200 minutes in a 30-day month. Take out free Sat & Sun, and 7am-7pm Mon-Fri (4*12 hours, really), that leaves 28,800 "anytime minutes" per month.

      AT&T caps out at 6,300 mins/month. Verizon, 5,500. Cingular, 3,000. TMobile has a nice plan with 5,000 anytime minutes but with a three day weekend for just $129/mo. Looks like Nextel is the only carrier I could find stateside that offers truly unlimited usage plans.

      Thanks for making me look it up, that was interesting!

      --
      Intelligent Life on Earth
    16. Re:3G a dud? by jjgm · · Score: 1

      It's also a mind-boggling claim that an open architecture was a mistake in the Internet's design. By levelling the field of experimentation, the result has surely being a skyrocketing success.

      You can certainly throw together an experimental IP network in your garage with cheap third-hand gear from ebay, swapmeets etc (e.g. old PCs running a free OS, old cisco routers).

      Now try simulating a circuit-switched telco network. Not so easy.

      - J

    17. Re:3G a dud? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The more technology the better. I think technology is an organic phenomenon. If there isn't much dispersion in the way of examples then technology advances slower. Science examples are key for technologists. This is probably one of the weakest or most damaged part of computing. It could take hundreds of years to recover from monopolists. At least interconnection is advancing correctly in this example. Humans become like one organism if there is not an example. People need role models like parents. Culturally many fields of technology followed the humanities side of the culture. In the last fifty years culture is less focused organically so people coalese more. This is undeniable. There is one organism called people and not a series of independant discovery. The direction toward this is so fine that it cannot be detected insofar as isolation of influence from a group mind.

    18. Re:3G a dud? by luisdom · · Score: 1

      Well, in Spain the telcos say that they'll focus in data services for 3G. But it's going to be funny how they are going to fail miserably again. Now, for GPRS, they charge around 6euro/Mb (it varies from 24 to 1.5 euro/Mb, depending on minimum usage per month).
      As UTMS is supposed to be faster, they'll expectedly want to charge more, which will expectedly lead to even less usage.
      Who the hell is going to pay even 1euro/Mb? Maybe some corps and some geeks? But not many.
      They are convinced they can put anything down our throats through ads, but they already failed with WAP, they are failing with GPRS and they will fail again with UTMS/3G. At our expense, through existing GSM calls: 20 cents per minute? WTF? GSM infrastructure already paid for itself years ago. But people still call and pay, so they have a healthy cow to milk while they take absurd adventures...

    19. Re:3G a dud? by DonGar · · Score: 1

      It's also bad in the US. You pay for data totally seperate from voice. The largest data plan available from most carriors is $12 per month for 8 Mbs. After that, you pay per k.

      There simply doesn't seem to be a way to do flat rate for data any more than for voice. I don't know if the networks aren't really setup for data, or if they just don't want to sell it for some reason.

      --
      plus-good, double-plus-good
    20. Re:3G a dud? by N1XIM · · Score: 1

      " I don't know if the networks aren't really setup for data, or if they just don't want to sell it for some reason."

      Oh please tell me that you aren't that stupid! Do you know what the bandwidth of a voice call is (sound via ADPCM, via a digital DATA system)? (The truth is that it varies between encodings, but is is usually about 64kb/s when sent uncompressed--a-la landline service. GSM is something more like 19.2kb/s--lots of compression used==funny sounding voice.) And what, perchance is this data routed over? Oh yes, it is an x.25/frame relay style network. (I know that x.25 and frame relay aren't the same thing, and if you had better grammar skills you'd have realized that already--non-native speakers exempted.) I've got some news for you--they have the capability to make cheap data access available just a easily as IP data blocks get ferried from one location to the next in the landline system by frame relay. In fact, according to the telcom act (as ammended 1996, and probably hasn't changed here) they don't even really have much right to know if they are routing raw data or voice--outside of the technical concerns of actually making the connections needed--when it comes down to information posted about the call to the billing system. Granted, that is a very strict interpretation of the law as written (and ONLY applies in the USA, so far as I know)--God forbid they enforce it that way, and prevent the providers from raping anybody whom doesn't just kiss their feet due to their sheer glory--I don't know about all of the case law.
      But, you should get the point by now. It is about taking everybody who wants to use the full power of the tool given and making their lives as difficult and expensive as possible because they didn't just pony up with lots of cash like good plebian sheep should. (You should also have the vocabulary necessary to see what is wrong with that kind of reasoning.)

    21. Re:3G a dud? by krakrjak · · Score: 1

      In my area of the US there is such a carrier. Cricket Wireless offers service in a few locations that I'm aware of: Little Rock, Fort Smith, Fayetteville Arkansas. $29.99 a month unlimited local area calling.

  2. Railroads... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I have always been interested in railroads, and as I see organizations thriving to work over large areas, I cannot fail to notice that they run in essentially the same problems railroads ran into 150 years ago when they found-out that they had to absolutely synchronize their operations over vast territories in order to simply avoid accidents...

    This is one reason, for example, why Standard Timezones were adopted by the railroads, then telegraphy used to coordinate operations.

    More than 100 years ago, there were elaborate protocols to insure that instructions were transmitted reliably and double-checked to insure that no error of communication occured.

    Of course, the technology used (telegraph keys and, later, telephone) was not as sophisticated as now, but the essential principles (fail-safe, reduntancy checks, retransmission protocols and whatnot) were there.

    It's always fun to watch young pups straight out of school try to solve a problem that was solved more than a century ago by the high-tech industry of the times: the railroads...

    1. Re:Railroads... by demonhold · · Score: 2, Funny

      Pity,

      then comes Thatcherism and privatisation of key services and make such a mess of the British railway... costs are cut, people are sacked and every now and then an accident happens. British railways used to be an example of good competent service... ask any Briton about it nowadays?

      In Spain, this Bush's boots licking administration is planning to do the same. After sinking the health care, educational and justice systems underwater we only need trains to be crashing every now and then so some relatives and chummies of the party in Govt may rip some benefits.

      We are coming back to Victorian to times, crappy jobs and health care and good education only to those who can pay it... if this is the future I want out.

      --
      ... y Dios vio que Linux era bueno... Genesis 99.666
    2. Re:Railroads... by Animats · · Score: 5, Interesting
      There are two pre-electronics technologies that anyone designing reliable systems should understand in some detail - railroad signalling and telephone switching. Both were designed to be more reliable than their components. In the relay era, that was essential, because component reliability was mediocre by modern standards.

      The references you need to read are obscure, but exist. For railroad signalling, the technology was mature by 1930. An understanding of either General Railroad Signal or Union Switch and Signal relay-era technology is useful. Both companies produced good books describing their technologies in 1924. There's also "NXSYS", a simulator down to the relay level of New York City subway signalling technology. The key idea to take away from railroad signalling is what "fail-safe" really means and how it is consistently implemented.

      Telephony in the relay era is best understood by studying its most advanced form, Number 5 Crossbar. There are descriptions of the technology in "A Technical History of the Bell System". #5 Crossbar is a transaction-oriented system, in which units of different types do quick transactions to get the job done. Resources of a given type are interchangeable, so losing one unit just reduces call capacity. Resources include originating registers, markers, senders, trunks, translators, billing punches, and trouble recorders. The switch fabric itself is dumb; all the smarts are in the resources. Resources are never tied up for the duration of a call; they're seized from a pool, used for a fraction of a second to a few seconds, and released. That architecture is extremely reliable; no Bell System central office in the relay era was ever down for more than 30 minutes for any reason other than a natural disaster. The key idea to take away from telephony is how interchangeable resources were used to build up a system.

    3. Re:Railroads... by miu · · Score: 1
      There are descriptions of the technology in "A Technical History of the Bell System".

      Can you list an ISBN? I can't come up with any reference to this book newer than 1990 and no exact matches at the online book stores.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    4. Re:Railroads... by IM6100 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      In the 'golden days of railroad' that the grandparent comment referred to, it was ALL private.

      So much for your rant about 'privatization' or whatever.

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
    5. Re:Railroads... by Babstar · · Score: 2, Informative

      Try http://www.telephonetribute.com/

    6. Re:Railroads... by BrookHarty · · Score: 1

      Speaking of standards, Look at how all carriers are pushing SMS interoperability, while European countries have had it for ages. The US is just started enabling interoperability. Everyone knows how to do it, just didnt see a need, until now.

    7. Re:Railroads... by Detritus · · Score: 1

      I think it was published in the pre-ISBN era. As far as I know, the only place it can be found is in used book stores, like many other Bell System publications.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    8. Re:Railroads... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 3, Insightful
      In the 'golden days of railroad' that the grandparent comment referred to, it was ALL private.
      They were able to survive as private entreprises as they were MONOPOLIES. At least, until the government would start to build roads that the competition could use for FREE.
    9. Re:Railroads... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine, kill yourself. But first, can I have all your stuff?

    10. Re:Railroads... by td · · Score: 3, Informative

      He might mean "A History of Science and Engineering in the Bell System", a series of many volumes. A google search reveals this link, which gives these isbns: 0-932764-07-X, 0-932764-06-1. I'm pretty sure there were 5 or 6 volumes in the series.

      --
      -Tom Duff
    11. Re:Railroads... by miu · · Score: 1

      Excellent site, thanks.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    12. Re:Railroads... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Private companies that were given millions of dollars in free land by the government.

    13. Re:Railroads... by IM6100 · · Score: 1

      During that period of time, the government was in the wholesale business of giving free land to about anybody who could make use of it. (except the Native Americans, of course)

      They could have waited for federal bureaucracys to get around to laying track, etc. It wouldn't have been a wise move, though.

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
    14. Re:Railroads... by slipgun · · Score: 1

      then comes Thatcherism and privatisation of key services and make such a mess of the British railway... costs are cut, people are sacked and every now and then an accident happens. British railways used to be an example of good competent service... ask any Briton about it nowadays?

      Read up on the British railway network before privatisation. There were in fact more accidents than there are today - they just received less publicity. And you can hardly call the railways private when the government is constantly setting their prices, and bailing them out of trouble. (I'm not trying to argue that the railways are good in Britain today - just correcting a few facts).

      As for good education, it was a left-wing party which abolished grammer schools (which provided the intelligent poor with a decent education), and invented the downright-awful comprehensive system.

      --
      SpamNet - a spam blocker that really works
  3. Exactly... by Eric_Cartman_South_P · · Score: 4, Funny
    Furthermore, they all failed not because the technical solutions that were developed were inadequate, but because they were not what users wanted.

    Perfectly stated. All I want and care for from an ISP is a good stable connection. That's why I've been with AOL for six montH^@@!0%$*ATDT[NO CARRIER]

    1. Re:Exactly... by c.emmertfoster · · Score: 2, Funny

      The no carrier joke is quickly becoming a standard one.

      Beowulf Natalie Grits Russia Overlord$&^#@*&#@*$@#%$@#[NO CARRIER]

      --
      We can neither love nor pity nor forgive. If you make a slip in handling us you die!
    2. Re:Exactly... by xigxag · · Score: 2, Informative

      The no carrier joke is quickly becoming a standard one.

      You're kidding, right? The "NO CARRIER" joke has been around much longer than the Natalie Portman joke. Hell, it's been around longer than Natalie Portman!

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    3. Re:Exactly... by Biogenesis · · Score: 1

      The most secure home workstation is one that isn't connected to the internet, that's why I always recomend AOL.

    4. Re:Exactly... by catscan2000 · · Score: 1

      As you probably know, ATDT directs the modem to dial a number using dial tones.

      If I remember properly, programs that use the modem usually disconnect with an escape sequence (+++ if I remember) and then ATH0 to go on hook (hang up). So a rehash of your comment could be:

      "Perfectly stated. All I want and care for from an ISP is a good stable connection. That's why I've been with AOL for six montH^@@!0%$*+++ATH0[NO CARRIER]"

      Though, now that I'm thinking of it more, I read into it too much ;-), especially since modem communications are handled typically with PPP at a lower layer, preventing the gibberish from being interpreted as an IP packet for Slashdot ;-).

