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The NYT Compares Broadband Upgrade Costs in US, Japan

zxjio writes with this excerpt from a New York Times article about just how much networking infrastructure costs vary between the US and Japan: "Pretty much the fastest consumer broadband in the world is the 160-megabit-per-second service offered by J:Com, the largest cable company in Japan. Here's how much the company had to invest to upgrade its network to provide that speed: $20 per home passed. ... Verizon is spending an average of $817 per home passed to wire neighborhoods for its FiOS fiber optic network and another $716 for equipment and labor in each home that subscribes, according to Sanford C. Bernstein & Company. ... The experience in Japan suggests that the major cable systems in the United States might be able to increase the speed of their broadband service by five to 10 times right away. They might not need to charge much more for it than they do now and they would still make as much money."

257 comments

  1. Crazy by Caustic+Soda · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That's just...ridiculous. No wonder they have such enormous speeds compared to the US. At least the States get a decent speed though. Here in Australia you tend to pay through the nose for anything more than 1Mb/s

    1. Re:Crazy by homey+of+my+owney · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In Australia you suffer even more so than we do in the western US in that there's LOTS of space between A and B, making any infrastructure cost much higher than Japan where they measure that space in feet or inches.

    2. Re:Crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I live in Denmark and I have a 25 / 25 MB fiber connection with true unlimited bandwidth usage, no port restriction and static IP address for USD 45 per month. I paid 200 USD in a onetime fee for equipments and installation.

      I have the option to upgrade to a 100 / 100 MB connection for 180 USD per month.

      Sweden (our next door neighbor) is a lot cheaper.

      If it cost Verizon 1500 USD per customer they are doing something very wrong.

    3. Re:Crazy by AI0867 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Actually, they measure it in meters or centimeters, but your point still stands.
      This makes me wonder why the speeds in the Netherlands don't go much over 20mbps, as we actually have a higher population density than Japan.

    4. Re:Crazy by sternmath · · Score: 3, Funny

      no, they use metric in Japan. =)

    5. Re:Crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      From a profit taking standpoint, they're doing exactly what they should be doing.

      People that whine about infrastructure costs and the geographic area of the states are full of shit, and are falling for the same stale telco pablum they've been feeding us since the 80's. They're greedy, they don't actually compete with anyone (is anyone stupid enough to believe these Baby Bells aren't colluding with one another?), and most importantly, most consumers don't demand a higher quality of service from them and are in fact perfectly content to get screwed up the ass for what is pitifully mediocre service.

      The technology is out there. We Americans either developed or helped develop a lot of it, and everybody is using it besides us. The incentives for improvement simply aren't there, and as long as the (heavily subsidized, perpetually price-hiking) telcos don't have any reason to improve, they won't.

    6. Re:Crazy by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      Is the higher population density in the Netherlands on average over the whole country or higher in the cities?

      One thing I'm curious about with articles like these, are they looking at the cities such as Tokyo or are they also including the countryside?

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    7. Re:Crazy by brusk · · Score: 1

      Actually space in residential housing is often measured in tatami mats (jou).

      Damn, "ou" should be "o-macron" -- how do you use Unicode escape sequences on /.?

      --
      .sig withheld by request
    8. Re:Crazy by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No what is going on here is a neat trick of modern B$=PR marketing. They are spending $20 per house to 'upgrade' the network but, the article doesn't say from what it is upgrading ie, from lower bandwidth fibre to the home to higher bandwidth fibre to the home.

      So typical modern news as marketing B$. Think about it, even when fibre in the street how much would it have to cost to cut into the fibre, lay it to a point in the home from the street and and the outlet, no way you can get that done for $20.

      So no news there, yes it costs way more per house to upgrade from copper to fibre optic than it costs to upgrade existing fibre optic.

      Same old lies about why the are holding up upgrading to fibre, truth is they have got an existing inflated investment in copper which has to be scrapped and they intend to hold onto it for as long as possible and, they will do everything them can to block government from actively pushing investment in fibre to the home. Upgrades to fibre are simply being done where the government in that country is acting in the majorities interests rather than the minorities corporate executive greed.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    9. Re:Crazy by feepness · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. We should immediately begin crowding all citizens of the US into 10% of the land mass in order to achieve Japan's population density so we can reduce these costs. California would be good. I already live here and don't want to move.

    10. Re:Crazy by sternmath · · Score: 1

      jou is a square measure, used for area, and usually only in real estate applications. linear measure is typically metric.

    11. Re:Crazy by aynoknman · · Score: 1

      So typical modern news as marketing B$. . . .

      Unfortunately in this case, as so many others, B$ stands for Billions of $$$$.

      --
      We need a "+1 -- nice sig" moderation.
    12. Re:Crazy by yuna49 · · Score: 0

      The figures quoted are really rather incomparable, I suspect. In the Japanese case it appears that that fiber structure was already in place, and the $20/HH figure is an "upgrade" cost, most of which is probably concentrated at the provider's end (routers, switches, etc.)

      The figures for Verizon include the cost of installing the fiber networks themselves on poles, through conduits, etc. $716/HH passed seems like a very reasonable investment for something that will be paying off for decades.

      Then we have the in-home installation costs. Verizon is usually installing a combination phone/video/Internet service, not just the latter. Much of the time the installers spend in peoples' homes comes from installing cable television services throughout the home. (VZ will install cable as many as three TVs as part of the free initial installation package.) Sometimes they can reuse the home's existing cable plant; sometimes they have to pull new cable. I will say that my experience with FiOS, a bit over a year ago, suggests that some of these costs reflect managerial incompetence. In my case they failed to show up for two scheduled installations of my residential service apparently because they were stunned to discover I already had a fiber drop for my business Internet service. The third time around I ended up with two techs, and the installation still took perhaps 6-8 hours. I'd guess they're better at installations now than they were, though. My friend just added cable television to his existing FiOS phone/Internet package, and the installer was there for only two hours. Of course the ONT was already installed, and the home had been previously wired for cable.

      The installers themselves were quite competent and professional; it was their managers who couldn't figure out what to do in my case.

    13. Re:Crazy by Poltras · · Score: 1

      Please compare with Canada, where population density is lower than the US, and we still have better speed with lower prices. That argument is an excuse more than anything else.

      Why aren't there good cost and speed in big cities like New York and Los Angeles, then?

    14. Re:Crazy by brusk · · Score: 1

      Strictly speaking it's a rectangular measure.

      --
      .sig withheld by request
    15. Re:Crazy by sternmath · · Score: 1

      Strictly speaking it's a rectangular measure.

      ha ha. cute.

    16. Re:Crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While the total and utter certainty and rightenousness with which you make your sweeping statements is certainly charming, it would be interesting to hear how your explanatory models would be changed if you were told that the Japanese company in question is also privately owned and not pushed by the state to do anything.

    17. Re:Crazy by dcam · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sure, but in Australia approximately half the population is centered in 2 cities: Sydney and Melbourne. Why isn't there decent service in those two locations?

      --
      meh
    18. Re:Crazy by imikem · · Score: 1

      Yes this is a bit off topic, but in Japan it would be measured in metres and centimetres. Only my lovely US and a couple of banana republics still use these "crazy" measurements.

      --
      Perscriptio in manibus tabellariorum est.
    19. Re:Crazy by i_b_don · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ok... I live in the Japanese countryside, or at least this is what they consider the Japanese countryside, but is NOTHING like the barren nothingness that you picture when someone from the US says "countryside". Population density in the Japanese countryside is still pretty dense.

      Anyway, when I moved here nearly 3 years ago, I got 100Mb fiber to my house installed for something like $300 bucks full installation costs. Modems, first month payment, etc. I think it was actually more like $220 after discounts, but that was the price range. I now pay 50 bucks a month for this service and I've kept it and been very happy with it since it was installed.

      Now keep in mind, this included two guys coming to my house and running fiber onto the property (stand alone house), and installing the cable modem plus router.

      To compare, when I moved from the US, I was paying cable modem costs that were over $60 per month (with no cable service bundled, no extras) and maybe I'd top out at around 5Mb? I dunno, but no comparison in any case. When I was in the US I lived in Los Angeles.

      You can't give me any of these bullshit population density arguments when i paid MORE for for LESS bandwidth in an area with a HIGHER population density. Something doesn't smell right here and its not a population density argument. i think it starts with an "M" and ends with "onopoly", and has everything to do with government and telcos/cable companies getting in bed together.

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    20. Re:Crazy by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      We should immediately begin crowding all citizens of the US into 10% of the land mass in order to achieve Japan's population density so we can reduce these costs. California would be good.

      Last I read, even in large cities like LA and NYC broadband isn't available everywhere. If true, the problem isn't that people are too spread out. More like it's because there are monopolies controlling broadband. Lat year there was an article on /. about how after the city of Monticello, Minnesota asked the Bridgewater cable company to offer broadband and the company refused the people of the city voted to have the city build the infrastructure itself. Bridgewater then sued the city.

      Falcon

    21. Re:Crazy by dave87656 · · Score: 1

      It is a Cable network, so they may not have actually had to upgrade the hardware to the home at all. I live in Germany and my speed is 32MBit (speed tests put it at a pretty consistent 30MBit) via Cable. It was recently upgraded without any hardware changes on my end, so maybe that's what happened in Japan. If you're talking DSL to fibre, that's a different story, of course.

    22. Re:Crazy by mjwx · · Score: 1

      In Australia you suffer even more so than we do in the western US in that there's LOTS of space between A and B, making any infrastructure cost much higher than Japan where they measure that space in feet or inches.