    5. Re:Exactly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure it's been around forever, but I hadn't seen it in EVERY DAMN story until the last month or so.

      Makes me miss the days of playing LORD and whatnot but nevertheless...

    6. Re:Exactly... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      It's worse than that. Remember the old Bitware software, for connecting to BBSs? if you were reading a message online (for you young'uns, meaning while connected to a BBS, not to the internet) and encountered the words "NO CARRIER" in the message body -- this dumb program would hang up the modem!

      Come to think of it, one has to wonder if this "feature" was a bug or a practical joke. :)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    7. Re:Exactly... by xigxag · · Score: 1

      I don't remember that, but I do vaguely remember some program that would hang up if it encountered "ATH" on a line all by itself.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    8. Re:Exactly... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't surprise me if it was Bitware. It was blind-friendly, I remember that -- you could do ANYTHING with text commands.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    9. Re:Exactly... by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 1
      Hell, it's been around longer than Natalie Portman!

      Yeah, but it hasn't been around longer than hot grits :)

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
  4. telling the user what it is by UnderAttack · · Score: 4, Informative

    One issue is that companies do not tell users what they are actually buying. Users do not want to buy "GPSM" or "3G" or "ATM". They want a fast network for a good price. Somehow companies have to tell them just that.

    For example, here in the US 3G services are sold by AT&T as "MWave" and Sprint as "Vision". Neither vendor actually explains users why they want these services.

    On the other hand, Verizon is doing pretty well by just simply explaining users that they provide clearer calls /better coverage. Users don't care that part of the trick is 3G and such.

    --
    ---- join dshield.org Distributed Intrusion Detec
    1. Re:telling the user what it is by BrookHarty · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, Verizon is doing pretty well by just simply explaining users that they provide clearer calls /better coverage. Users don't care that part of the trick is 3G and such.

      Verizon also lies on its coverage maps, and marks all non-coverage areas as "Roaming". They also include 2G coverage on their 3G maps.

      Sprint claims they have the fastest network, which they dont.

      You have to watch every company, they are trying to get customers just like everyone else. I normally would say look at coverage maps, but Verizon basically covers the entire map, and says "See we have the largest coverage area" which isnt true. AT&T Wireless has the largest coverage area, Verizon has the largest privately owned coverage area.

      Its hard for consumers to know which plan to get, what carrier to choose, and listening to commericals as gospel, isn't very bright.

      Of course 2 years from now, coverage won't be the issue, most telco's will have the entire USA coverered, and coverted to true 3G. I'll wait till 2006 before I say "3G" is dead, since it will have arrived.

    2. Re:telling the user what it is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.myrateplan.com

      Most consumers do not have the time, expertise or desire to do the leg work necessary to ensure that they are getting the best value from the services they use everyday. MyRatePlan offers a comprehensive, unbiased online information resource to help consumers "cut thru the fine print", and locate the best price for the exact amount of service they need.

    3. Re:telling the user what it is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Gentlemen, hold your horses. You ought to check the definition of 3G from http://www.3gpp.org/. What US operators call "3G" is just 2G GSM/GPRS branded as "3G." However, relatively speaking US operators are correct. When compared to US wireless patchworks, those 2G GSM/GPRS networks are so much advanced that can be called "3G." US only, though.

    4. Re:telling the user what it is by chiph · · Score: 1

      For example, here in the US 3G services are sold by AT&T as "MWave" and Sprint as "Vision". Neither vendor actually explains users why they want these services.

      I have Sprint PCS-Vision on my PDA-phone, and it's quite nice. Besides the usual: Check the weather, Get stock quotes, Transfer money to my checking account, etc. I'm able to use it as a modem for the laptop. I usually get 115kbps (twice as fast as dial-up), and that came in handy over the holidays when I had to download patches for a relative's virus-infected PC. No problems with coverage so far -- If I'm in the digital service area, I get Vision service too.

      Chip H.

  5. 3G by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd like 3G, I just won't pay $10 a month for internet service for my 100x100 pixel phone, and I'm not buying screen savers and ringers that expire in 90 or 120 days. I'll pay that much for screen savers and ringers that I can keep forever, $1 to $3 isn't too bad compared to the time it would take to make my own, but not for something that the "owner" thinks should just be a temporary thing.

    1. Re:3G by Tim+C · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm not buying screen savers and ringers that expire in 90 or 120 days

      Your screensavers and tones expire?! I think I begin to see why Americans always seem to be so critical and sceptical of advances in mobile phone technology - expiring downloads, network-locked phones, etc; you guys are being screwed.

    2. Re:3G by larry+bagina · · Score: 1
      you're a teacher, but you can't spell 'ridiculous'?

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    3. Re:3G by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your screensavers and tones expire?! I think I begin to see why Americans always seem to be so critical and sceptical of advances in mobile phone technology - expiring downloads, network-locked phones, etc; you guys are being screwed.

      You can thank the RIAA about ringtones that expire. US gets screwed because of corporate welfare.

    4. Re:3G by LinuxHam · · Score: 1

      Now, now, don't take one person's comments and generalize them as applying to ALL stateside carriers. The Nextel downloadable rings and wallpapers don't expire. Now, I was bitten because I changed out my phone before I backed up my custom rings and wallpaper and couldn't redownload (bastards!). Now I know.

      I had them for over a year before I damaged my phone beyond repair.

      --
      Intelligent Life on Earth
    5. Re:3G by red+floyd · · Score: 1

      You're with Sprint, aren't you. Not only won't they let me buy an unlimited time ringer, I can't download wallpaper from my computer!

      --
      The only reason we have the rights we have is that people just like us died to gain those rights. -- Cheerio Boy
    6. Re:3G by toast0 · · Score: 1

      The only carrier I know if that does that is sprint. AFAIK they're the only way to get ringers that expire.

    7. Re:3G by krakrjak · · Score: 1

      If you don't like ringers and screensavers expiring you should try www.3gupload.com. For a one-time donation ($5.99 minimum) unlimited downloads with no expiration dates. I have sprint and it has paid for itself pretty damn quickly.

  6. just wait a few years by pummer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My inside connections at Verizon tell me the company is preparing to offer DirecTV in 2005 to get themselves known in the TV business. Then, by 2010 when they roll out FTTP (Fiber To The Premises), they'll be able to offer television over that. Is this what consumers want from a communications company?

    1. Re:just wait a few years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What an intelligent rebuttal. You should be applauded.

    2. Re:just wait a few years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks. You can send it here.

    3. Re:just wait a few years by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      Verison.

      They are idiots.

      They keep telling me that I qualify for DSL when I go online to check my bill, when I check they say no.

      But what do I expect, I live in an area where Cox internet is 1024/128.

    4. Re:just wait a few years by lambadomy · · Score: 1

      Uh, how exactly do they plan on offering DirecTV? DirecTV is now owned by NewsCorp, and they don't seem to have any incentive to do any deals with Verizon, or to sell the company they just bought.

    5. Re:just wait a few years by leviramsey · · Score: 1

      DirecTV has an issue with penetration in urban areas: owing to difficulties with getting a clear view of the southern sky, many/most potential customers cannot use the service. Once you get into the suburbs and (especially) rural areas, you start seeing DirecTV dishes regularly.

      Thus, I suspect that Verizon (and other telcos) would, rather than roll their own digital television service (with the management headaches that entails), partner with DirecTV to run DTV through their fiber with DTV handling programming and Verizon handling billing and delivery. This at least allows DTV to compete with cable companies across the board on the video segment and allows the phone company to offer a video service.

    6. Re:just wait a few years by rtp · · Score: 1

      Amazing how ya'll haven't kept up with the times.

      Verizon first pursued fiber to the home, and this failed - it was far too early. Consumers didn't need it. Verizon went back and pulled out the fiber, and went back to copper, now delivering DSL to satisfy the current consumer demand for bandwidth.

      Verizon resold DirecTV to the consumer market for about a year or so, about the same time they tried to unify all billing. Consumers also didn't need or want this - another effort that didn't make the numbers Verizon had anticipated.

      Needless to say, Verizon, along with many other carriers, have tried to do more in terms of services and features, often to much market flop.

      Just 'cause the Geeks want something doesn't make it profitable. Mainstream needs to want it.

  7. Nice quote from the article.... by twoslice · · Score: 4, Funny
    From the article under the heading Open Systems and innovation:

    The power to price discriminate, especially for a monopolist, is like the power of taxation, something that can be used to destroy.

    Sounds a lot like Microsoft to me....

    --

    From excellent karma to terible karma with a single +5 funny post...
  8. Information Revolution by g-to-the-o-to-the-g · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The interweb has revolutionized the way we gather information. It has become a cheap, simple, and reliable alternative to traditional systems such as ancient 'libraries'. Once, many years ago, people would actually travel from their homes or workplaces, to these 'libraries' and browse the 'library's' limited selection. Today, there are far fewer information borders. I see it as evolution. At one time, people would even write on pieces of paper and have them delivered to other people. This could often take weeks, which would seem unbarable when compared with IM services or emails. No, I'm not making up stories, despite how unbelievable. Aren't we lucky?

    1. Re:Information Revolution by starcraftsicko · · Score: 1

      But the PROBLEM with the interweb, when compared to those ancient "libraries" is that every other "book" on the interweb is pornographic. Of course I figure most /.ers dont really mind that...

    2. Re:Information Revolution by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I'd say that's more a problem with the librairies.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  9. Advantage of status quo by Klatoo55 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The problem with the networks that have failed is that they have not been able to improve on the status quo enough. A technology may be superior to the current standard, but it must overcome the laziness of the general public; they don't want to switch unless there is a clear and overwhelming advantage to be had by doing so. I refer to the rotary engine... The advantage of experience and existing support for a technology can overwhelm all but a clearly superior alternative.

    --
    ------- "A true friend stabs you in the front." -Eliot
    1. Re:Advantage of status quo by DavidinAla · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What you describe isn't really about the "laziness of the public," but rather the laziness (or stupidity?) of the providers. It's not reasonable to expect the public to investigate the advantages of every new thing in every area and make educated decisions. People can only decide they want something when providers are explaining WHY they want something.

      For instance, some automakers push things in their ads which don't explain a benefit to the public. I've never known what "dual overhead cams" are. I've never known why I should care that a car has 24 valves. I've never known why I should care about "independent front and rear suspension." I'm sure there is a benefit to all of these, but fewer and fewer people want to be mechanics in order to buy cars. We want to know about specific benefits, not about lists of technology that we don't really understand. We shouldn't have to learn about auto mechanics in order to decide whether we want a certain feature.

      In the same way, consumers of IT products shouldn't have to know what 3G means, for instance. They just have to be sold on a network's ability to transmit a picture or whatever else it might mean to them. That's not laziness. That's simply reasonable in a world where no one can know everything.

    2. Re:Advantage of status quo by Klatoo55 · · Score: 1

      I disagree. The public must make educated decisions on many other things, why not their product consumption? It's a bit pessimistic to say that the average person can't think for themselves in simple situations such as this. Granted, the public doesn't want to go very in-depth with their decision making, but a level of self-interested investigation can be assumed if making an important decision on what to buy.

      --
      ------- "A true friend stabs you in the front." -Eliot
    3. Re:Advantage of status quo by DavidinAla · · Score: 1

      It's impossible for people to make educated decisions about everything they have to buy or consume. There is just too much to know -- too many choices to investigate. At some point, it becomes a matter of priorities. "Do I spend 24 hours a day studying technical journals and Consumer Reports or do I have a life?"

    4. Re:Advantage of status quo by Klatoo55 · · Score: 1

      I don't advocate hours of dedicated research. 15 minutes on google is sufficient for a basic knowledge of the subject.