      -1 complete lack of understanding of the topic.

      roughly 90% of Australia's population lives in the cites, this not withstanding the majority of the costs in laying new lines is in the last mile, it cost cents in the dollar to connect Australia's cities with Fibre, it costs a lot to connect every house with copper, much of the copper under Australian streets is aging and due to this DSL signals are degrading too quickly, further more Telstra (privatised national telco who owns all the copper) has no interest in upgrading the aged copper lines. Distances between cites are not the problem, its cheap to cable between cities, even with the distances we have in Australia, it's the last mile that's letting us down (and the lack of undersea cables but thats Australia specific).

      Now in Japan and South Korea they suffer from the same problem as the US and Australia, the last mile is still more expensive. But their governments have created an environment where the telecommunications industry is competitive and those who don't invest in new infrastructure end up being punished by their own inaction. In Australia and the US it is far more profitable for Telco's to maintain the status quo, they aren't forced to spend money on new infrastructure, there's no financial disincentive for keeping the same old systems around. The AU government has been trying to get the Telco's to work together and build a new broadband network but the biggest telco (Telstra, surprise surprise) doesn't want to because they would not have a monopoly on the new infrastructure.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    23. Re:Crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Now keep in mind, this included two guys coming to my house and running fiber onto the property (stand alone house), and installing the cable modem plus router.

      I'd be pretty pissed if I signed up for fiber and someone installed a cable modem instead.

    24. Re:Crazy by Tharsman · · Score: 1
      The issue is that most american companies inflate the price of everything.

      Let's say a store sells an inch of cable for $5 (made up numbers.) It does not matter that the company itself may make their own cable with raw materials and pay just 5 cents for each inch, they will still say it cost them $5 in cabling because thats the market value of the cable used.

      Same goes for all other equipment used. Same goes for man hours. They claim a contractor may had charged them $80 an hour and say thats what they "spent" even if they hired their own goons and paid them minimum wage.

      At the end of the day, the company spends $20 bucks and says it cost them $800. That also helps them pay less taxes in the end as they made less gross profit.

      To hide all this the company tends to use sub companies that still belong to the parent company (or to a big investor) and these bill big daddy the inflated amount with the big profit ending in the owner's pockets.

    25. Re:Crazy by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>the Japanese countryside is NOTHING like the barren nothingness that you picture when someone from the US says "countryside"

      That's why it's ridiculous to compare an island nation to a continent-spanning nation. Overall the U.S. is about the same as the Russian Federation, European Union, and Canada:

      Japan 16 Mbit/s
      Russian Federation 7
      European Union, United States 6
      Canada, Australia 5
      Brazil, China 2
      Mexico 1 Mbit/s

      And if you prefer to look on a state-by-state basis of the EU, US, and Canada then you get:
      1 Sweden 11 Mbit/s
      2 Delaware 10
      3 Washington 9
      4 Netherlands,RI,NJ,MA 8
      5 VA,NY,CO,CT,AZ,Germany, British Columbia 7 Mbit/s

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    26. Re:Crazy by default+luser · · Score: 1

      Exactly, tghese naysayers are comparing one insular, tiny nation with high population density to the gigantic, unpopulated North American areas.

      I'm going to let the naysayers in on something here that nobody ever brings up: the cost of running fibre to your house is not the only cost involved in upgrading your internet connection. Your average large ISP has (or leases) a huge network backbone connecting all their major markets, and it is the backbone that is a huge cost. Sure, you might be in a major market with very high population density, but your internet connection is limited because it has to connect to the rest of this deserted country.

      Since the population centers in the USA are spread far-apart, and in so many different directions, the ISPs are on the hook for much more infrastructure than it takes to connect the population centers in Japan. Not only does that mean you have to lay more cable, but it also means you have to make more branches (or users will complain of too much latency). Just take a look at this link: there are dozens of large US backbone providers, and Japan's largest provider is simple by-comparison (compare to PSINet or UUNET maps). Once it leaves the island, the Japanese networks don't care so much about performance, so the infrastructure is cheap.

      Further, the concepts in Japan of NIMBY are much less powerful then they are in this country (not owning your own home and plot of land will do that to you). The people are used to doing what the government/businesses tell them is best, so there's little political impediment to progress. Here in the States, you have to grease every local and state board imaginable, and then HOAs take you to court whenever you want to expand services to an area. This is hardly an easy market to offer cutting-edge services at a low price.

      --

      Man is the animal that laughs.
      And occasionally whores for Karma.

    27. Re:Crazy by Geezle2 · · Score: 1
      You're wrong, Commie_lover...plainly and simply wrong. The poster you are replying to was comparing the Japanese countryside (which is where I happen to live also) to Los Angeles. I originated from the BosWash megalopolis on the opposite coast of the continent.

      The large conurbations along America's coasts, combined with the cities clustered near the Great Lakes, account for practically all of the nation's population, with only a handful of outliers like Denver and Dallas-Fort Worth. Sure, running fiber to every recluse in every shack deep in the Rockies and wiring in every survivalist camp in Montana and every religious cult compound in Texas will cost a chunk of change, but providing modern telecommunications infrastructure to most Americans is no special challenge. Just getting the East Coast up to modern expectations would cover more than half of America's population.

      The parent poster claims to have been in Japan for three years. That's long enough to notice the differences in business philosophies between here and America. He's probably just too polite to mention them. You get like that if you spend too long here. In Japan, you are expected to provide a fair service or product for what you charge. In America, it is a standard business practice to try to lock in your customers then rape them mercilessly.

    28. Re:Crazy by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Please stop acting as if the EU were a country, like the US.
      It is not. And we, the people of the states of Europe, do not want it, and never dit.
      The politicians of the governments, that rule here, pretty much decided to go that way without asking us and even with completely ignoring us.
      I live on the territory of the company, that is called "Germany" here (our constitution states, that we are a company, owned by the USA. No shit. Look it up). I do NOT live in the EU. The EU is more like a business alliance. Nothing more.

      I know that for people of the USA, it is easy to think of Europe like this. But please ignore the bullshit of the European governments. It is insulting to us, the people.
      I know you could not know that, so I'm not angry at you. Just giving you some information, that you rarely hear in the news, for obvious reasons.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  2. Thank you captain obvious by TrentTheThief · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of course verizon is going to milk its customers for every penny they can squeeze out. That what US telco's do.

    Remember the bright star of ISDN? Yeah. Priced out of existence when simply selling in volume could have made them a mint.

    Verizon! Bring me a 100Mbps line.

    1. Re:Thank you captain obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ISDN failed for a lot of reasons and greed wasn't the biggest of them. If you're wondering what's wrong with ISDN, consider this: The standard VoIP signaling protocol is SIP. There exists an "actual" standard called H.323, which hasn't succeeded in the market. VoIP only took off when the much simpler (yet still quite complicated) HTTP based SIP came into existence. Guess what H.323 is. It's the ISDN protocol for VoIP (literally, not figuratively).

    2. Re:Thank you captain obvious by smpoole7 · · Score: 1

      Shoot, I'd be happy to get a reliable, reasonably-priced 1.5Mhz up and down here in Birmingham, AL, for our company's servers. You can get decent download -- 6Mhz is common -- but ATT is extremely stingy with upload. The ratios are typically 256/1.5, 384/3 and 512/6 on their DSL lines. Other technologies are available (such as Metro Ethernet, bonded T1 or business broadband through the cable company) but they're quite expensive -- as much as $1,000 a month. As a result, co-location is expensive, too. Right next door in Atlanta, about 100 miles away, all of this is available at reasonable prices. That's the difference that competition makes.

      --
      Cogito, igitur comedam pizza.
    3. Re:Thank you captain obvious by TrentTheThief · · Score: 1

      ISDN for data connectivity was fine back in '95. If anyone could have afforded it. A 128K line rather than 9.6 dialup? Hell yeah.

      No, ISDN would have flown had they not made it too expensive for the regular person to buy.

    4. Re:Thank you captain obvious by TrentTheThief · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I've been in that boat a couple of times. We'd kill for a couple 100Mbps lines. We're dying for reliable bandwidth.

    5. Re:Thank you captain obvious by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Actually, ISDN proved to be a bit of a problem for the aging infrastructure. When ISDN was installed to my apartment in '97, Bellsouth had to run 4 miles of trunk cable first (seems noone told them about 800 new apartment being built :-)), then it took "Bob" 3 hours to find a pair that would work. After that, it worked flawlessly (short of a CO crash and a lightning strike) for 11 years. I'd still have it if the world could be seen through a 64k/128k straw.

      Plus, ISDN is way too complicated for the average house wife. You cannot simply plug the phone in and go. I've seen a lot of gear attempt "auto spid", but none have ever worked properly.

    6. Re:Thank you captain obvious by TrentTheThief · · Score: 1

      No argument, but my view with a 9.6 was a heck of a lot tinier than yours :-)

      I sure would have liked to have had ISDN back then.

    7. Re:Thank you captain obvious by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Well, I had the advantage of working for an ISP :-)

  3. High density = no digging by cheebie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And what is the population density in the areas where they are installing this $20/house fiber optic? Do they need to trench through miles of yards to get the lines there? And how much time and resources do they have to exert fighting the local dictators in each and every state/county before they can even begin? A straight "it costs $x vs $y" comparison without looking at all the factors is useless.

    1. Re:High density = no digging by Fusen · · Score: 4, Informative

      This has nothing to do with digging up the roads, the article talks about the US basing their high speed lines around FiOS installs, where as Japan are simply upgrading their cable lines to use DOCSIS 3 instead of 1.

      In the UK atm, the main (pretty much only) cable provider is doing the same, they are upgrading half of their network to run off DOCSIS 3 and are offering 50Mbit, but leaving the rest of the network still on DOCSIS 1 that'll run speeds of less than 20Mbit.

      All it takes is for the ISP to replace the hardware in their buildings and send the customer a new cable modem that supports version 3.

      Literally, no spade is involved at all in the process.