      --
      ------- "A true friend stabs you in the front." -Eliot
    5. Re:Advantage of status quo by DavidinAla · · Score: 1

      No, there are just TOO MANY subjects. What car do I buy? What toilet paper do I buy? What brand of washing machine? What kind of carpet do I put into my house? What baby food do I give my child? What hard drive is best? What type of roof is best for my house? Which school should my child attend? There are thousands upon thousands of decisions we make -- many of them much smaller than these -- and it's literally impossible to make a fully informed decision about all of them. People tend to take the easy way and choose "the leading brand" or what their friends buy. It just isn't possible to learn everything they need to know about everything.

      And I'll guarantee that you do the same thing about some things, even if you don't realize it. We ALL do. You can't be an expert on everything. Besides, there are plenty of things you don't even know that would be of interest to you, because no one has ever articulated the benefits or let you know that something existed.

  10. ATM is a dud? by cavebear42 · · Score: 3, Informative

    DSL is a form of ATM. I don't know if I would call that a "dud". I agree that we were hoping to move all forms of notworking to ATM and that didn't pan out, but still is one of the widest forms of notworking currently in use.

    1. Re:ATM is a dud? by sxpert · · Score: 3, Informative

      yeah, atm is used for DSL only to link the modem to the provider because the transport operator's network is atm based for some reason. ATM in itself is not useful in this context, and eats up to 10% of the available bandwith with pure non-necessary overhead

    2. Re:ATM is a dud? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ATM is all about the structure an consistant size of the cell, asshat!

    3. Re:ATM is a dud? by juglugs · · Score: 0

      Can you think of a more efficient transport protocol?
      ATM is great for this purpose...

      --
      This sig is in Spanish when you're not looking....
    4. Re:ATM is a dud? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually ATM works quite well as an backbone transport for large business/small bandwidth connections. It allows for better bandwidth utilization and allocation over fiber connections (this is in comparison to Sonet). The 10% overhead doesn't really cause a problem. DPT & MPLS are doing their best to do what ATM has been doing for years, QoS. But, for the basic end user, they really have no use for ATM directly. Many of the US core ISPs use ATM somewhere in their network, just the basic end user doesn't see it. Wouldn't say that makes it "a dud". I've built a 300 node ATM network that's still growing :)

    5. Re:ATM is a dud? by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 1

      What about PPP or HDLC?

    6. Re:ATM is a dud? by juglugs · · Score: 0

      They are more "Edge" protocols, and not suited for "Transport".

      --
      This sig is in Spanish when you're not looking....
    7. Re:ATM is a dud? by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 1

      99% of DSL lines are used for IP, so all the DSL line needs to do is get the packets from one end of the pipe to the other; PPP is fine for that.

      (To preempt the pedants, I know that "DSL line" is redundant.)

    8. Re:ATM is a dud? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be more precise, DSL is the layer-1 protocol running between your DSL modem and something called a DSLAM at the central office. ATM is the layer-2 protocol that connects your home to your ISP. ATM is important because it allows people like Covad to arbitrarily connect different homes with difference ISPs in a point-to-point fashion. While it is true that PPP over Ethernet can be used in a similar fashion over a traditional IP network, ATM allows companies like Covad to offer service guarantees, usually for business circuits, that cannot be offered over the more common network protocols that end users are familiar with. So, one of the big benefits to ATM is that it allows virtualized circuits to be sold as if they were dedicated lines. ATM definitely is _not_ a dud.

  11. LOLOLO YUO MAD3 TEH [NO CARIAR] JOKE + 5FUNNAY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    OMG LOLOLOROFL

  12. Users dont know what they want by skaap · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Learning from experience, users dont actually seem to know what they really want..

    First they decide that they need something, so it gets done,
    next they decide that isnt what they wanted. And now what was made is not good enough.

    This happens every day in the PC world where we're forced to deal with endusers.
    All of the above technologies were created through a demand for them, only to realise that they werent sufficient for what they wanted to achieve in the first place.

    --
    -Rob
    1. Re:Users dont know what they want by vik · · Score: 1

      Users may not know what they want, but they won't buy what they don't want.

      Users are also getting more fickle. Most of them have been burned by lock-ins, and are starting to be aware of the concept of "compatibility". They've had Napster and like the concept.

      Look at it his way: You know when they've found themselves a "killer app", right? None of those dud technologies fits the bill.

      Vik :v)

  13. QoS dud? I think not by dmiller · · Score: 5, Insightful

    QoS is far from being a dud - it is a critical part of any VoIP deployment and is now a part of any substantial core network engineering. QoS brokering between ASs (e.g. RSVP) has been a dud so far, but interdomain VoIP is still pretty young so there hasn't been much demand.

    What about architecture changes that have worked? IPsec, ECN, CIDR (and the many changes that came from that, e.g. BGP4) and MPLS? It is too easy to focus on things that failed and ignore the things the silently work.

    1. Re:QoS dud? I think not by pummer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      excellent obervation. Phones will ALL be VoIP eventually, so QoS will only be becoming more and more necessary.

  14. Wrong... by Gwala · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and say that essentially all the major networking initiatives of the last decade

    Funny, becuase that's the opposite of what I see today. Networking/Telecommunications has never been bigger, and apart from a good portion of the net's underlying protocols, we are constantly surrounded by new networking initiatives that have been blindingly successfull. Since `94, the internet (as far as public use goes) has been a pretty successfull initiative. Let alone a lot of the behind-the-scenes initiatives, like enhancing transoceanic cabling.

    The author of that paper is incredibly vague in his paper -, it's easy to pop off 10 initiatives that failed bigtime (like sattelite phones), but becuase your so used to them, you never notice those that have been successfull (Eg CDMA/GSM, and 3G is popular outside the US). I would go so far as to say that most telecommunication's/network initiatives have been successfull in the last decade, becuase as a planet, we are growing increasingly dependent on communication.

    -Adam

    --
    #!/bin/csh cat $0
    1. Re:Wrong... by gkuz · · Score: 0
      The author of that paper is incredibly vague in his paper

      "Incredibly vague"? 72 footnotes, including specific historical references back to the 17th century? Did we read the same paper?

      I know I'll sound like a hopeless fanboy, but before going to UMN, Odlyzko was one of the most creative thinkers and most cogent writers I've seen employed by a major corp.

  15. Subscriber Fatigue: Right Features, Wrong Price by G4from128k · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Its not that users don't want the telco's acronym soup of next-gen features, it's that they don't want to pay for those features. Providers are desperately seeking the fabled "killer app" that makes subscribers shell out another $29.95/mo. But consumers are tired of expanding monthly bills. And it doesn't help when companies slather on an encyclopedia of restrictions, fees, and service charges.

    --
    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
    1. Re:Subscriber Fatigue: Right Features, Wrong Price by zangdesign · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Most of the features the telco's add are things that are just not well suited to the small form factor of a cellphone (Text messaging is fine on the receiving end, but I don't want sega-thumb from having to push all the damn buttons to enter a reply).

      Whatever happened to the cellphone equivalent of the plain black telephone (occasionally available in hotline-red, ghastly-green, or jesus-what-shade-is-that-gray)?

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    2. Re:Subscriber Fatigue: Right Features, Wrong Price by fermion · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I guess we me it is not the expanding bills, as those come with additional services. It is the long contracts and, at least for cell phones, the difficulty of upgrading.

      For the ISP, the problem is a long list of restrictions. You can do this, can't do that. You have to install this software, and we can redirect you. My favorite is that on SWB, Yahoo will take you a useless ad page, which youmay customize, rather than yahoo.com, which is actually useful.

      For the cell phone, I would use the new services, but it is so hard to upgrade. I have to buy a new phone, sign up for two years, and maybe even pay an activation fee. What the hell do they think? That after several years of staying with the same company I am going renew a plan and then quit after a few months. They have to create a reasonable path so that old customer can migrate to thier new services.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    3. Re:Subscriber Fatigue: Right Features, Wrong Price by rmarll · · Score: 5, Insightful

      At my last cell company, the *killer app* apparently was to write software to strip caller ID info from the data stream and charge me to turn off the filter.

      I currently have a mailbox with 3 available message spaces... Not that I mind so much, but does the exra space for a few more messages really cost 5.95 a month?

      I feel like someone has crapped in my well so they can sell me bottled water.

    4. Re:Subscriber Fatigue: Right Features, Wrong Price by Ironica · · Score: 2, Informative

      For the cell phone, I would use the new services, but it is so hard to upgrade. I have to buy a new phone, sign up for two years, and maybe even pay an activation fee. What the hell do they think? That after several years of staying with the same company I am going renew a plan and then quit after a few months. They have to create a reasonable path so that old customer can migrate to thier new services.

      Have never had a problem upgrading with Cingular. Every 12-18 months, I wander into a convenient Cingular store, find out what new phone I can get for free, find out what the new bells and/or whistles are on the contract that has the same price as my existing one, sign a couple pieces of paper, pay the sales tax and nothing else, then take home my brand-new phone and, after charging it as the instructions say, pop in my trusty SIM card. Then the next day I find myself a new faceplate I can stand.

      In fact, anyone who *doesn't* upgrade their contract every year or so is paying way more for way less than they should be. If your service provider makes this too cumbersome, that's what number portability is for. ;-)

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    5. Re:Subscriber Fatigue: Right Features, Wrong Price by toast0 · · Score: 1

      damn, your cell provider sucks.... mine is nice enough to provide me with caller id info if I answer a call that has blocking activated. I just have go to the web billing interface in a few hours and look at who called me. (this worked the last time I got a call from a number with blocking activated, i don't know if this still works)

    6. Re:Subscriber Fatigue: Right Features, Wrong Price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're going to copy the article, at least have the decency to quote it.

  16. Re:Jesus, someone's a genius by pummer · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    MS poured resources into it as the "next big thing" in desktop OSs, but it failed miserably.

  17. ATM was a spectacular failure by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1
    IP networking destroyed ATM, but not before an entire industry could chance it out trying to market this stuff into progressively smaller markets.

    3G also suffers from the "not IP" dilemma, but also ecause it is not clear excatly what 3G is in a fragmented cell network.

    1. Re:ATM was a spectacular failure by DAldredge · · Score: 2, Funny

      Now come on. 48 byte packes was a GRAND idea. After all one side wanted 32 byte packets and the other wanted 64 byte packets so they simply took the average of the two.

      sigh...

    2. Re:ATM was a spectacular failure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      US wanted 64, Europe wanted 32. We compromised at 48, but then there was an extra 5 bytes for the header. Mwa ha ha!

    3. Re:ATM was a spectacular failure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Packet length in ATM is related to the maximum allowed distance between "repeaters." The itty-bitty countries (pre-wannabe-unification Europe) wanted a smaller packet. The larger country involed (USA) wanted a bigger one. The compromise was over the number of repeaters necessary to span a country...

    4. Re:ATM was a spectacular failure by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression the large/small packet advocates were split on application grounds, not national grounds. Those who wanted ATM to be optimal for data applications wanted small, low latency, packets. Those who wanted it for voice applications wanted larger, bandwidth-efficient, packets.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  18. gap people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "but because they were not what users wanted."

    *and* the users could get something they did want.

    possibly that doesn't need to be emphasized, but sometimes it does. to a degree the net is flexible and allows a number of ways to do things. if it was an oldschool lockdown situation, any of those failed technologies may have "succeeded". not because they were good solutions, but because they were the only ones available.

    don't like what your local pop40 station plays? tune in somafm or whatever. we didn't have that option before, and a lot more people listened to local just for the 1 in 20 songs they liked.

    the trick for user studies (there's got to be a better term than that, but it's better than consumer) is to be aware where people go when they don't use your system.

    ie, how many people don't have a land line telephone? every year a lot more people go to just cel and cable. but most of them are "new" customers fresh out of college, so the telcos don't see them in disconnection stats. there's lots of research holes like that one.

    unemployment figures are full of them. up here there's a guestimate 200,000+ that left school then never showed up as employed or on welfare. that's a hella lot of people the gov't doesn't know where they are, and don't put in our unemployment figures because they were never listed as working...

    1. Re:gap people by Ironica · · Score: 1

      ie, how many people don't have a land line telephone? every year a lot more people go to just cel and cable. but most of them are "new" customers fresh out of college, so the telcos don't see them in disconnection stats. there's lots of research holes like that one.

      And then there's folks like me at my old apartment, who didn't use a landline, but the phone company still saw me as a customer because they could charge me the regular phone rate on top of my DSL charges. Couldn't figure out where to route my complaint to at the FCC...

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
  19. strange by segment · · Score: 3, Interesting
    ATM, ... have turned out to be duds. Furthermore, they all failed not because the technical solutions that were developed were inadequate, but because they were not what users wanted.'"

    Define "user" I know this guy is not referring to some average joe fiddling with ATM. Hell the average joe thinks a cell is where he's going to be if he uses Kazaa too long.

    interface ATM1/0.2 point-to-point
    description PVC to Kungfunix
    ip address 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.252
    no ip directed-broadcast
    ip access-group from_Kun in
    ip access-group to_Kun out
    atm pvc 3 0 33 aal5snap

    Oh yea I'm sure the average user is going to bypass DSL or cable and go straight for the big guns. Sure, run an ISP in their own house... User? Define

    1. Re:strange by awx · · Score: 1

      Sure, run an ISP in their own house... User? Define
      You just did.

      The user here is the ISP.

      Wasn't that hard, was it?

      --
      Feel that power? That's mah MOUSING FINGER
    2. Re:strange by segment · · Score: 1

      THAT I know, but it should have been clarified either in the write up, or by /. editors posting the story. Perception is a bitch, and the way I see it, the intro (/. intro anyway) makes it seem as if the average joe blow would know or even care about ATM, QOS, etc., hell the average non ISP linked person knows what CLEC's or ILEC's are.

    3. Re:strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If the user is ISPs, then I'd say that the success or failure of any technology has less to do with the usefulness of the technology, and more to do with which claims to give the most at the cheapest cost. Most large ISPs run ATM somewhere on their network, but it's often put aside for IP because IP solutions are cheaper to implement. However, until MPLS becomes more common, ATM is still the better solution when QoS is required.

    4. Re:strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Competitive and incumbent local exchange carriers. i.e. the new and old phone companies following the deregulation of the Telecommunications Act of 1996.

    5. Re:strange by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Oh yea I'm sure the average user is going to bypass DSL or cable and go straight for the big guns.

      Isn't DSL signaling a subset of ATM anyhow? I think I read that once... :)

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  20. It's the sweeteners that are selling 3G by dbIII · · Score: 4, Informative
    Here in Australia, Hutchison is doing fairly well
    Mobile call pricing in Australia is set very high, and the 3G phones have a price cap - once you go beyond a certain number of calls you don't have to pay any more charges. There have been serious technical issues with Hutchison's 3G network - lot's of dropouts, no-one getting any sound for hours in some exchange areas, people being able to recieve but no send etc. Whether this comes down to lack of resources, bad planning, poor implementation or the actual hardware isn't clear yet from the stories on the issue. Perhaps they just oversold the service and are getting serious congestion problems?

    They're also selling it like phone sex - the posters each have a photo of a person not wearing much and the line "Call me" in big letters - funny really.

    1. Re:It's the sweeteners that are selling 3G by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:It's the sweeteners that are selling 3G by SinaSa · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think you'll find that pretty much all cellular providers had similar problems to the ones you described when they started up. If you look at the 3g forums for australia, youll notice the complaints on things like that have dropped significantly, as time has gone on.

      --
      --
      The last digit of pi is four.
    3. Re:It's the sweeteners that are selling 3G by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you will actually find is that '3' is being blamed for something that is not entirely their fault. The reason for the drop outs is actually extremely poor quality handsets.

      A large number of people are complaining about the usability of the 3G handsets being sold by '3' in Australia, however what not many people know is the fact that the 'network' part of the phone is crap too. This combined by the fact that '3' built a 'budget' network, by not covering adequate area makes the problem even worse.

  21. ATM... by An+Anonymous+Hero · · Score: 2, Informative
    the networking industry [has] devoted inordinate efforts to technologies such as ATM and QoS

    The paper seems quite light on the subject ("ATM" only occurs twice)...

    but indeed Marconi sank billions of cash into it.

    Not everyone was happy ;-)

  22. ATM and QOS are not duds by trybywrench · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ATM may not have ever reached the desktop but it is a very good backbone protocol. It was designed from the start for fast switching and has QOS features built into the protocol. Things like Gbit eithernet and 10gbit ethernet are available but ethernet was never designed as a WAN protocol and lacks features that ATM has.

    I would say over half of the tier1 ISP's are running ATM on their backbones. That would make ATM a very succesful technology in the Internet.

    --
    I came to the datacenter drunk with a fake ID, don't you want to be just like me?
    1. Re:ATM and QOS are not duds by juglugs · · Score: 0

      You're correct in that Ethernet wasn't designed as a WAN protocol, but the WAN Interface Sublayer (WIS) of 10GbE is pretty darn good. However, I'm an ATM advocate - it's a simple and very effective transport mechanism with lots of good features for relatively low overhead...

      --
      This sig is in Spanish when you're not looking....
  23. Ithe Marketing, Stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ATM failed because people bought it because of the marketing not the technical merits. Anyone experienced with TCP/IP knew it would not scale and the performance plunges when packet loss is minimal. (lose one tiny ATM cell and the entire TCP packet needs to get retransmited).

    Goes to show that people are idiots. Like faith healers, people will do anything a marketeer tells them is good for them.

    1. Re:Ithe Marketing, Stupid by tonyray · · Score: 1

      ATM failed? ATM runs over 90% of all DSL circuits and the rest are being quickly converted to ATM. It is bigger now than it has ever been.

      Sorry guy, but lose an IP packet and something has to be retransmitted. Lose 15% of packets and TCP comes to a screeching halt.

      I don't think you can compare IP and ATM anyway. ATM and Ethernet maybe, in which case ATM wins hands down.

    2. Re:Ithe Marketing, Stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right about the IP/ATM comparison, in my view. What he's trying to say is that incremental upgrades were overmarketed and no new ideas have been created. Where your point is most relevant, in my view, is in the nature of the support for his ideas, which assumes a single-technology model for each industry (seemingly).

  24. Curse of the layered model by G4from128k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The layered approach to internet infrastructure is a great technological solution for decoupling the physical mechanisms for moving data, the protocols for managing data movements, and the high-level applications that rely on that data. Layers create natural zones of standardization and enable any application to run on any network.

    But that technological architecture is a business model nightmare. All of the costs reside in the lowest physical layers. All those wires, fibers, amplifiers, and switches cost big bucks. Unfortunately, all of the value lies in the highest, application layers. Users want the application and don't care about the physical infrastructure. A layered architecture gaurantees that users don't have to care because the lower layers are interchangable and invisible.

    The result is cut-throat price competition among infrastructure service providers (and the associated miles of dark fiber, negative earnings, high debt, and bankruptcies). Meanwhile, the application providers reap the profits while the infrastructure providers can't justify the expense of solving the last mile problem.

    --
    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
    1. Re:Curse of the layered model by vik · · Score: 1

      So eliminate this cut-throat competition with the equivalent of the Open Source movement. Hmm, Open Communications movement?

      Anyway, hows about users get shown how to solve the last-mile problem among themselves with wireless connectivity? Wireless local networks for free...

      Vik :v)

    2. Re:Curse of the layered model by bmninan · · Score: 1

      Very interesting idea. Maybe one solution would be to encourage convergence of application/content providers and infrastructure companies (Time Warner). Wldn't it be funny if BGP becomes Bill Gates Protocol ;)

      --
      I am the Pentium Borg. Division is futile, you shall be approximated!.
    3. Re:Curse of the layered model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But look at how the opposite approach ends up. Telecoms companies provide the applications and infrastructure. The consumer has had the same basic set of telephone applications for the last, what, 50, 100 years? The growth of the Internet has seen a huge explosion in communication applications, while telecoms companies have continued to gouge their customers with the same few applications because they have no incentive to innovate.

  25. Focus Groups by halo8 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Reduce the problem to its simpilist equations

    the telcos THOUGHT we wanted it because the focus groups told them " sure id like that on my cell phone" soo.. instead of getting joe six pack, bob the dentist, and suzy suburb homemaker to do the focus group..
    Get...
    jim the out of work IT, bitter, sarcastic, REALISTIC guy, who will say "i just want a cell phone to be as cheap and useable to replace my homephone but ill pay a SMALL bit more to have it be portable"

    because as much as joe, bob, and suzy like these neat gadgets.. after the first week there not going to use them, and there not going to pay for them.

    --
    The More Knowledge you have the Luckier you Get- J.R. Ewing
    1. Re:Focus Groups by pummer · · Score: 1

      Providers:Ron Popeil as 3G:Hair In a Can?

    2. Re:Focus Groups by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So what you're saying is, Bob the Dentist et. al. were making the decisions on weather or not to impliment QoS or ATM for IT network design?

      That actually makes a lot of sense.

      "Bill, we need to impliment an entirly new standard over our backbone. Let's call up marketing and have them do a focus group of a cross section of America."

      "But the average Joe doesn't know anything about network architecture!"

      "You don't want to keep your job, do you Bill"

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
    3. Re:Focus Groups by Nessak · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You are right. I was in a focus group a while ago (1999) for a Fiber-to-the-Home test by a large cable op. In the final group meeting they asked the 10 of us if they should continue the rollout. I was the most technical of the group.

      Everyone else was very enthusiastic about it. My response was that no one in their right mind would pay more for fiber and a trench in there front yard if the speeds would not be much faster then DSL/cable and the usage was just as restricted. For that reason I thought it was a bad idea. (It really wasn't all that impressive compared to my superfast cablevision cable ISP.)

      So yes, I agree. Either they really need to do better at focus groups or they need to ask people who have a clue about tech and know how much various services are really worth. (Fast internet on a small phone without getting a USB/RJ45 IP and paying $$$ is NOT worth it and will fail.)

    4. Re:Focus Groups by warkda+rrior · · Score: 1

      So you are the one that held back Fiber-to-the-Home! Bastard!

      --
      You need to install an RTFM interface.
  26. Mayor Quimby sums this subject up: by Shut+the+fuck+up! · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    "You're nothing but a pack of fickle mushheads!"

  27. Interest in Control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    An interesting passage in the paper reads:
    "Introduction of artifcial restrictions on the Internet would be consistent with other
    trends in the modern economy. In addition to legal measures (such as DMCA), the U.S.
    government is forcing major architectural changes on the whole IT industry through the
    requirement for the "digital broadcast flag." The computer industry is contributing to these
    trends with its development of DRM (digital rights management) and "trusted computing"
    technologies. The scientifc and engineering developments that gave us the openness of the
    PC and Internet platforms are also enabling changes to these platforms that would restrict
    what users can do with them."
    So, differential pricing based on content, can be seen as another element in the effort to restrict what users can do with the internet or with their computers.

  28. Notworking is not working by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    heheh- that's a cute pun, but in this posting it makes no sense. If it wasn't repeated, I would've thought it was just a typo. Your statement may be technically inaccurate as well, DSL may only use ATM upon startup?

    1. Re:Notworking is not working by cavebear42 · · Score: 1

      Yes, it was a typo, and even worse a typo done twice. I thought it was kind of funny when I read it myself. I'll spell check this one. In any case, The purpose of ATM is to act as multi-layer (on the OSI) solution to bring different forms of connecting together (notably synchronous and asynchronous). Not trying to start a flame war by referencing wikipedia, but they have a decent explanation. ATM

  29. Deeply conflicted UI requirements of handsets by G4from128k · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most of the features the telco's add are things that are just not well suited to the small form factor of a cellphone

    Amen! The user interface for cellphones epitomizes the worst possible combination of design compromises -- trying to deliver a cognitively rich array of features in an inscrutably tiny screen space. Customers demand the smallest lightest possible handset and then are disappointed when the screen is unreadably small, the buttons are unusably close-packed, and the battery life (under real use) is pathetically short. Perhaps when eyeglass screens and virtual keybaords appear, then we will be able to enjoy full internet services in a visually large space.