    2. Re:High density = no digging by mrobinso · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The Japanese aren't worryied about monetizing every inch of their infrastructure. Here in Canada we're 2 - 3 years behind in technology because the telcos are busy harnessing broadband, wired and otherwise, so they can add to shareholder value, and they have the wonderful auspices of Canada's oldest whorehouse, the CTRC, to protect them while they do.

      Government protected, oligopolized hyper-capitalism is the new telecommunications mantra here. The end is nowhere in sight.

      --
      -- Karma whore? You betcha. --
    3. Re:High density = no digging by Fusen · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Oh I forgot to add, the 50Mbit being offered is purely down to this being their first push into using DOCSIS 3, the company has been quoted as saying once they make sure their network is working properly and more areas are supported, in a year or less they'll start offering 80Mbit and upwards to 120Mbit. All still based on the hardware the current 50Mbit subscribers use and all still not requiring any digging.

    4. Re:High density = no digging by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And what is the population density in the areas where they are installing this $20/house fiber optic? Do they need to trench through miles of yards to get the lines there? And how much time and resources do they have to exert fighting the local dictators in each and every state/county before they can even begin? A straight "it costs $x vs $y" comparison without looking at all the factors is useless.

      So, according to your theory, high-density cities like New York should have broadband on a par with Japan.

      Of course, this overlooks the fact tht in Japan, just as in New York, it's MORE expensive to trench in a high-density area than in the exurbs, where you can just quickly string the cable along existing utility poles.

    5. Re:High density = no digging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I bought a modem off eBay for my mom a few years ago after I moved out. It seemed fairly recent, not as new as mine but it worked.

      I got a call about 3-4 weeks ago from her. Cox Cable upgraded the modem for free to the latest model, I assume the old one didn't support DOCSIS 3. That was pretty nice of them.

    6. Re:High density = no digging by ruckc · · Score: 4, Informative

      What the article is saying is that you don't need fiber to the curb for the cable companies to get 100mbps service to the home. What Japan and other countries are doing is using the existing cabling with newer hardware. Verizon is running all new lines to their FIOS neighborhoods so of course its more expensive, its like comparing riding the bus to school and digging your own trench.

      Additionally, I would prefer to trench through yards compared to running wiring in an older giant apartment complex that wasn't designed for rerunning cable throughout.

    7. Re:High density = no digging by Vectronic · · Score: 1

      "...digging your own trench."

      You too? I had to, both ways.

    8. Re:High density = no digging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone didn't read the article before posting! oooooooooo!!!

    9. Re:High density = no digging by legoburner · · Score: 4, Informative

      I currently have the 50mbit connection and finally, they have returned to their previous level of quality. I've managed to get 45Mbits out of it off peak, and consistently get 3.5MBytes/sec at peak times. I'm very happy right now, I have not even noticed the bandwidth constricting cap come in to play (which was a big problem on the 20Mbit/sec DOCSIS1)

    10. Re:High density = no digging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've got EuroDocsis 3.0 with 110 Mbits. A Helsinki based cable operator is selling the service for less than 60 euros.

    11. Re:High density = no digging by jabithew · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You know, a state-protected oligopoly is hardly "hyper-capitalism".

      --
      All intents and purposes. Not intensive purposes.
    12. Re:High density = no digging by ruckc · · Score: 1

      Mom drove me home from school.

    13. Re:High density = no digging by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You know, a state-protected oligopoly is hardly "hyper-capitalism".

      Of course it is. Capitalism is an ownership model, not a market model.

      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
    14. Re:High density = no digging by Cap'nPedro · · Score: 1

      I take it we're talking about Virgin Media here? Previous level of quality?

      I didn't realise Vigin had ever been high quality; everything's been going downhill for me since Virgin bought out my NTL connection.

    15. Re:High density = no digging by phoenix321 · · Score: 4, Informative

      A state-protected oligo-/monopoly is hardly capitalism, let alone Hyper-Capitalism.

      Having The State and The Authorities protect a certain market sector from the activities of all but one trusted supplier is called Feudalism. Has been for centuries.

      The King giveth and the King taketh away a limited monopoly to one corporation which in turn pays a large recurring premium for this right. The East-India corporation springs to mind, but the Italians and the French had similar models, back in the 17th century.

      Quote Wikipedia on this: "Every man was the vassal, or servant, of his lord. The man swore fealty to his lord, and in return the lord promised to protect him and to see that he received justice."

    16. Re:High density = no digging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not?

      It's a perfect example of a free market - a free market for politicians. "Hyper-capitalism" basically means "make as much money as you can with as little effort/risk as you can", and if the best way to do that is to screw consumers over by getting the state to take away their choice, then you do exactly that.

      Needless to say, this is why pure, unfettered anarcho-capitalism is not actually a good idea for society, too. You just need to step back and get over the indoctrination that "more capitalism" automatically always equals "better" - it does up to a certain point, but beyond that, the opposite is true. (Although people are going to disagree exactly where the sweet spot is.)

    17. Re:High density = no digging by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Uh no. If you start stringing cables along utility poles you get residents worried about the 'radiation' being 'emitted' by the coaxial line. Appearing on TV. Demanding the cable be buried in the ground. But Not In Their Backyard.

      Uh no. Most places, you'll find that land deeds include servitudes for public utilities, and if the pole or conduit is already there, just string it along - no permission needed (not even permission to access the property 24/7/365 without notice).

      The building itself is a different story ... but since this uses the existing cable tv infrastructure, it's not a big issue.

    18. Re:High density = no digging by cheebie · · Score: 1

      So, according to your theory, high-density cities like New York should have broadband on a par with Japan.

      No, it would just be a fair comparison at that point. Japan may still win. They probably will, given that they built their way out of their own economic collapse recently.

      Of course, this overlooks the fact tht in Japan, just as in New York, it's MORE expensive to trench in a high-density area than in the exurbs, where you can just quickly string the cable along existing utility poles.

      And have the cable/internet/phones go down every time it snows. Verizon isn't stringing fiberoptic cable along poles for the simple reason that a break in the fiberoptic is not anywhere near as easy to patch as a break in telephone lines. They are trenching.

      And the advantage of high density population centers is that you dig a trench to one apartment building, and
      now you can snake through the walls to hundreds of customers. And often the utilities already have runs to all of these buildings in place.

    19. Re:High density = no digging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And on that note kiddies, don't forget Loyalty Day on May first. Never too early to start practicing your oath recitations.

    20. Re:High density = no digging by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      The japanese are using DOCSIS 3 modems over the cable network - $60 per house for the upgrade to 160mbit. At that price/point, fiber-optic is a waste of time and money.

      Also, burying ANYTHING in an urban area is expensive, mostly because there's already so much buried (power, gas, water, data, traffic sensors, lighting ...) but also because it has to be done to the standards set by the municipality for buried lines. Stringing coax along a pole is a LOT cheaper.

    21. Re:High density = no digging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      3.5 MBytes/sec is 28 Mbps, or a little over half what's advertised. I wouldn't call that particularly impressive, considering what Virgin charge for the service.

      Of course, at that speed, it may be that you're being restricted by the server you're downloading from rather than the Virgin network.

    22. Re:High density = no digging by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 4, Informative

      First of all, that isn't the definition of feudalism. Feudalism is a system where a monarchy grants rights to use of the (agrarian) means of production in exchange for military service. The crown retains ownership. The East-India model is not feudal, it is mercantile. The government granted rights to exploit specific markets, but the company owned the means of production. Capitalism is defined by private ownership of the means of production regardless of how markets are structured or regulated. Popularly, people often use capitalism to mean free market capitalism, but that is only one type. Ownership and markets are separate phenomena. You can have government owned companies (socialist) competing in free markets and privately owned ones (capitalist) in government sanctioned monopolies and oligopolies (like cable companies).

      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
    23. Re:High density = no digging by jabithew · · Score: 1

      Quoth the dictionary on my Mac:

      an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.

      Wikipedia says:

      Capitalism is an economic system in which wealth, and the means of producing wealth, are privately owned and controlled rather than commonly, publicly, or state-owned and controlled.

      Google's definition (from Answers.com) goes:

      An economic system in which the means of production and distribution are privately or corporately owned and development is proportionate to the accumulation and reinvestment of profits gained in a free market.

      I seem to have missed the bit where state-protected oligopolies are mentioned.

      --
      All intents and purposes. Not intensive purposes.
    24. Re:High density = no digging by green1 · · Score: 1

      but is it really that simple?

      Would it be possible for cable lines the length of those needed in North America to carry those higher speeds reliably? If not, the solution is irrelevant.

      Secondly, can it run over the quality of lines in North America? If not, you're left re-running lines anyway, so you might as well go fibre.

      The company is unlikely to purposely choose the more expensive option, they make more money if they save money in the process. But I suspect there's a good reason not to go there, and my suspicion is that the answer is in the length and quality of the lines.

      Population density makes a huge difference in broadband roll-outs, this is why many parts of rural North America are stuck on dial-up, it's just not cost effective to do anything about it. And when you look at the population density of urban areas, the Japanese would be amazed at the amount of empty space (2-4 people living on a 500 square foot (46 square metres) lot, and that doesn't count roads wider than anywhere else on earth, back alleys, large green spaces, etc)

      A solution that was easy in Japan may be completely impossible in North America.

    25. Re:High density = no digging by coryking · · Score: 1

      Trench?

      Now I've seen the gas company install a gas line to your home. They don't dig a trench. They dig a small hole in front of your house and then put one of those tiny and shoot one of those mechanical moles from the hole to your new gas meter. In fact, they don't usually even dig a trench to go down the street--the just dig small holes every couple hundred yards and shove that mole thing through.