    --
    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
  30. HOWTO: Write a stupid paper by jd · · Score: 5, Informative
    • First, pick a technology that has never been seriously deployed. It greatly helps if none of the readers have any practical, real-world experiences with the subject.
    • Second, always compare with an only marginally related industry or discipline. There has to be enough of a connection to convince the readership, but not enough of one to disprove your preconceived notions.
    • Third, Always tell the audience that they have The Right Thing. It makes them happy. It also makes the usual sponsors of such work (the ones who run the status quo) very happy, too. Happy enough to pay you, for example.

    Seriously, multicaasting is enabled on most of the majopr backbones, but none of the major ISPs supply it - even to broadband customers - at any price. UUnet is one of the few that does. Their links aren't cheap, and from all accounts it can be very hard to get multicasting enabled, simply because a good number of their front-line support people don't know anything about it.

    QoS is likewise serioulsy hindred. Oh, it's used in the field. The transatlantic link between the UK and the US has CBQ (Class Based Queues) enabled to maximise the throughput of important traffic, simply because there's so much.

    Britain's JANET network has a highly extensive network of web caches. The theory being that one of the biggest loads on the transatlantic link is web traffic, and that the same site is often accessed repeatedly (eg: for University coursework), so that the most efficient solution is to cache everything.

    While not strictly "QoS", caching can reduce access times for a web page at peak time from maybe an hour to down to 15 seconds, whilst also massively reducing the load on the network.

    RSVP is a different case. That is known to not scale well over very large, complex multicast networks. (Too much overhead.) However, it is great for local networks, and I'm sure that it will gradually filter its way into Universities and mid-sized corporations, where videoconferencing is useful but bandwidth issues make it impossible to do without some QoS.

    ATM is used by many xDSL companies, as it is a very efficient way to run a fixed-point to a fixed-point. To say it's not used is absurd and shows a degree of ignorance. It's also very popular in Europe, where people perhaps put a little more investment into infrastructure.

    Quick note: I'm a little irritated by hearing some American politician label maglev trains as "sexy science fiction" and "stupid". To me, it's part of a worrying trend I'm seeing in all too much of the US, where there is an apparent phobia of making any actual progress in anything. To me, progress is the certain bit. What happens to those who reject it - that's not so certain.

    How does this fit in? There's only so much bandwidth. Sure, Lucent is up to 3 Terabits per second, but with collapsing R&D funds and Lucent in enough of a financial mess, don't expect either a rollout, or a refinement, any time soon.

    That's the absolute upper cap. The real limit is much smaller. Backbone connections are probably not much more than four or five hundred gigabits per second. (That is to say, about the capacity of two or three hundred well-made Pentium IV-based PCs.)

    A relatively small Beowulf cluster could totally saturate a decent chunk of the Internet backbone. Most cluster-based computers, such as the Origin 3000 or the Altix 3000, with sufficient network links, could easiy max out the capacity of any part of the Internet, without much effort.

    Why isn't the technology used? Because the customer doesn't want it? The customer has never been offered it!! Very, very few customers even know about it!! And ISPs, in particular, are keen to keep it that way. There is much more money to be made from serving people badly, because the customer'll keep paying for improvements and/or support. The ISPs can gouge the more foolish for years

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:HOWTO: Write a stupid paper by beezly · · Score: 2, Informative

      Britain's JANET network has a highly extensive network of web caches. The theory being that one of the biggest loads on the transatlantic link is web traffic, and that the same site is often accessed repeatedly (eg: for University coursework), so that the most efficient solution is to cache everything.

      Not any more it doesn't... webcache.ja.net passed away Dec 2002.
    2. Re:HOWTO: Write a stupid paper by Ironica · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Second, always compare with an only marginally related industry or discipline. There has to be enough of a connection to convince the readership, but not enough of one to disprove your preconceived notions.

      Ok, I haven't RTFP yet, though I definitely plan to. Maybe he doesn't make the link particularly clear. But the analogies between transportation and telecommunication networks have long fascinated me, since shortly after I abruptly left the tech support field to get a Master's in Transportation Planning. (For example, if you consider that the basic traffic system has to be collision-avoidance based rather than collision-detection based, it explains a little about why transportation networks tend to be relatively inefficient and have pretty high overhead. You can't retransmit a car.)

      Quick note: I'm a little irritated by hearing some American politician label maglev trains as "sexy science fiction" and "stupid". To me, it's part of a worrying trend I'm seeing in all too much of the US, where there is an apparent phobia of making any actual progress in anything. To me, progress is the certain bit. What happens to those who reject it - that's not so certain.

      I did a search for this in the paper and didn't see it, so where is it from? I'm curious which politician that was, and which project they were talking about. Mostly because it sounds like they're quoting my advisor ;-).

      But the fact is, maglev in particular is a somewhat inappropriate technology. Over shorter distances, it's wasted; you spend the entire trip either accelerating or decelerating. Over longer distances, though, it's much more expensive and difficult to provide, not to mention it's hard to find a solid stretch of right-of-way that you can take over preemptively full-time. Maglevs pretty much have to be fully grade-separated, and building an elevated track is about 10x the cost of building it on the ground (generally speaking; I don't know if there are any special considerations with building elevated maglevs).

      It is a fun idea, but from everything I've seen it's not a practical component in our existing transportation infrastructure. It might be eventually, but at the moment, it's got a lot of issues.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    3. Re:HOWTO: Write a stupid paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just a few comments on the maglev, namely that for one it has a far superior acceleration curve compared to other trains, making it more usable on track lengths of moderate length, compared to the current high speed trains that need much longer tracks to make there speed count. As well as that maglev's can take far far steeper gradients then any other type of train. The only real issue with it, is I believe that it eats alot of power. So wide scale deployment might hinge on energy prices dropping, something which will porbably happen over time.

  31. Re:LOLOLO HAHA YOU MADE TEH 1ST M$ JOKE +5FUNAY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you're so fucking retarded

  32. A hint as to why Linux is succeeding??? by 3seas · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Cause the users make it what they want??

  33. "Quickly becoming standard"?! by cduffy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That joke was old 20 years ago!

  34. Less about Architecture, More about Pricing by juglugs · · Score: 0

    The problem (and the cause of the slump) isn't so much to do with the architecture or technologies available, but more to do with the "pricing" aspect.

    Supply Demand

    People always need to communicate, and want that communication to happen instantly (in most cases). So the demand for a faster communications structure is always there. Forget the "Killer App" theory - it's already here - we want high quality video conferencing, and the ability to get information ASAP - i.e. download large files, such as video and documents almost instantly.

    However, due to infrastructure costs, the net price (excuse the pun) was/is too high to charge the average user. The Telecom boom happened because the Telco's etc. tried to undercut each other, as did their suppliers, and the result was unsustainable. More users jumped on the bandwagon, but the cost of upgrading the infrastructure was too high.

    Eventually, the telco's couldn't afford to buy new equipment to satisfy demand, so the suppliers decided to "loan" them equipment until their revenues went higher - however, this didn't happen and everyone suddenly realised that they were in debt up their eyeballs and the bubble burst...

    The industry needs to adopt a better cost model. End Users, in general, are probably able to handle $30/month for the leading edge technologies, but that must be $30/month ALL INCLUSIVE - i.e. Broadband Internet, Video Phones and telephone/mobile services, if possible...

    ATM QoS aren't duds - QoS isn't a technology, per se, but a methodology - your POTS line has a QoS contract...

    --
    This sig is in Spanish when you're not looking....
    1. Re:Less about Architecture, More about Pricing by Differance · · Score: 1


      Pricing is what this paper is all about.

      You do go on . . .

  35. route around damage. by twitter · · Score: 1
    Price discrimination is just another form of censorship. It will be seen as damage and routed around. Those that try will fail.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  36. Has anyone RTFA or RTFP ? by anti-NAT · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because I have glossed through it (a number of months ago), and none of the comments up until now show any evidence of people actually understanding Prof Odlyzko's arguments.

    The goal of ATM was to replace network stacks such as TCP/IP, as evidenced by all the different QoS options available (VBR, CBR, UBR etc), as well as all the AAL layers (1 - 5, I've heard a AAL6 might be coming). Switched Virtual Circuits were supposed to be the dominant way connections were set up.

    Why has it failed ? There are primarily two reasons :

    • It is primarily deployed, if not always deployed, by telco customers as Permanent Virtual Circuits. The Telco's love SVCs, as they can then charge per connection setup. Customers love PVCs, as it is then a fixed price service. The customer won. So the SVC mechanisms within ATM are somewhat redundant, as well as the SVC signaling mechanisms.
    • The dominant application of ATM is to run TCP/IP over it. This is a waste of resources, as TCP is providing a lot of the facilities ATM was intended to provide. ATM is incredibly over engineered for the most common service it is being used for, namely, link layer or layer 2 point to point, best effort connections.

    Another technical restriction ATM has is due to the 53 byte Cell size. As bit rates increase, the number of cells per second increase, which increases the number of cell headers per second the ATM device has to process, which then increases the computational requirements of the ATM device. This is putting huge demands on CPU/ASIC technology, such that it is becoming impossible to build an ATM interface that can operate fast enough. For example, you can already get 10Gbps SONET and Ethernet interfaces, but I'm not aware of any 10Gbps ATM interfaces. They may exist, but they are "late to market", and very expensive, when compared to alternative 10Gbps techologies.

    On a related note, the header per second processing issue is also going to be a problem with ethernet in the near future, which one of the reasons why jumbo / 9000 byte ethernet frames is slowly being adopted.

    Finally, a note to those who think ATM is successful just because it is being used. You really need to consider and compare the original goals of the technology verses how it is commonly been used. As ATM typically isn't used at all for what it was designed for, then it is a design failure, and an over engineered one at that.

    We all complain about how much our broadband Internet access costs. Unfortunately, ATM has contributed significantly to those high costs, because the vendors who have sold ATM want to re-coop all their R&D costs for most of the features of ATM that are never used, so they charge high prices for ATM technology. There are a few things ATM does that other technologies don't, and there haven't been any alternatives, so we have been stuck with ATM, and have been stuck paying for its over engineering.

    --
    The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
    1. Re:Has anyone RTFA or RTFP ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The goal of ATM was to replace network stacks such as TCP/IP, as evidenced by all the different QoS options available (VBR, CBR, UBR etc), as well as all the AAL layers (1 - 5, I've heard a AAL6 might be coming).

      ATM QoS operates at the data link layer, and is therefore not relevant to the upper layer protocols like IP. Maybe I'm missing something, but I don't follow your argument.

      Another technical restriction ATM has is due to the 53 byte Cell size. As bit rates increase, the number of cells per second increase, which increases the number of cell headers per second the ATM device has to process, which then increases the computational requirements of the ATM device. This is putting huge demands on CPU/ASIC technology, such that it is becoming impossible to build an ATM interface that can operate fast enough.

      This is just a consequence of the fact that ATM was designed for fine-grained hardware QoS that cannot be achieved in any other way (including the "QoS" promised for other layer 2 technologies).

      For example, you can already get 10Gbps SONET and Ethernet interfaces, but I'm not aware of any 10Gbps ATM interfaces. They may exist, but they are "late to market", and very expensive, when compared to alternative 10Gbps techologies.

      ATM will always lag behind simpler, less capable technologies. You get what you pay for. The only issue is whether the older technologies like ethernet can be tweaked to provide an acceptable alternative to ATM in all of its application spaces, and achieving that, will the result be as complex and expensive as ATM?

      On a related note, the header per second processing issue is also going to be a problem with ethernet in the near future, which one of the reasons why jumbo / 9000 byte ethernet frames is slowly being adopted.

      Slowly indeed, since it breaks the current infrastructure, and complicates data convergence and synchronization issues. It illustrates the problems of retrofitting obsolescent technologies for applications they were not designed for.

      Finally, a note to those who think ATM is successful just because it is being used. You really need to consider and compare the original goals of the technology verses how it is commonly been used. As ATM typically isn't used at all for what it was designed for, then it is a design failure, and an over engineered one at that.

      More accurately, the market and applications it was designed has not yet materialized. That doesn't make it a design failure.

      We all complain about how much our broadband Internet access costs. Unfortunately, ATM has contributed significantly to those high costs, because the vendors who have sold ATM want to re-coop all their R&D costs for most of the features of ATM that are never used, so they charge high prices for ATM technology.

      Can you prove that or are your just guessing? I suspect that politics and monopolies have far more influence on end user prices than equipment.

      There are a few things ATM does that other technologies don't, and there haven't been any alternatives, so we have been stuck with ATM, and have been stuck paying for its over engineering.

      And the interesting questions now are whether those "few things" ATM can do will become more, not less, important, and whether they can be done by any other technology, especially when applications like VoIP become popular.

    2. Re:Has anyone RTFA or RTFP ? by Moskit · · Score: 1


      For example, you can already get 10Gbps SONET and Ethernet interfaces, but I'm not aware of any 10Gbps ATM interfaces. They may exist, but they are "late to market", and very expensive, when compared to alternative 10Gbps techologies.

      There is at least one existing commercially available ATM switch with 10Gbit/s (STM-64c) native ATM interface that I'm aware of: Cisco's MGX 8950 and it's AXSM-1-9953-XG module:
      http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/sw itches/ps 1938/products_configuration_guide_chapter09186a008 017a4e1.html#1529475

      Pricewise an ATM port has always been (and most likely always will be) more expensive than Ethernet port of comparable speed, but you will get price comparable to an POS port. Also "pricing rule" shouldn't be different: STM-64 price should be similar to 3xSTM-16 (remember: it's 4x the speed).

      This is a "transit" ATM port (switching), not "endpoint" (terminating). Transit ports "only" switch ATM cells, but still it's very difficult to build them (Cisco claims to be the first company to have STM-64 ATM). End device ports have to perform segmentation and reassembly of packets - waaay more power is needed for that and it's true that such ports don't come in STM-64 size.

      Still, don't dismiss the existing module - as a backbone link it IS useful.

      Finally, a note to those who think ATM is successful just because it is being used. You really need to consider and compare the original goals of the technology verses how it is commonly been used. As ATM typically isn't used at all for what it was designed for, then it is a design failure, and an over engineered one at that.

      Very well said.

      NB: a lot of /. discussion seems american-oriented (cheap bandwidth), it doesn't notice a different rationale in european countries.

    3. Re:Has anyone RTFA or RTFP ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The dominant application of ATM is to run TCP/IP over it. This is a waste of resources, as TCP is providing a lot of the facilities ATM was intended to provide. ATM is incredibly over engineered for the most common service it is being used for, namely, link layer or layer 2 point to point, best effort connections.

      This is dead wrong. TCP is layer 4 and ATM is lays 2 and 3. TCP provides a connection from one process on a host to another process on another host. TCP provides NO services that ATM can provide. ATM only provides a point-to point connection so your two LANs can appear to be one big LAN. It does not do flow control or congestion control. ATM cells are just dropped when congestion occurs.
      ATM was designed in the 80s when the telcos anticipated video being transmitted across network which is why the QoS was added because video is latency dependant. It was never designed to replace TCP/IP which was in it's infancy at that time. I will agree that 53-bytes is much too small but to say ATM is a failure is ignorant. In the late 90's ATM switches were MUCH faster then their Ethernet coutparts and a great deal of high-speed routing reaseach has come from the development of ATM.

    4. Re:Has anyone RTFA or RTFP ? by anti-NAT · · Score: 1

      There is at least one existing commercially available ATM switch with 10Gbit/s (STM-64c) native ATM interface that I'm aware of: Cisco's MGX 8950 and it's AXSM-1-9953-XG module: http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/switches/ps 1938/products_configuration_guide_chapter09186a008 017a4e1.html#1529475

      Not knowing all that much about ATMs use in Telco network (well, I probably know a bit more than the person), would I be right in guessing that this type of interface would be used to aggregate up VCIs under a VPI or multiple VPIs ? As you can't generate or receive ATM traffic at these speeds, aggregation is the only use I can see for this type of equipment, and I'm a bit curious as to how it is done or used.

      --
      The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
  37. Interesting fact about real ATM deployment by StandardCell · · Score: 4, Interesting

    About 5 years ago, when I was working for a telecom consortium in Canada, one of the guys who was an expert for ATM was telling me that most deployments of ATM at the time were in purely synchronous mode due to the complexity of configuring the equipment to handle various types of traffic. Of course, what you ended up with is a very expensive switch with basically redundant capabilities.

    ATM had a lot of promise but it's really an unnecessary technology relative to the amount of bandwidth available. Tons of fiber still lies dark. SONET switches and Ethernet are basically all that's going in these days for medium and long haul. Even for synchronous traffic, fast asynchronous transport can make the asynchronous nature of the medium transparent.

  38. Buzz-word Bingo by Bob_Robertson · · Score: 1

    What has failed is the excessive boasts made about such things.

    ATM is not the answer. VPN is not the answer. There is no "The" answer. Each protocol has its place and use.

    Just because I don't like VPNs and QoS doesn't mean they're wrong, it means that I believe they're overused in situations where they don't solve anything. In this way I agree with the author.

    dmiller, you do have a very important point, to wit:

    It is too easy to focus on things that failed and ignore the things the silently work.

    Exactly. Silently work. What people really want is for things to "just work". Buzz-words just confuse the issue. If a new wunderthing doesn't materially improve the situation, don't use it, no matter how pretty it looks in the stockholders report.

    Bob-

    --
    The Ludwig von Mises Institute. The reasoning individuals economics
  39. NO CARRIER jokes are *so* 10 years ago. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To whom are they still funny? (Other than slashdotters with mod points in one hand and blotter acid in the other)

  40. It won't work in IT. by Malcontent · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What worked for railroads will not work for IT because the players have no interest in playing nice with each other. Each company wants to make their own proprietary version of everything and lock it up with patents and DRM.

    Why do we have umpteen different voice and movie recording codecs? Why do we need so many DVD formats? Why didn't MS just use ldap and kerberos instead of rolling their own versions of it?

    --

    War is necrophilia.

    1. Re:It won't work in IT. by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 3, Insightful
      What worked for railroads will not work for IT because the players have no interest in playing nice with each other.
      They will. It's inevitable.

      120 years ago, the railroads didn't work together (different track gauge for each railroad; incompatible couplers, and in England, at one point, there were 3 incompatible brake systems) because they had no interest in playing nice with each other.

      Over time, the railroads who played nice with each other had an advantage over the ones who didn't, and legislation eventually did the rest, so, nowadays, railroads are 100% compatible with each other (to the point that engines from one road can be remote-controlled by engines from another road).

    2. Re:It won't work in IT. by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      In IT the company which hates playing nice and insists on doing everything it's own way has a monopoly and is the biggest most profitable company.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    3. Re:It won't work in IT. by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Fortunately, we can reroute around this obstruction with open source.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  41. "QoS" a dud ? I think so by anti-NAT · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think you are saying that "QoS" is necessary to VoIP, because if VoIP is flakey, the end users won't use it.

    I then think you are really saying that VoIP is a latency sensitive application, so the network has to be engineered to meet the latency requirements of VoIP.

    The issue then is how you meet those latency requirements ?

    There are a couple of ways you can do that :

    • Ensure that there is enough capacity in the network such that it very rarely gets congested to the point where VoIPs latency requirements cannot be met.
    • Provision less capacity in the network, and then use various managed QoS mechanisms, such as CBQ, etc, to manage the congestion in the network when it occurs. Congestion in this network will occur much more often than the network with the additional capacity.

    So which solution do you choose ?

    As a rule, simplicity usually wins out. Maybe not in the first instance, but eventually, over time, things tend towards simplicity. Simplicity tends to be cheaper, and everybody aims for cheaper. There is always a demand in the market for cheaper, and commonly, the only way to achive cheaper is to go simpler.

    Costs of running a network are broken into two areas - Capital Expenses (ie. usually initial, setup costs), and Operational Expenses (ie. ongoing running costs).

    Comparing the above solutions, the one thing the second has that the first doesn't have is a lot of active bandwidth management and measuring. This can be very expensive to do, when you consider the number of devices and links within the network. It can also be very complicated, as it increases the number of protocols running in the network, and the number of people who need to be paid to watch and operate the network. The QoS solution is not the simpler of the two solutions. The second solution has higher operational expenses than the first.

    Comparing the two solutions using capital expenses, I'd suggest the initial set costs of the first solution would only be in the order of about 20% more than the second, accounted for by the additional bandwidth expenses incurred.

    The question to ask then is "how long will the 20% cheaper start up cost of the second solution be absorbed by the higher operational expenses of the second solution ?"

    My answer is "not all that long". Which indicates that the "throw bandwidth at it" solution, in the longer term, is both simpler and therefore will be cheaper.

    As further evidence, consider the Internet. There is very little QoS management on the Internet, with the exception of a recommendation of a default queuing alorithm - Random Early Detection. The Internet solution is to "throw bandwidth at it". Yet most of the time Internet provides good enough "QoS" to allow people to make voice and video calls across it. Certainly good enough to sustain voice calls that are equivalent or better than mobile or cell voice calls eg GSM. Based on that evidence, you don't need to implement QoS technology inside the network to sustain the latency required for typical VoIP applications.

    In the Internet, simplicity has won.

    --
    The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
    1. Re:"QoS" a dud ? I think so by bmninan · · Score: 1

      This reminds me of a Wired article arnd 1996 http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/4.10/atm_pr.htm l Overprovisioning may be a simpler solution but the key factor is the burstiness of traffic. Most of today's traffic is P2P with high variability. And then there is the "Groves Giveth and Gates Taketh Away" phenomenon. Any extra bandwidth u throw into wld be consumed by ever demanding applications. 2 yrs ago ppl were downloading mp3s and now they r into DivX movies. I think much of the confusion on this QoS vs Overprovisioning debate lies in the temporality of congestion. Internet experiences congestion usually for millisecond durations when say all the traffic flows to a slashdotted site. This does not mean that the avg demand is higher than the available capacity. Such short term congestion cannot be combated by overprovisioning. At present we rely on TCP to do the dirty work but no one has much of a clue if UDP flows come into the picture. Luckily over 95% of net traffic is TCP so we r kinda saved for the time being!. One nice thing with pricing is it gives the users an incentive to send the most important data when the network is congested. It also acts as a feedback to the network to decide whether and how to avoid congestion. If congestion persists for the long term it is an indication of supply-demand mismatch which can be alleviated by overprovisioning. The revenues generated by congestion pricing can be used for this purpose. So QoS and overprovisioning are in a way complementary. Usage pricing has however associated problems of system complexity, accounting and revenue division as well as lack of standards. And like Odlyzko always says ppl r always risk averse and hate change.

      --
      I am the Pentium Borg. Division is futile, you shall be approximated!.
    2. Re:"QoS" a dud ? I think so by Ironica · · Score: 1

      Costs of running a network are broken into two areas - Capital Expenses (ie. usually initial, setup costs), and Operational Expenses (ie. ongoing running costs).

      Strangely enough, this is also the case in transportation. I haven't read the paper yet, though I definitely plan to... and I'll probably work it in as a reference in one of my assignments this or next quarter.

      Comparing the two solutions using capital expenses, I'd suggest the initial set costs of the first solution would only be in the order of about 20% more than the second, accounted for by the additional bandwidth expenses incurred.

      But I'd consider additional bandwidth to be an operational expense. Sure, the capital expenses are also going to be higher, but unless you *own* the bandwidth (i.e. you're a backbone provider) you'll have a monthly lease on it.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    3. Re:"QoS" a dud ? I think so by jonbrewer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      In the Internet, simplicity has won.