      Dunno how that impacts the cost, I just picked up on "do they have to dig a trench?". The answer is "nope"

    26. Re:High density = no digging by CB-in-Tokyo · · Score: 1

      Living In Japan and having 100MB Fiber for over 7 years, I can say a couple things about this matter.

      1) I am pretty sure fiber is more popular than cable. It definitely had a first mover advantage over cable. ADSL was held back because getting phone lines here used to be so damn expensive (you had to basically buy the line from the phone company and it was around $800). Plus the fact that the majority of the lines here used to be ISDN. ADSL got around this by allowing a rental line that was used specifically for ADSL, but it couldn't compete in terms of fiber for speed.

      2)Trenching cable? TRENCHING in Tokyo? LOL Tokyo is pole city. Overheard cables everywhere! Perhaps this is why the cost is $20/house. Japan, home of the modern and backwards living in perfect harmonious discord. But at least its fast!

    27. Re:High density = no digging by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Maybe you wouldn't miss it if you studied economics in college rather than relying on answers.com.

      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
    28. Re:High density = no digging by ion.simon.c · · Score: 1

      That would be one modern method to dig a trench.

    29. Re:High density = no digging by FooRat · · Score: 1

      "Government protected, oligopolized" is not equal to "capitalism", pretty much by definition - capitalism, as the term is used everywhere, is characterized primarily by private ownership of the means of production AND free markets.

      I now return you to your regular uninformed, mindless anti-capitalist ranting.

    30. Re:High density = no digging by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

      KDDI came by the other day here in Osaka and offered me 1,000Mbps if I'd switch over from my current service. Plus 10,000 yen (about $100) cash. I kid you not. They also are going to charge me about 800 yen less than what I pay now, and it'll show up on my regular phone bill.

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    31. Re:High density = no digging by yuna49 · · Score: 1

      You sure they're not renting her the new modem? Check her monthly bill.

    32. Re:High density = no digging by yuna49 · · Score: 1

      Verizon isn't stringing fiberoptic cable along poles for the simple reason that a break in the fiberoptic is not anywhere near as easy to patch as a break in telephone lines. They are trenching.

      No, they're using poles when they can. My FiOS service comes off the pole. They're not going to dig trenches or pull wire through conduit unless conditions (including regulatory ones) require it.

      We had quite a bit of snow this winter here in New England; I never lost service.

    33. Re:High density = no digging by sjames · · Score: 1

      Surely not significantly different than the density of NYC or many other major metro areas in the U.S.

      Yes, it might cost too much to get that kind of speed to some guy who has to drive for a few minutes to get to his mailbox, but there are plenty of areas in the U.S. where the density is high enough and yet the telcos do nothing.

    34. Re:High density = no digging by Comen · · Score: 1

      We currently have the equipment/modems to do DOCSIS3 but we do not have the bandwidth on the cable to the home, we have a issue where we do not want to turn off the old analog channels that eat up so much bandwidth because some users do not want to pay for a digital box or do not own a tv that will use a cable card etc... They may not have these kind of issues in Japan.
      Running lines and installing equipment has got to be easier in a much higher density area like Japan.
      Also just because someone puts a line in your home that is a 1Bgit connection to the telco does not mean you get that much bandwidth to the internet, I would be curious how much bandwidth they get out all the way out to popular internet websites etc...

    35. Re:High density = no digging by sjames · · Score: 1

      It's a good comparison that shows the U.S. telecomm excuses to be just that. Surely deploying high speed in NYC would be equivalent to deploying it in Tokyo, yet it hasn't happened.

      Your point is valid as well. The telecomms complain that the population density in the U.S. is lower and so it would cost too much, but they ignore that it's a lot easier to run cables in the less dense areas.

      In my area, they could run additional cables parallel to the existing pole mounted cables without even needing to seek permission (assuming they even need a second cable). They apparently had enough money in the '90s to run a second cable here but not finish ancoring it such that it came down across people's driveways, got cut up and thrown away, and then run it again but actually tieing it properly the second time.

      One fiber cable has 24 pairs in it and each pair can carry 100 channels of 10Gbps each. So, 24 Tbps per cable. That's 10,000 customers with 100Mbps dedicated to each on a single fiber cable.

      So, what's the excuse again?

    36. Re:High density = no digging by legoburner · · Score: 1

      NTL were always bad. Blueyonder/telewest were good. Virgin got really, really bad about 2 years ago, but now things are improving to the point just after they took over blueyonder.

    37. Re:High density = no digging by legoburner · · Score: 1

      This is at peak time, is a consistent speed and more often that not is limited by the server rather than the network from what I gather. Since any bulky transfers (offsite backup, log processing, etc) is all done early in the morning, that frequently hits 45Mbits. Still not squeezed out those last 5 though!

    38. Re:High density = no digging by CB-in-Tokyo · · Score: 1

      Nice! The phone companies have promised 10 Gig to the home by 2010, but I don't know if they will make it.

      Are you already on Fiber, or are you on ADSL or cable?

    39. Re:High density = no digging by bensch128 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So Verizon digging out their old copper wires and putting in fiber is a GOOD THING!

      Imagine if only the cable company (Comcast here) could offer ultra hi-speed internet.

      Since we (the US) don't require the cable companies to be common carriers (http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/06/27/1510219) then customers wanting hi-speed internet would have only one place to go.

      So I say to verizon, dig baby dig!

    40. Re:High density = no digging by Matheus · · Score: 1

      I don't know about where you are but our urban core has utility trenches. The only time they need to dig is for a new tap-to-building or to make bigger trenches.

      Once you get to the building it is no longer the telco's responsibility (although they often do the work) to get around.

      Upgrading outside of the core if varies from area to area whether the lines are over or under. I'm guessing our telco won't be changing that just using the same route as was used before for any given building/neighborhood.

      How resistant IS fiber to being wind-whipped?

    41. Re:High density = no digging by rabiddeity · · Score: 1

      Somebody please mod parent +1 Informative. This post is right on the mark.

    42. Re:High density = no digging by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Informative

      Running lines and installing equipment has got to be easier in a much higher density area like Japan.

      I seriously doubt population density has anything to do with the US lagging other countries in broadband. From The State of Broadband Internet Access "Clearly Iceland, Finland, and Canada have low population densities, but better access to broadband than countries such as the United States - Birthplace of the Internet, Australia, Japan, etc."

      Also see this post of mine about how after being asked to install broadband in a city in Minnesota and refusing to do so a cable company tried to sue the city for doing it itself.

      Falcon

    43. Re:High density = no digging by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Informative

      You know, a state-protected oligopoly is hardly "hyper-capitalism".

      Of course it is. Capitalism is an ownership model, not a market model.

      Read Adam Smith's, the father of capitalism, "The Wealth of Nations" sometime. Capitalism is both an ownership and a market model. It calls for voluntary exchanges between people, which is what a free market is.

      Falcon

    44. Re:High density = no digging by sonicmerlin · · Score: 0

      A snazzy Blackberry Storm- $100 A brand new netbook with Linux installed = $300 2 extremely low ID slashdotters warring against each other? Priceless

    45. Re:High density = no digging by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1

      I read Smith, as well Ricardo, Malthus and all the British Classical school when I was a political economy major in college. Smith did not define capitalism, He described a form of it that was in the early stages of development. The word "capitalism" does not even appear in An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations.

      You did people a disservice by linking to Amazon instead of to the Project Gutenberg editions of the book. I mean, it was published in 1776. Pretty sure it is in the public Domain everywhere now. This is a great book. Maybe not so well written or funny as Marx/Engels or Veblen, but fascinating and important. More people should read it.

      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
    46. Re:High density = no digging by Inda · · Score: 1

      VM tells me I'm getting 50mbit soon...

      The only time I get the full 20mbit is on Astraweb's european Usenet server, wherever that is. Even then I need 30 odd [SSL] connections and it's probably more like 18.5mbits. This is during peeks times btw.

      I get very few internet problems with VM. Rebooting the modem and router solves most of them - I do that weekly out of habit. Only had one 2 hour outage in the last 12 months.

      Now their HD content; I could rant about the lack of that for a while...

      --
      This post contains benzene, nitrosamines, formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide.
    47. Re:High density = no digging by FrozenFOXX · · Score: 1

      Having The State and The Authorities protect a certain market sector from the activities of all but one trusted supplier is called Feudalism. Has been for centuries.

      How about we just call it "bullshit." It's descriptive and has the instant benefit of most of the people being screwed by it knowing what you're talking about. ;)

      --
      "Just a fox, a whisper."
    48. Re:High density = no digging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where is that (-1, elitist asshole) mod point when I need it?

    49. Re:High density = no digging by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Smith did not define capitalism

      You're right Adam Smith didn't use "capitalism", it was first used after him. He did however use "capital" to mean money, means of production, and the goods and services offered. Now it was Milton Friedman who emphasized free markets and Ludwig von Mises free trade. Smith did oppose monopolies though, and didn't like patents. He called patents a necessary evil. Government's in the US though have granted a lot of monopolies, including those telco and cableco monopolies and broadcasting monopolies.

      You did people a disservice by linking to Amazon instead of to the Project Gutenberg editions of the book.

      First I didn't think to check with Project Gutenberg, but I will now. Oh, I can't it doesn't list the book I looked for, so back to Amazon for the book "The Theory of Moral Sentiments". Next, not everyone can read an entire book online, not easily at least. If I read more than a couple of pages on a monitor I will get bad headaches. Just reading most of the posts on /. I have to shift my gaze frequently or my eyes will hurt. And there are others who suffer the same thing. Now because both books are in the public domain anyone can print either or both books themselves. Amazon shows a lot of editions of "The Theory of Moral Sentiments". I would spend more downloading and printing most books than what buying one from Amazon would cost.

      More people should read it.

      I'd add other books, such as the afore mentioned "The Theory of Moral Sentiments".

    50. Re:High density = no digging by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1

      OK, that explains why you define Capitalism as Free-Market Capitalism only. You are into Mises/Austrian "economics." Mainstream economics does not define Capitalism that way.

      The Theory of Moral Sentiments is classic. Smith was a great empirical philosopher. Of course, if you like Mises you should hate Smith, as Mises despised empiricism, especially in economics. How anybody can read Mises past the point where he calls economics an "a priori science" is beyond me. The very phrase is oxymoronic. And the idea is just plain moronic.

      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
    51. Re:High density = no digging by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      A snazzy Blackberry Storm- $100 A brand new netbook with Linux installed = $300

      The Blackberry Storm is $500 without a contract ... the netbook is *still* only $300 without a contract ... not paying $3000 (3 years @$80/month) so I can "pay only $100 for a Blackberry", priceless :-)

    52. Re:High density = no digging by sonicmerlin · · Score: 0

      ...I was just imitating one of those mastercard commercials. The prices are absolutely meaningless.

  4. about money, not efficiency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You mean in the US it's all about making money? It's not about trying to do the rollout as efficiently as possible? Especially when they can repeatedly charge the customer for it? I'm shocked. Ahhhh, the joys of a hyper-capitalist society.

    1. Re:about money, not efficiency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahhhh, the joys of a hyper-capitalist society.

      Indeed, It must be a joy to live in Japan, where they have less governmental regulation and therefore more competition which brings the price of this down. good comment.

    2. Re:about money, not efficiency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And lolikon is legal...

    3. Re:about money, not efficiency by phoenix321 · · Score: 1

      In a Hyper-Capitalist society, every capitalist with enough capital could come riding with a white horse and shiny armor and start laying out some cable.

      Competition is the hallmark of Capitalism. Hyper-Capitalism as a stronger, overdosed form of it would mean that all company activities are stretched out to deliver diminishing returns, because each and every one is trying to undercut each others prices.

      Hypo-Capitalism, a pathologic lack of a free market and a lack of freedom to employ one's capital would bring no competition, monopolies and with it high prices.

      Kill off the Invisible Hand and nothing gets done anymore, supplies plummet and the prices for everything soar. Like in, well, Feudalism and Socialism. Except for that in Socialism, prices are usually fixed, bankrupting the society some decades sooner or later.

      Executive summary: hyper-capitalism has stiff competition where you cannot really cash in on your work or company. Hypo-capitalism or Feudalism is where you can have all the cash you want, but you cannot enter several or all markets without bribing officials or buying expensive official paperwork (read: licenses).

    4. Re:about money, not efficiency by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      Uhm, American cable companies are just as concerned with efficiency as the Japanese cable companies, and just as good at it.

      Inefficiency costs them money no matter what so its in their best interests to be efficient regardless of how much they charge.

      You're confusing their bullshit excuses to raise the price or not provide more bandwidth to you and shut down high traffic users with inefficiency which is simply not the case. They can give you more bandwidth any time they want in most cases, sometimes with nothing more than a firmware upgrade (as is in testing locally to me), but in order for you to actually get any benefit, they need more bandwidth outside their network, that costs them money and you're already paying about as much as you're going to pay anyway so increasing it does nothing but cost them.

      Why provide you with more product for free when you're going to continue paying the same or more for what you get now because you don't have a choice?

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    5. Re:about money, not efficiency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The US isn't capitalist. It hasn't been for the past century or so.

    6. Re:about money, not efficiency by Cramer · · Score: 1

      No. No they cannot. Look at all the municple wifi projects, and city run fiber networks that have been sued relentlessly by both cable and telco companies. While it may be cheap on paper, the red tape and legal hurdles are daunting.

    7. Re:about money, not efficiency by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Just to carify... they can change the rate on your modem pretty much instantly. It's a number in the modem's config file. My speed has been increased 3 times over the last few years, and all it takes is a modem reset (so it loads the new config.) DOCSIS 3.0 requires new hardware to do channel bonding.

  5. I want Fios by aoeu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It is right across the street and has been for three months. I watched while they put it on the poles. There is a coil of fiber hanging for each building. I'm planning on buying their triple play, who wants comcast. The fiber is not dark, many houses get it already on my street. My availability, not so much. They are not doing it right.

    --
    All your database are belong to U.S.
    1. Re:I want Fios by aurispector · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I talked to the guy stringing it up on our street last spring but I couldn't get anyone at Verizon to tell me when it would be ready to go. Once they did start marketing, the prices were unreasonable. If they made it cheaper than Comcast everyone everywhere would be onboard. Instead they're busy trying to gouge - giving Comcast time to roll out Docsys 3.0. They had a narrow window of time to beat the pants off Comcast and they missed it. Of course Comcast might have dropped prices to actually *compete*, but price competition is the LAST item on the list of things american telcos are willing to do for market share.

      --
      I have mod points. The reign of terror begins now.
    2. Re:I want Fios by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      At some point they'll start trying to get a return on their investment, if Comcast has DOCSIS 3 ready to go at that point, its fine, they'll actually have competition so you will probably get lower prices due to actually having a choice for high speed connections.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
  6. Japan Broadband = Dense population by overseasjp · · Score: 5, Informative

    THe cost on this is actually pretty simple. I have been living in Japan for 10 years and yes we do enjoy some really incredible bandwidth here. Most of the population lives in very condensed areas. Greater Tokyo has about 30 million people in an area the size of LA... so rolling out the latest technology in one of the most wealthy and densely populated cities in the world is well... nearly easy if you can say that. Cell phones are the same way. Docomo, Softbank, AU etc.. rolled 3g out YEARS... before the US, simple put because logistically they can. Japan is 2/3 the size of California with 45% of the population of the entire US. 80% of the country is mountainous (ie.. nobody lives there) and half the countries population is centered in 4 or 5 cities. Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Sapporo.. Heaven for Technology fans. In a nutshell, you can roll out new technology fast and cheap because the distances between hubs are short, and the overall physical breadth and width of the network is small.

    1. Re:Japan Broadband = Dense population by drinkypoo · · Score: 0, Troll

      LA has about 30 million people in an area the size of LA, too, but many of them are illegal Mexicans who may have a cell phone but certainly don't have broadband. OTOH, LA and Tokyo are both slated to be submerged :)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Japan Broadband = Dense population by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Here's a hint from rural Japan. A small town in Hokkaido to be specific, which is pretty much the middle of nowhere. Population of 12,000 in an area a little under half of Tokyo "City" (23 wards). More specifically, a population density of 51.5 persons / sq. km versus Tokyo's 14,064 persons / sq. km. That's a 1:273 ratio. We don't have fiber, yet. They're installing it right now. We do have 54Mbps ADSL though, and have had it for some time. We also have 3G cell phone reception not only town wide, but in the mountains as well. The mountain range is the size of Kanagawa Prefecture, by the way, but as long as you're not in the shadow of a huge ridge, you'll get your mail.

      What I'm saying is that it's a fallacy that Japan has high-tech only because of the population density. If that were true, only Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya would have these high-speed networks. Even Sapporo is way too spread out to compare. Yet the only areas that I know of that don't have high-speed internet that exceeds what is available in most homes in large U.S. cities, are the extremely remote villages way up in the mountains, which are even more remote than where we live.

      I believe the fact that 97% of the population is covered with high-speed internet right now in Japan says something to that extent (even though that figure is a bit optimistic). Less than 20% of the Japanese population live in Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya.

    3. Re:Japan Broadband = Dense population by biggknifeparty · · Score: 1

      Japan's population is actually not that dense at all. Tokyo is roughly twice as dense as Toronto. Plus, 80% of people live in houses not "manshions" (appartments).

    4. Re:Japan Broadband = Dense population by rdnetto · · Score: 1

      What kind of bandwidth do you actually get in practice? I know the connection may be labelled ~160 MBPS, but what is the actual speed achieved when connecting to local sites?
      I'm curious to see if the ratio of acutal-to-promised is the same as it is in the US.

      --
      Most human behaviour can be explained in terms of identity.
    5. Re:Japan Broadband = Dense population by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Mod parent up. He's right- I live in Sapporo, and I know what the countryside here in Hokkaido is like.

      Japan doesn't have high access simply because of pop. density- Sapporo has poor service at the edge, but blazing fast speeds in the middle- that's ADSL, the majority of what's available here. My 50mb ASDL connection is shit here- always dropping.

      My old 8mb ASDL in the middle of Sapporo had much better service.

      Fiber internet like FiOS is still taking off here.

    6. Re:Japan Broadband = Dense population by overseasjp · · Score: 1

      The population density factor in big cities allows a rapid return on investment for the carriers who then systematically roll it out into the rural areas. But without the ROI in the big cities you then are in the same situation as the US. Other thing is the countries overall scale (on a physical level) to quote myself "Japan is 2/3 the size of California with 45% of the population of the entire US."

    7. Re:Japan Broadband = Dense population by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      You and the parent are both using just cities as an example, which is completely flawed. The report looks at the countries as a hole, not just the cities.

      If you look at the average density of Japan and of America, you'll see that Japan is just over an order of magnitude more dense on average.

      Japan: 337/km2 ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan )

      America: 31/km2 ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States )

      So while the large cities may not be much more dense, when you actually consider that America has FAR higher ratio of rural areas, things start to make a little more sense.

      Of course, you can twist the numbers however you'd like, obviously, the cable companies do it all the time.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    8. Re:Japan Broadband = Dense population by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      Yes, for every city that Japan has at those ratios, America has at least a hundred more cities with lower density than that.

      Average population per square kilometer:
      Japan: 337
      America: 31

      I promise you far more cable has been laid in America than Japan has even thought about laying.