      You're showing a very Western bias there...

      in New Zealand, for example, there isn't bandwidth to throw at the problem. Upstream providers want around $115 USD/month per 64kb channel for CIR bandwidth. Other expensive markets include parts of Russia, South America, Africa... all places with millions of Internet users. Active bandwidth measuring, traffic caps, and QoS will be with us for many years to come.

    4. Re:"QoS" a dud ? I think so by anti-NAT · · Score: 1

      You're showing a very Western bias there...

      Well, Australia is probably considered a Western country :-)

      in New Zealand, for example, there isn't bandwidth to throw at the problem. Upstream providers want around $115 USD/month per 64kb channel for CIR bandwidth.

      I'd suggest a significant part of the reason for that relatively high cost is the requirement for an end-to-end CIR.

      The efficiency and economics of a packet switched network is based on the fundamental assumption of fair and equal sharing of available bandwidth, where everybody suffers if there isn't enough capacity. If you want priority handling pr dedicated bandwidth, you need to expect to have to pay for it.

      As an analogy, we all share the road, and, as long as there is enough capacity in the system, we all get to where we need to go in a reasonable and acceptable timeframe, constrained by the speed limits in place.

      Of course, for some (rich) people, the inherent delays in a shared road infrasture, as well as the possiblity of encountering congestion are not acceptable. So they buy a helicopter instead, which gives them their own "dedicated" channel to their destination (forgetting for the momement they also have to share airspace).

      Your 64 Kbps CIR link is the equivalent to the helicopter solution. If you truely need it, you are likely to be willing to pay for it. If you don't need it, or can't afford it, maybe an IPsec VPN over the Internet will be sufficient, yet still provide acceptable performance.

      Other expensive markets include parts of Russia, South America, Africa... all places with millions of Internet users.

      Are you saying there are actually (today) millions of Internet users in these countries, or are you saying there are potentially millions of Internet users in these countries ?

      If you are saying there are actually millions of Internet users in these countries, then the carriers providing Internet bandwidth should be already be reaping enough revenue to ensure that their core bandwidth grows quickly enough to support their edge bandwidth growth. If they aren't, then it isn't a networking problem, it is a business problem - they aren't charging enough for their product to continue to be in a financial position to provide it.

      --
      The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
    5. Re:"QoS" a dud ? I think so by dmiller · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but many networks use CBQ for traffic engineering because, at the edge, most people are bandwidth constrained. How on earth do you engineer surplus bandwidth in the age of KaZaa without QoS?

      Even at the core some basic QoS is necessary on CSMA/CD media, lest a bunch of 1500 byte FTP packets preempt your jitter-sensitive multimedia traffic. Throwing bandwidth doesn't solve that problem, it only mitigates it. Furthermore the improvement that you do get is sublinear with the additional of bandwidth, while bandwidth costs ($/Mbps) are superlinear. Sure it'll work, up to a point, but piping gigabit to the home just to make VoIP calls work while I'm downloading with BitTorrent isn't going to happend

      In the Internet, simplicity has won.

      That sounds really nice as a soundbite, but that doesn't make it true.

    6. Re:"QoS" a dud ? I think so by radi0man · · Score: 1

      Which indicates that the "throw bandwidth at it" solution

      An end-user will only choose that solution if it is cheaper than a solution with QoS. However, when providers don't charge extra for QoS (or just for changes), a QoS solution will be cheaper for them.
      We offer QoS on some of the products we sell and many customer choose to use QoS instead of buying more bandwidth.

      I think one of the reasons that the "throw bandwidth at it" solution has been used so much on the Internet so far, is that there hasn't been a decent implementation of QoS so far.

  42. Regulation by Bob_Robertson · · Score: 1

    It is also instructive to note that the Railroads exist as a sad remnant of their former glory, due to being regulated in their innovation by government, and competition with a government run monopoly: roads.

    A network is a network is a network. They have the same issues no matter how different their method or payload. They are all subject to the same failings as well, and bureaucratic regulation will kill all of them.

    Innovation is what keeps networks alive, the ability for new players to enter the market without hinderance is what allows the greatest innovation.

    The 'Net only exploded when the NSF loosened its death-grip on the interchange protocols and allowed anyone to connect to anyone. The cruch coincided with the Digital Milenium Copyright Act. The former is direct cause and effect. The latter is only partly coincidence. ...IMNSHO.

    Bob-

    --
    The Ludwig von Mises Institute. The reasoning individuals economics
    1. Re:Regulation by Ironica · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Railroads exist as a sad remnant of their former glory, due to being regulated in their innovation by government, and competition with a government run monopoly: roads.

      Competition with a free road network did a lot to kill off rail in much of the US, but government regulation didn't kill them... it avoided killing people. If you want to talk about the urban streetcar systems, that's another story, but the "regulation" was what the streetcar operators agreed to in order to maintain a monopoly on a given route.

      Regulated travel and transportation is far safer than deregulated. Take a look at airplane accident statistics pre- and post-Regan deregulation. It's pretty horrifying (and firing all the experienced air traffic controllers didn't help one bit).

      Innovation is what keeps networks alive, the ability for new players to enter the market without hinderance is what allows the greatest innovation.

      And in many cases, it's only through government regulation that new players can enter those markets unhindered. See Sprint/MCI vs. Ma Bell, for instance. How much better did telecom innovation get in the US when the government stepped in and broke down the monopoly? How much has the Telecom Act of 1996 allowed smaller providers to come in and do what the big phone companies are prohibited from doing unless they open their networks?

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    2. Re:Regulation by lewie-the-lip · · Score: 1

      Take a look at airplane accident statistics pre- and post-Regan deregulation.

      For the record, I did check some data on airline accidents within the jurisdiction of the US traffic control system.

      1969 through 1981 (The year Regan de-unionized ATC)

      Total accidents: 59
      Annual average: 4.54

      1982 to through 2003

      Total accidents: 72
      Annual average: 3.27

      Thus, it would seem that Regan's canning of the ATC union and deregulation had a beneficial effect on the total number of accidents.

      I used this for my data, where did you get yours, Ironica?

  43. Multicasting by TheSync · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Multicasting, as a standard service, has not been seriously brought into the Internet because of the difficulty of billing between AS's. There has never been an effective agreement for this (unlike unicast flows). You can imagine the trouble of not knowing how many packets you send out of your network for each one that comes in. Plus ISPs did not want to canabalize their existing unicast customers who might spend less through multicasting.

    Moreover, multicast routing has never reached a level of technical competancy, in part because of the billing problem. No one ever really pushed Cisco to make things like PIM-Sparse Mode work properly, and as of 1-2 years ago, it still barely worked.

    This brings us to legacy equipment, like dial-in routers and DSLAMs that are not multicast enabled. To turn on mulitcast everywhere you would need to make it a useful service would require something aking to IPV6 switchover (which also, uh, isn't happening fast).

    Multicast is alive an well in intra-AS niches like satellite and DTV IP datacasting, as well as special large Internet customers on specific backbones.

  44. Who is selling 10Gbit ATM ? by anti-NAT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Cisco aren't

    Juniper aren't either

    Neither of them are because either

    • They can't build it, as the cell per second processing load is too high for current technology
    • They can't afford to build it, as the customer won't pay, as it will be too expensive, caused by the cost of coming up with a solution to the first point.

    They don't even go to OC48c or 2.5 Gigabits speeds with ATM.

    ATM is being phased out of carrier backbones because it is overly complicated, and therefore overly expensive for what carriers need. Packet Over Sonet/SDH (POS) or Ethernet is taking over.

    Just because a technology is being used doesn't make it successful, in particular when compared to its original design goals. It may only mean that there was not alternative at the time. As soon as something cheaper, yet as or more effective comes along (eg POS, 10Gbps Ethernet), the less effective technology will be replaced and / or avoided.

    --
    The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
    1. Re:Who is selling 10Gbit ATM ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Everyone seems to think that ISPs just run Ethernet everywhere. Nothing could be farther from the truth. 95% of the links between POPs are SONET rings which only run at SDH/OCx data rates. There is a technology that allows defined QoS and aggregated connections over a single link and it sure isn't Ethernet.

      SDH being phased out? By who? The telcos and MUST provide quality of service. I can't honestly say I foresee them replacing Add/Drop multiplexers and DCSs with Ethernet especially considering the former equipment's reliability GREATLY exceeds the latter.

      Cisco and Juniper aren't use because they are terrible at supplying equipment used in carrier class networks. Data rates aren't everything as anyone who sources equipment will tell you.

      ATM doesn't do OC48??!? Try the 5 year old Lucent GX550 which supports 8 OC48 cards on a 25 GBsec backplane.

  45. clearly wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used to work for Nortel, before it imploded. I can tell you for a fact that this statement is completely wrong. But not for the reason you think.

    Your terminology is preventing you from seeing the truth. Substitute "customer" for "user" and it will be clearer. Nortel's customer isn't you and me - its BellSouth. Nortel supplied exactly what its customers demanded.

    Sadly, the "solution" supplied to BellSouth isn't what BellSouth's customers (that would be us "users") wanted. BellSouth and the other baby bells (all two of them) can't possibly know what their customers want, because they absolutely refuse to listen.

    BellSouth is a deaf as a post, true enough. But they own the last mile. As long as they have a monopoly on the last mile, you'll take what they offer.

    And they ain't gonna offer you fiber in the last mile. No, no, no. Not from a baby bell.

  46. Probably cost too much to run, by anti-NAT · · Score: 2, Insightful

    cheaper to just throw bandwidth at the problem, and then avoid the operational costs of futzing around with proxy servers, with their inherent disk space, OS patch, proxy software patch, hardware failure, etc. etc., problems.

    As commonly in life, in networking, complexity is the enemy.

    --
    The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
  47. Other way around by anti-NAT · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Radia Perlman, in her book "Interconnections, 2nd ed" goes into a small amount of detail about the 48 byte payload decision.

    --
    The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
    1. Re:Other way around by gid-goo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Interconnections is an incredible book. One of the best buys out there. Interesting material, decent writing and some killer algorithms. Plus Radia kicks huge ass.

  48. Theres not many people that should write these by Crashmarik · · Score: 0

    and this guy isn't one of them.

    How anyone can talk about about QoS and congestion based pricing as being miserable failures and then go on to speak about pricing for bandwidth based on the value of the content, is completely beyond me. I will also never understand how a paper could get past referees, with a table that compares bits used for cable television with bits used for wireless SMS. It is as if the man doesn't have the most basic of a nodding acquaintance with field.

    His analysis of the affect of VOIP on pricing for a combined telecom practice seemed to imply he had never paid a phone bill. If your paying for 2 phone lines, dialup internet access, flat rate long distance and along comes VOIP telephony for you, your not going to just sub it for your long distance plan. Youre going to get a broadband connection, replace your two phone lines with a home network and drop a hundred bucks in charges everymonth while having better service all around.

    Seems the only thing the paper demonstrates is you don't need to understand what youre writing about to get published.

  49. True by anti-NAT · · Score: 1

    But I'd consider additional bandwidth to be an operational expense. Sure, the capital expenses are also going to be higher, but unless you *own* the bandwidth (i.e. you're a backbone provider) you'll have a monthly lease on it.

    And I do too, forgot about it, until I re-read my post, after it was posted.

    Still, the only "opex" cost associated with pure bandwidth, other than the expense of the bandwidth itself (which you are fundamentally getting your customers to directly pay for), is to have your accounting section send off a monthly, quarterly or some other periodic cheque (check if you are in the US). Much simpler (and cheaper) than having techos who understand QoS, networking, packets and all the other complicated networking stuff watching the network, prodding and playing with it to keep it running optimally.

    --
    The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
  50. Don't hate the player by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hate the game, biotch!

  51. Except.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The institution he is at uses advanced QoS equipment to manage P2P usage against 'primary' web, email, etc. People don't like QoS when they are on the short end of the stick, but I like QoS, it lets me reload Slashdot instead of having P2P users use the entire pipe.