      Not defending the cable companies for ripping us off, but you're making a very poor contrast between the two countries density.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    9. Re:Japan Broadband = Dense population by biggknifeparty · · Score: 1

      That's a good point. I think I read once that somewhere in the neighbourhood of 40% of Americans live in rural areas. (compared with only 20% of Canadians for the sake of comparison)

    10. Re:Japan Broadband = Dense population by Dibblah · · Score: 1

      Bah humbug. I can't see how to PM @ /. - So I'll just reply here. BSD appears to be different, but on most unices http://www.bpfh.net/simes/computing/chroot-break.html

  7. Where are they putting the cables? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    Verizon is spending an average of $817 per home passed to wire neighborhoods for its FiOS fiber optic network and another $716 for equipment and labor in each home that subscribes,

    WTF? Who knew running a cable between telephone poles cost so much.

     

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:Where are they putting the cables? by thejynxed · · Score: 1

      They have to pay unionized labor costs and permit fees as well as the cost of materials like the cables and battery backups.

      --
      @Mindless Drivel: 100% of Twitter posts ever Tweeted.
    2. Re:Where are they putting the cables? by guruevi · · Score: 1

      Well, in my rant to the TWC marketing execs (https://rcbi.rochester.edu/weblog/vanooste/)I already explained that's what I pay on a yearly basis for them to give me a crappy 3Mbps copper-based service that's been there for the last 20 years. If that's all it costs for them to give us FiOS, I don't understand why it takes so long.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    3. Re:Where are they putting the cables? by coryking · · Score: 1

      Dont forget the endangered owl who built a nest on one of those poles. Dont forget the NIMBY assholes who are worried one the trucks who install the fiber will lower their home value**. Dont forget the fact that the fiber will cause somehow cause cancer and so we better do a 3 year study to find out. Dont forget we will need to conduct a neighborhood meeting first.

      Lots of red tape. Remember when we could just say "fuck it all" and blow shit up whenever we wanted? Neither Hover Dam nor the Panama Canal could be built now days. Truthfully though, I could argue a lot of our red tape is a good thing, but it sure has a high cost.

      ** Parking my truck along the curb isn't gonna decrease your resale value, jackass. Painting my house a color you don't like isn't gonna fuck with your property value, jerkwad. You buy a home to live in, not to be used as an investment, asshole. Hopefully these asshats got shafted by our current economic woes.

    4. Re:Where are they putting the cables? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's what union labor will do to you.

    5. Re:Where are they putting the cables? by Jaime2 · · Score: 1

      I see it as big company politics as usual. I now work at a big company, the small company I worked at was newly acquired a short time ago. My first big project after the acquisition went through all of the corporate eyeballs for standards compliance. My $150,000 fully-redundant, major vendor hardware, 3-hour on-site support VMware cluster design (ground-up, including network infrastructure) got corporate standardized to a $500,000 fully-redundant, major vendor hardware (much of it Cisco this time), 3-hour on-site support design. The explanation given was "We save time and money by not having to learn how to support a second vendor's hardware". There was no allowance for discussion on the fact that we have a bunch of their hardware here already and we are already effectively supporting it, or that outsourcing support to someone who is trained and capable would cost one tenth of the $350,000 difference over the life of the hardware.

      At the end of the day, it turned out exactly like the US broadband situation, we paid three and a half times as much to get one-tenth of the capabilities. The bandwidth killer was that we spec'd dual 10G copper directly to a blade chassis, but the corporate standard was 1GB fiber between switches and 100M copper to nodes, including servers.

  8. Why would you be digging? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 4, Funny

    Don't you have telephone poles in America?

     

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:Why would you be digging? by LordKaT · · Score: 1

      Some towns do, some don't.

      In New York City telephone poles are grandfathered devices. New wire should (has to?) be laid down underground.

    2. Re:Why would you be digging? by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Funny

      Don't you have telephone poles in America?

      Q: Who was Alexander Graham Bell Kowalski?
      A: The first telephone poll !

    3. Re:Why would you be digging? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      Ah well, they'll get everything they deserve then.

       

      --
      Deleted
    4. Re:Why would you be digging? by Johnny00 · · Score: 0

      Depends where you live. A lot of utility lines are underground.

      --
      I live life on the edge ... of my desk.
    5. Re:Why would you be digging? by psnyder · · Score: 1

      I've lived in both NYC and Tokyo.
      I don't remember telephone poles in NYC, but they're everywhere in Tokyo.

      You can see them clearly in this picture outside of my Tokyo apartment.

      But the price difference probably has a lot more to do with what this guy said.

    6. Re:Why would you be digging? by AF_Cheddar_Head · · Score: 1

      Yeah sure we do until that nice ice storm comes thru and takes them all down. Underground might be expensive to put in but sure saves a hell of a lot of money when you have the kind of weather you get here. Nice to not worry about power outages while new cable and poles are installed.

    7. Re:Why would you be digging? by Neko-kun · · Score: 1

      I do have to say that Danny Choo's photos from when the Japanese Telco did the install at his house better demonstrates just how packed the telephone poles are.

    8. Re:Why would you be digging? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here (Southern Indiana), only electrical is above ground. All communication, cable and telephone, are buried.

  9. speed versus caps by stonewallred · · Score: 1

    Oh this is great. If TWC does this, you will be able to max out your 40GB cap in a matter of an hour or two.

    1. Re:speed versus caps by tylerni7 · · Score: 1

      Actually, at 160 Mbit, it would take just a bit over 30 minutes to max out a 40GB cap.

    2. Re:speed versus caps by stonewallred · · Score: 1

      I figured it would take longer because just because the speed is there on your end, the swarms will not match your download speeds. Now if you are just pulling content without discrimination, yes you are correct on 30 minutes to max 40GB.

    3. Re:speed versus caps by TuaAmin13 · · Score: 1

      Actually, at 160 Mbit (Actual speeds may vary), it would take just a bit over 30 minutes to max out a 40GB cap.

      There, fixed it for you.

    4. Re:speed versus caps by dimension6 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'm using a 100Mb line right now in Tokyo (roughly $50/mo. with a static IP address and all fees), and I do get the full 100 megabits, full duplex. Of course, I'm usually limited by the other party's connection, but when downloading things within Japan, the computer immediately slows down due to the hard disk sustaining writes at 8-9MB/sec.

      I wonder if the 160Mb connection mentioned in the summary includes a gigabit router...

  10. Journalism meets Technology ... by LordKaT · · Score: 1, Informative

    J:Com's costs were substantially reduced because they rolled out DOCSIS 3.0 on their existing copper infrastructure.

    Verizon is laying new infrastructure in the form of fiber-optic cable.

    Ah the New York Times, where Journalism meets Technology like a retard smacking his head into a brick wall.

    1. Re:Journalism meets Technology ... by v1 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      What I wonder is, are companies like Cox pulling maneuvers similar to "Hollywood Accounting" to make their end costs really high, which would appear to justify jacking everyone's rates up, but under the table they're paying themselves off (via their affiliate or otherwise owned companies) and turning an insane profit in the big picture?

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  11. Hip Hip Hooray? by rinoid · · Score: 1

    Three cheers for unfettered capitalism!!!

    Oh wait. You mean it's not really capitalism? There really isn't enough competition?! Yet they companies keep hiding behind the premise of free markets and profits?

    Write your senators and representatives folks ... we all believe this is the future right? Where everyone has access to broadband and those who can't afford it are subsidized in some fashion? Information wants to be free right? Not just for some people.

    The US will never get reasonable fast broadband in the current vacuum of competition.

    1. Re:Hip Hip Hooray? by witherstaff · · Score: 1

      Most of our telco laws are very corporatism in nature, monopolistic friendly. My local Rep was chairman of the telco subcommittee for years. His yearly donations from telco lobby groups were for last cycle $134,350. Hard to compete against those deep pockets no matter how many letters I write, letters to editor, etc.

      I wish Google would have opened up some wireless competition. Android is cool and all but a real non ILEC competitor for the last mile would be even nicer.

  12. Re:Things to remember by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Informative

    They're using the existing cable network, and sending their customers upgraded modems ($60 a pop) that can handle up to 160mpbs. No digging, no rewiring.

  13. Re:Things to remember by nysus · · Score: 1

    RTFA

    --

    ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

  14. final mile, not end-end by petes_PoV · · Score: 4, Insightful
    screamingly fast connections are only useful if the box that is serving up content can keep up. That means that not only the end-server, but every node along the way, as well as the capacity of the cables/fibres is up to the job.

    While it makes for nice, simplistic headlines (and even more simplistic marketing - along with unfulfillable expectations that just cause resentment and ill-feeling later) it's largely pointless. Far better for the providers to come up with a balanced delivery, than to go around having to make excuses for who someone's gigabit/second link is only running at 1MByte/s in real life.

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
    1. Re:final mile, not end-end by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In conclusion, the US and Canada should stick to GSM wireless services because who would really need any faster anyway?

    2. Re:final mile, not end-end by TheSunborn · · Score: 1

      But most servers in the real world don't have any problem delivering 100Mbit/sec to you.

    3. Re:final mile, not end-end by saleenS281 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And you now fully understand the beauty of P2P.

  15. Fastest in the world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I question that. Here in Sweden I know of at least one company (bredband2) connecting private consumers at 1 gbit.

    1. Re:Fastest in the world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same here in Japan 1Gbps is also available from various providers depending on your location.

      Unfortunately for me I am stuck with 100mbps :)

    2. Re:Fastest in the world? by Idiomatick · · Score: 2, Informative

      Go to any speed test site and the fastest recorded tests will be in gunma japan someplace.

    3. Re:Fastest in the world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      KDDI/AU in Japan is also offering 1 gbit service to consumers.

  16. Re:Things to remember by nloop · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Did you read the article? I'm guessing no from your response.

    The whole point of it was Japan used existing cable lines and upgraded it to docsis 3, which is cheap to do. There is no running of new cable to the highrises vs the suburbs. The article attributed the US's slow uptake of docsis 3 to lack of competition and fear of losing traditional cable services to streaming video. Not cost of adding new wire or running phone, which doesn't make any sense anyway because VoIP runs on cable just fine. The excessive cost is FiOS which is running new wire, but if the cable company wasn't asleep and upgraded their system before FiOS would be dead in the water.

  17. Re:Things to remember by kremvax · · Score: 4, Insightful

    >Most of Japan is high rises

    >Also, a lot of the buildings in the US are older than those in Japan

    You've clearly never ever been to Japan.

    --
    --- Little Atomo - The Amazing Thinking Robot from Atomocom! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIP9KisHi4k
  18. Why don't the cable companies upgrade? Monopoly. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The article is badly written, it's true. However, the issue the article is trying to make clear is that there is a cheap way of providing much faster service: by upgrading cable service. Upgrading cable service doesn't require new cable, or work in the streets; it just requires new equipment at the central office and new modems for the customer.

    The reason that the cable companies don't do that, apparently, is because in the U.S. they were granted poorly regulated monopolies. Therefore they can 1) lie to customers, 2) give poor service, and 3) give slow service, and still raise prices.

  19. Re:Things to remember by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hi, you must be new here.

  20. anyone remember the federal universal service fee? by DragonTHC · · Score: 2, Interesting

    That's something that we all get charged on our bills for the federally mandated fund that's supposed to be used to build out broadband infrastructure.

    Why aren't they building out their infrastructure?

    Why, instead of building upgrading to the highest speed available, are they only upgrading to the next increment?

    It's the mentality of these industry giants. They spend as little as little as possible only when absolutely necessary. But they charge out the ass for it.

    Comcast has the capability of providing 100Mbit service with their docsis 3.0 upgrades. Will they provide 100Mbit service? No. Because it makes more sense to charge double the normal rate for 20Mbit service.

    They will probably provide 50Mbit service also. They will charge $300 for 50Mbit. Capitalism does not like innovation.

    --
    They're using their grammar skills there.
  21. DOCSIS 3 by grumling · · Score: 1

    Comcast will have DOCSIS 3 nationwide by the end of the summer. Qwest is running fiber to the home in select areas. AT&T is still rolling out uVerse service. Verizon FiOS is still moving along. Clearwire, while not in the same league as the wired services, is building out. I agree the pricing is harsh, but faster Internet will be here soon.

    The way the NYT article read, we'll never see any improvement over what we have now, and 6 months is an eternity. Meanwhile I click the "preview" button and wait 5-6 seconds for the page to build. What's up with that?

    --
    "Well, good luck finding a judge that doesn't run a bestiality site."
  22. It's the network by tepples · · Score: 1

    for example, the Japanese ISPs probably dont need to provide any kind of stuff to handle phone connections since just about EVERYONE has a mobile phone whereas Verizon has to support phone connections over FIOS with an expensive UPS to keep things going if there is an outage and someone needs to call 911 in a hurry.

    Then why doesn't Verizon just bundle basic cell phone service with FiOS? Verizon is The Network.

    1. Re:It's the network by rrossman2 · · Score: 1

      I stopped into a VZW store to get a BB Storm, and from what I heard when a customer service person was talking to a customer about VZW's new VoIP deal is that Verizon Wireless and Verizon (teleco) are essentially two separate entities.

  23. AM i missing something? by koutbo6 · · Score: 1

    Aren't the costs mentioned by NYT fixed in nature?
    Which means, if they are higher, it would just take longer to recoup.
    Lets use a liberal estimate of these costs and say it was $2000.
    A customer paying $60 per month, would pay it in 34 months. Even if $40 were going towards paying that costs, and $20 to cover variable costs, it would take 50 months to recoup.

    Seem to me like a reasonable time before an investment starts making profit. If only the telcos would just stop abusing their customers and win their loyalty for that period.

    Here's another thought, could it be the legal fees and the mismanagement overhead what's making the telcos less profitable?

    --
    You speak London? I speak London very best.
  24. FIOS by olddotter · · Score: 1

    My understanding of the Fiber to the home projects is that it is a legal maneuver to re-establish absolute monopoly on services to the home. I have heard that as they bring the fiber in they are ripping the copper out to ensure it is VERY expensive for you to decide to switch back to your old provider.

    This is because of a law/regulation that says networks laid down during the telco-monopoly days must be shared with competitors at market rates. If they put in a new network for the "last mile" (or 100 feet) then they don't have to share.

    This desire for monopoly pricing is driving American companies to invest huge amounts of money for technology that isn't technically superior any more.

    1. Re:FIOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please mod the parent up.

  25. Missing the Point by Strick11 · · Score: 1

    This article misses the point. Cable companies could make a profit selling higher bandwidths, but only at the expense of their real money maker, cable subscriptions. They've known since the mid-90s that the inevitable consequence increasing bandwidths would be the rise of services like Netflicks and Hulu (though we never envisioned them quite as they are), and the end of cable TV, where they make their real money. Everything they've done since then has been aware their fate and calculated to put off that end, the trading of their high profit product for a commodity, bandwidth, as long as they could. And that's the reason bandwidth suck in the US. Everything else, all the technical difficulties, etc., have been exaggerated as an excuse.

    1. Re:Missing the Point by memorycardfull · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The CEO of J:Com makes exactly this point in the article if you read it all the way to the end. Maybe you missed it?

  26. please cite by way2trivial · · Score: 0, Troll

    please read the above page and get back to us about where it says the USF is collected to build out broadband infrastructure.

    it is used in certain small and rural areas- but it is not for "everyone's network buildout"

    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
    1. Re:please cite by witherstaff · · Score: 1

      It's not just USF. ILECs also got nice tax breaks and other concessions because they 'promised to wire america'. Teletruth.org has more info. Since they were part of the FCC Consumer Advisory Committee they know what they're talking about. The 200 billion dollar broadband scandal, talked about by Crigley and others, are based on this investigation.

    2. Re:please cite by number11 · · Score: 1

      please read the above page and get back to us about where it says the USF is collected to build out broadband infrastructure.

      it is used in certain small and rural areas- but it is not for "everyone's network buildout"

      Exactly. It is used to subsidize the "rugged individualists" who choose to live in places like Montana and Alaska.

  27. Not a fair comparison by kenh · · Score: 0

    Obviously, the cost of a house passed is much much lower than an actual FTTH implementation, like the FiOS implementation priced at $716/house (compared with $20 to run cable past a "house"). What does the high-speed cable "modem" cost? The actual wiring in the house, etc.?

    It costs more than $20 to simply run coax from my street to my house - that $20 number is silly.

    And finally, I bet Verizon could run more than 160 Megabit over their fiber infrastructure to a house if they choose to - fiber has a lot of bandwidth, more than coax last I checked.

    Because this feeds into a popular myth, it isn't questioned - but the excerpted text is just misleading.

    --
    Ken
    1. Re:Not a fair comparison by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

      I understand this is slashdot, but did *anyone* RTFA?

      He's not comparing the cost of laying copper cable to the cost of laying Fibre.

      He's comparing the cost of upgrading the boxes connected to the *existing* copper wire cable network to support up to 160 Mbits to the cost of laying NEW fibre.

      Which is a reasonable comparison, given that these are our two options to get that kind of speed out to most people in the country right now. He is saying that it is ridiculous that to get that high speed we have to wait for verizon to spend $800 instead of Time Warner spending $20, because Time Warner refuses to spend that $20.

      Time Warner could be giving us Japan-like speeds everywhere that their network currently reaches, but they are refusing to because they have a monopoly in those local areas, and therefore no incentive to improve a service that only competes with their over services.

    2. Re:Not a fair comparison by icebike · · Score: 0

      Look, even if what you say is true, you are still asked to believe you can get 160Mbits on copper, AND you can get it for $20 bucks.

      I doubt there really exists such a box at that price. I doubt you could get a tech into the dwelling to hook it up for that price.

      Someone is glossing over a subscription funded subsidy here, and the comparison is just bogus.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    3. Re:Not a fair comparison by TheHawke · · Score: 1

      And you have to keep in mind how insular the telecoms and cable companies are in comparison to how the Japanese counterparts are. The majority of their systems are gov't sanctioned, driven and funded. They can afford to keep their customers happy, in direct comparison to how the utilities take care of their American clients. From what I've seen, heard and experienced, our telecoms in the US treat their clients like dirt in comparison to our Asian friends.

      --
      First rule of holes; When in one, stop digging.
    4. Re:Not a fair comparison by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      It costs more than $20 to simply run coax from my street to my house - that $20 number is silly.

      From what I understand, if someone who reads this knows I'm wrong let me know, running new cable isn't needed to increase the speed of cable. What is needed is for DOCSIS 3.0 equipment to be installed in the central office and a DOCSIS 3.0 modem. These should cost more than $20 I'd imagine but they shouldn't cost too much.

      Falcon

    5. Re:Not a fair comparison by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      And you have to keep in mind how insular the telecoms and cable companies are in comparison to how the Japanese counterparts are. The majority of their systems are gov't sanctioned, driven and funded.

      US companies are also government sanctioned and funded. They are given the right to use rights of way and have been given hundreds of billions of dollar to build out broadband. Instead they used the money to pad their bottom lines.

      Falcon

    6. Re:Not a fair comparison by kenh · · Score: 1

      Falcon,

      The issue is, they are doing a cost comparison of $20 to upgrade one infrastructure with a forklift network upgrade at $1,500 to a complete fiber to the home roll-out. What did the Japanese company pay for their infrastructure? Why not compare Japan cable companies with US cable companies, and since there is still a large number of homes that cable co coax doesn't pass in front of, you need to consider the initial infrastructure costs (as US cable cos will need to roll out new infrastructure in many parts of America)?