  52. multicasting by Kevin+Burtch · · Score: 1


    I've never understood why multicasting isn't used, pushed even, by the media types. It would be so efficient to have audio or even video broadcasts over multicast that you could do it from home (with a typical broadband connection).

    Many radio stations (for example) have a way to "tune in" online, but it's always unicast, so with every slight increase in user-base, comes an equal increase in bandwidth.

    --
    - Preferences: Solaris 10 (servers), Ubuntu (desktops), Solaris 11 (personal servers) -
  53. Interoperability by dsplat · · Score: 1

    Think back to the online world of the early 90's. People with access to the Internet were mostly at universities and the corporations who had gotten onto the net. The online services weren't connected yet. It was not unusual for someone to provide multiple e-mail addresses on multiple service providers because they were separate worlds.

    The analogy with SMS interoperability is not a perfect one. However, there is one important similarity. The end-users want to talk to each other. The network effect becomes pretty obvious when you see it repeated so many times. At this point, it seems like a losing proposition to set up any service that is isolated regardless of what you are providing.

    --
    The net will not be what we demand, but what we make it. Build it well.
  54. ATM is a failure? by mnmn · · Score: 1

    Can anyone give a count of DSL users in North America?

    Here in Toronto, a while ago most ISPs were disconnected one morning, and the tech support said it was an ATM problem. At the backbone level, ISPs take their connections off ATM routers, just look at ciscos line of offering of ATM routers and switches. Theres a demand behind all that.

    QoS is used by many routers by many providers to improve VoIP, and by some providers to improve gaming and other lowlatency applications.

    This guy who wrote than ATM is a failure, entered his article in slashdot, with a BIG chance his HTTP POST passed through several ATM routers before reaching Slashdot servers. Does he know this?

    --
    "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
  55. price discrimination with information must die by argoff · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One big distinction between the information age and the railroad/canal/lighthouse examples is that there is a huge difference between information and other comodities. Unlike with physical comodities, information can be coppied without depriving the originator of that information and it is extremely easy to change form and type at any given instant. In addition it is always independent of the medium. For those reasons alone, the price discrimination, that he discussed at length (for content, at least) will not be workable in the information age unless you literally become a police state.

  56. Can't resist the urge to point out the absurdity.. by wurp · · Score: 3, Insightful


    Under pre-1970s copyright law, all of this material about telegraphy would have come out of copyright. Someone would have scanned it and made it freely available, probably through Project Gutenberg.

    I love these new copyright laws meant to spur innovation... by letting people and corporations get income in perpetuity while producing as little as possible, and locking out the material that no one wants to publish any more.
    </soapbox>

  57. The required infrastructure isn't there by anti-NAT · · Score: 1

    To deploy multicast fully and usefully across the Internet, all of the routers in the Internet would have to be upgraded or enabled to support multicast networking and protocols.

    The cost of doing this is just way too much, when compared with the costs of operating unicast media streams.

    Further more, because the Internet is really a network of networks, and not just owned by one entity, it would not be possible to ensure, and may never be possible to achieve 100% multicast capability across it. Which means that a portion of your customer base is only likely to have unicast connectivity. If that unicast potion is in the minority, then the impetus to fully deploy multicast may be created.

    Of course, that becomes a chicken-and-egg problem. At this point in time, there is no reason to deploy multicast, as unicast is working acceptably. Until unicast stops working acceptably, there will not be enough demand for multicast. No demand means there will be no inertia to deploy it widely.

    --
    The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
    1. Re:The required infrastructure isn't there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple. The next big p2p application will use multicast if it can, and unicast if it won't. You'll notice the difference because users who have multicast will be much faster than other users, but use less bandwidth. So ISPs can save bandwidth from their highest users by deploying multicast. That might get the ball rolling. If not... well, unicast still works :)

    2. Re:The required infrastructure isn't there by Kevin+Burtch · · Score: 1

      I find that shocking, as multicast has been there for 15 years, it's not new technology (RFC 1112 is dated 1989).
      I've never even heard of a router that doesn't support multicast.
      It may not be used anywhere near as much as unicast, but it is just as much a standard.

      I did see one posting that may be more accurate... it said that ISPs have neglected to impliment it (are blocking it) and their staffs just don't have the understanding to enable it (and politics get in the way as well at this point).

      Sad, very sad.
      Companies whine whenever anyone asks why they haven't started TV broadcasting over the internet yet (something that was supposed to happen in the days of ISDN), and the solution to their bandwidth problem is so simple.

      --
      - Preferences: Solaris 10 (servers), Ubuntu (desktops), Solaris 11 (personal servers) -
    3. Re:The required infrastructure isn't there by anti-NAT · · Score: 1

      I did see one posting that may be more accurate... it said that ISPs have neglected to impliment it (are blocking it) and their staffs just don't have the understanding to enable it (and politics get in the way as well at this point).

      That was more what I was getting at, and, as a result of that, it probably cause the first problem you mentioned.

      Because there isn't all that much demand for, or availability of, multicast based applications, the general networking population don't necessarily have knowledge or skills, or even awareness of it, so they either don't enable it if their equipment supports it, or don't know to ask for it when buying equipment.

      --
      The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
  58. Loose a cell, and everything comes to a halt by anti-NAT · · Score: 1

    Because you then have to retransmit the other 100 or more cells that were carrying the single IP packet.

    --
    The Internet's nature is peer to peer - 20050301_cs_profs.pdf
    1. Re:Loose a cell, and everything comes to a halt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TCP Reno works the same way.

    2. Re:Loose a cell, and everything comes to a halt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's only for TCP, which is probably not appropriate for realtime data anyway. With applications like VoIP latency is the critical parameter, not perfect transmission. There's no time to correct an error anyway so TCP is inappropriate. Welcome to the world of media convergence.

  59. A History of Science and Engineering in the Bell.. by Animats · · Score: 1

    1982, Joel, A.E., "A History of Science and Engineering in the Bell System, Switching Technology 1925-1975", Bell Telephone Laboratories, ISBN 0-932764-02-9. Chapter 7 covers #5 Crossbar.

  60. Unlimited service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    AT&T offers a $99/month plan on their GSM network, unlimited use, no roaming, no long distance.

  61. The point is totally missed here. by Dolemite_the_Wiz · · Score: 1

    The problems with the Telecom industry are that the infrastructure and business models for making money have, for the most part, been the same since the telephone was created. No work has been started to update telecom to the information age.

    Voice Over IP is simply leveraging a different technology and isn't 100% solid in it's architecture. All you need is some network problem between points A and B and calls are effected. The Backup plan for VoIP architectures are to use regular land lines for Business calling.

    Just like the RIAA, the longer the Telecom industry holds on to extinct business models and not proactively beginning to plan for the future then the end is near for their industries.

    If there are any issues of technologies that people don't want it's in the Telecom and Cellular Industries.

    How many times have you seen a phone with features that you will never need or use?

    For Example, why can't someone create a service to let the users choose what features they want in a Cell phone?

    I don't want a lame camera or games. I want a planner and a address book on my cell phone.

    Let me walk into a store, choose the features I want and walk right out.

    I want to customize my own phone for me and not have to choose 'the best of the worst' phones available for me.

    Jeez, it's not rocket science.

    Dolemite
    _______________

    --
    Save the World! Use a Quote!
  62. Very interesting online story about ATM by dracvl · · Score: 1
    One of the most interesting stories about ATM, the insane 53-byte payload and the politics surrounding the whole issue is an article in Wired (who'da thunk it :]) called Netheads vs. Bellheads. It's an excellent read, and thought me a lot about what was going on.

    Sample quotes:

    The Europeans wanted 32-byte payloads, because that would be best for voice, while the Americans and Japanese wanted 64-byte payloads, since that would be better for data. [...]

    As the invective became more heated, pressure built to solve the question the diplomatic way: split the difference. And so was born the 48-byte payload, which, combined with a 5-byte header (the smallest that the ITU could agree upon), added up to a 53-byte cell. [...]

    It's difficult to convey how insane ATM's cell scheme sounds to anyone in the data community, but it's roughly equivalent to Ford announcing a new car that is shaped like an upright obelisk. Sure, it could be made to work, but it's neither aerodynamic nor practical.

  63. Re:Can't resist the urge to point out the absurdit by ultranova · · Score: 0

    They aren't meant to spur innovation. They are meant to keep the populace ignorant, passive consumers, as opposed to active producers. To turn the clock back to pre-Gutenberg era.

    Remember, kwnoledge is power. Public knwoledge is public power. Private kwnoledge is private power. Which one do you think the corporate overlords want ?

    The less kwnoledge is publicly available, and the more privately available, the more power those who control the private kwnoledge have. That is the real reason behind the ever-tightening copyright laws - if everything is copyrighted, then you can't legally print anything, and thus the era of enlightenment is at an end, transferring the power back to the elite.

    I just wonder how long it will take untill the corporate overlords will outlaw all publishing not given prior agreement by them.

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  64. I'll tell you why by ChaosMt · · Score: 1

    It's true the infrastucture isn't there (as noted in other post). However, the reason it isn't implimented, and the reason we have this assinine async billing (egress costs a hundred times more than ingress) is so close, it's about to bit you. Do you really think "the media types" want the ability for anyone to broadcast be able to broadcast to the world? Follow the money my friend.

  65. Yea he forgot BSD by pacman+on+prozac · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure why he even mentions ATM, or QoS for that matter. I assume he has read the various flame-wars about the header/cell overheads with ATM and taken them to heart.

    Since ATM was primarily developed by its users, the big ISPs/Carriers, it turned out to be exactly what they wanted. Which is why they're using it right now, which was why they (industry) developed it.

    As for QoS, does he still think the world revolves around token ring? Has he forgotten RTP? Since ethernet has no service guarantee, you need QoS to carry any time dependant protocols with real guarantees (I appreciate excess bandwidth can solve this, but it doesn't provide any guarantee which is the entire point).

    Article: -1 troll.

  66. Re:Focus Groups-my experience with Intuit/Quicken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was called once by Intuit and asked to join a focus group regarding Quicken. Since I think Quicken has a vile UI I was eager to join. Then they ask me "Do you work in the financial industry?" no -- OK. Then they ask me "Do you work in the software industry?' yes -- sorry we can't use you for the group.
    WTF????
    So the people most likely to be able to give constructive criticism of the product, finance people and software people, are banned from the focus groups? No wonder the product sucks.

  67. Porn Math by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

    Download small 30 second mpeg of certain pornstar with poor quality. Final cost - $1.

    Go buy a 1 hr video of same pornstar and get perfect copy. Final cost - $15.

    The internet will lose alot of fan if every MB sent is associated with a cost.

  68. New Providers Model by Stonefish · · Score: 1

    The real thrust of this article is that.

    1. Current Network providers are struggling with the dumb network, smart edge.

    2. Discriminated Service models expensive, alienate your client base and merely prop up existing revenue streams.

    3. There are real opportunities for the providers who can supply a cheap dumb pipe to become the Dell of the telecoms world.

  69. Government Mandated Monopolies by Bob_Robertson · · Score: 1

    And in many cases, it's only through government regulation that new players can enter those markets unhindered. See Sprint/MCI vs. Ma Bell, for instance.

    Oh, yes, let's, since it directly proves my point.

    AT&T held, just like Major League Baseball(TM, reg us pat off) does now, Government Protected Legal Monopoly Status. MCI, Sprint &etc, were not allowed to enter the retail telephone market until they sued in court to do so. Judge Green, rather than simply nullify the legal protection that AT&T enjoyed, decided that the long-distance portion of AT&T would be divested into several separate companies, yet they would each maintain their legal monopoly over local and regional service.

    As any credible economist will tell you, monopoly cannot exist without government restriction as to who can and cannot enter the business.

    See: Adam Smith, "The Wealth Of Nations", 1775

    Bob-

    --
    The Ludwig von Mises Institute. The reasoning individuals economics