      --
      Ken
    7. Re:Not a fair comparison by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Correct. However, there are other problems... the biggest is the move away from traditional pay TV service (read: cable) to internet streaming, which means a (huge) drop in revenue. The other big issue is the amount of bandwidth necessary to provide DOCSIS 3.0 speeds. Many operators have extreme congestion in the cable network (due entirely to all this BS on-demand and iControl crap) so doubling or tripling the number of channels used by data services is going to be a hard sell. And moving to high frequencies means upgrading a lot of (expensive) equipment. (most cable networks only go to 850Mhz, which is as high as they needed to go in the days of analog cable.)

  28. Look at the Automotive Industry by olddotter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Are we really surprised that LARGE American companies keep whining that its too hard or expensive to offer high quality service that their customers want?

    We are into 40 years of Detroit automakers largely ignoring what their customers want. As a result they were already in serious trouble before the current financial mess. Mean while Toyota and Honda were giving people what they wanted. High quality reasonably priced cars in the sizes and shapes people wanted. When we come out the other end of this mess its likely only Ford will survive and hopefully they will be more responsive to market demands.

    I just hope someone American or foreign, comes in and shakes up the ISP/Cable/Phone market here the way that the Japanese car companies did the automotive industry.

    1. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "If in the course of operating a business profit taking becomes an end unto itself and all other pertinent matters of propriety and fairness are deemed irrelevant, it emerges that the only difference between the businessman and the burglar is their mode of operation - their only goal is to take money."

      I add to that this: The interests of the profit takers are so deeply interwoven with those of the state that they are inseparable, with enterprise insulated from all potential harm by the slovenly government it nurses. Predictably, atrophy has resulted, and the depth of their interdependency is such that neither could possibly survive without the other. They persist now only by monopolizing the real and political capital of the nation, starving their competitors of the wealth and attention necessary for them to thrive.

      With the telecommunications industry being no different, and with the infrastructure owners holding natural monopolies on the landlines and regulatory monopolies on the airwaves, there's no reason to assume that any real competition will take place here in the United States on any greater than the tiniest of scales.

    2. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, which is exactly why it's taken Toyota this long to become bigger than GM or Ford, becuase they were selling what Americans wanted. That's also why they've been hit just as hard in the recession, and are looking for a handout from Japan as well.

      Perhaps instead being yet another ignorant shill about how superior the Japanese automobiles are, you should pick up a history book.

      http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/books/chap1/badsamaritans.htm

      The *ISSUE* for GM is NOT making cars Americans want, it's making them at an affordable price with the UAW monkey on its back.

    3. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Great points - big business here in the US could give a rodent's behind about the consumer, othe than us being a source of income - if they can strong-arm us into paying by buying up all the competition and then raising prices, all the better for them while we get hosed. Time Warner is now going to start charging cable Internet like "cell phone" plans with tiered bandwidth. With all they charge for Internet service/cable and digital phone per household, they have to be making money hand over fist, which you would think would allow them upgrade infrastructure. Oh, I'm sorry, that cuts into profits, we can't do that....heaven forbid we should actually offer something worth what we are charging.

    4. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Detroit depended on trade unionism, protectionism, and government bailouts. Look where all that got them.

      Telco's bank on having the right people in charge over at the FCC, that stalwart defender of freedom of speech.

      See a pattern here?

    5. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by feepness · · Score: 1

      People seemed to want big fat SUVs for a looooong time. Detroit just didn't give enough other options.

      I am not sure why this is.

    6. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Toyota doesn't make a car you could pay me to drive.. Seriously... Please don't put me in your box of what "Americans wanted". Not that US car makers have offered what I want for sale in the US since the 90s either..

      What would I want? A TDI PT Cruiser w rwd and 6 speed manual trans... (there is a TDI PT Cruiser, but not for sale in US) or an updated Fiero GT, or maybe an relatively affordable Tesla Coupe (not a sedan, not a roadster) ?

      Wake me up when ANY car company is making something I want...

    7. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile, everyone else was allowed to flock to the uncivilized armpits of the developing world to exploit the disadvantaged labor there as a cost cutting measure, and nobody in government batted an eye. Using poverty as a competitive advantage, real classy.

      I'm not for eliminating government involvement in industry. Regulation is just a tool, but the goal of its use has to be accounted for. Here in the States, the goal of regulators and legislators seems to be to protect industry from having to actually compete or spend money while still turning gargantuan profits. Obviously, it's not working out so well for us.

      Bring trade home. Nix coddling regulations. Service, improvement, and investment have to come before money hoarding and Wall Street gambling. If these free trade bandits actually believe in what they think they believe in, trade hasn't been free or even remotely fair for decades.

    8. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by houghi · · Score: 1

      Why would Ford or anybody be responsive to market demands? If all else fails, just ask for more money and in the mean time take as much as you want if you are the CEO.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    9. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by olddotter · · Score: 1

      You make a very valid point. The "Detroit" companies made cars that people wanted to buy, they just refused to sell them in the US market.

    10. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by number11 · · Score: 1

      The *ISSUE* for GM is NOT making cars Americans want, it's making them at an affordable price with the UAW monkey on its back.

      Well, to a degree Americans want the cars that advertising sells them. That's why we have advertising. Another part of the problem is that GM was making more money on humongous vehicles and didn't hedge its bets, and have a vehicle ready for high energy costs.

      GM management were all consenting adults when they signed the contracts with the UAW. Now they're whining that they don't like what they signed. They're in the position of the homeowner who bought too big, and can't afford the house any more, and wants to have the mortgage changed.

      And even so, the contracts wouldn't have been so bad if it wasn't for out-of-control skyrocketing health costs, especially of retirees. If we had a working health care system in the US that wasn't supposedly financed by employers, it wouldn't be that much of an issue.

    11. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You want a company to come in and drive the existing companies out of business by offering better products? Then the gov can bail out our bankrupt telcos, oust the CEO, and then subsidize their services. Well I wouldn't be a believer in any of that happening if anyone but Obama were in office.

    12. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except for the fact that the US Automakers didnt have municipal monopolies over car sales.

      THAT is the major reason our speeds do not increase. No competition (or pseudo competition where providers services barely overlap so that they can say "hey its not a monopoly! at least 3 houses have a choice!").

    13. Re:Look at the Automotive Industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We are into 40 years of Detroit automakers largely ignoring what their customers want.

      I'm sorry, but from life experiences I would have to say many Americans received exactly what they wanted from the Detroit auto makers. MORE HORSEPOWER, FASTER, AND BIGGER VEHICLES! If people didn't want the SUVs and wasteful, powerful cars, then I wouldn't be seeing them on the roads now would I?

      I think it's more of a case of Americans not learning from past crises. Who in their right mind that lived through the 1973 oil crisis would want an SUV?

  29. J:com will eat the video stores by lanceblack · · Score: 1

    I live in Tokyo. A few weeks ago the doorbell rang and a J:com salesman started trying to sell me some new package deal. I started to wave him away and close the door when my ears picked up the words "160 megabytes." Interested, I enquired further. The next day the cable guy came around to upgrade our system. We went from a basic 30meg line for 5500yen per month (US$55.00 give or take at today's rates) to a 160meg line, 100 cable channels, pay-on-demand selection of thousands of new-release movie titles in high-definition format, fixed phone and a DVD HDD/DVD recorder HDTV-ready box for 6200yen per month. I'm very happy. But Tsutaya, the leading movie rental chain in Japan, probably won't be.

    --
    "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge." Darwin
    1. Re:J:com will eat the video stores by chitokutai · · Score: 1

      Did you sign up for this package using some kind of campaign discount? I read your description and immediately went to J:com's website to see about signing up, but with everything that you mentioned, the cheapest rate I can find is 10,980 yen - and that's without the phone services. The website I was looking at is available http://www.jcom.co.jp/information/common/pricing/pay_pack.php. If you've got any other information about getting 160Mbps for that price, please let me know. I'm currently paying 5800 yen with kddi for 50Mbps and that would be a massive speed increase.

    2. Re:J:com will eat the video stores by lanceblack · · Score: 1

      Going over the notes the cable guy gave us, covering various options, the basic 160Mbps plan was 3300yen, the HDD240h+DVD an additional 2200yen, and the telephone/fax 700yen, coming out to 6200yen per month. I do believe it's cheaper because I've been a customer for over two years...but not *that* much cheaper. Also, the entire building is wired up for J:com, which might have lowered the installation cost, so perhaps that 10,980yen includes the installation cost of the cable spaced out over the length of the contract? Perhaps give them a call and see what you can work out.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge." Darwin
    3. Re:J:com will eat the video stores by chitokutai · · Score: 1

      Thanks for checking! I'll be sure to give them a call and see what they can offer. I know my building uses J:Com by default, but we chose to go with AU since that's the service we use for our cell phones. Now I'm thinking that wasn't such a great idea... :)

  30. and it ate the url by way2trivial · · Score: 1
    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
  31. Verizon built FiOS because they didn't have coax by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 1

    Comcast is rolling out DOCSIS 3, just like the "$20 per house" Japanese company, because they can reuse their existing coax cable. They may have to move the fiber nodes in their fiber/coax hybrid network a little closer to their customers but hey, no big deal. Eventually they'll have to go FTTH but they can get by for now.

    Verizon's old telephone copper wire pairs are woefully inadequate for high speed Internet, much less video, so going straight to FTTH and reaping the operational cost savings from their state-of-the-art FiOS network (reliability of fiber, more automated diagnostics, fewer maintenance truck rolls required) makes sense. Fiber optic cable is expensive but it'll last for decades, just like the copper it replaced did. They can own the high-end of the market easily.

    AT&T, unfortunately, decided to shoehorn Internet and TV into their existing copper pairs, call it U-verse, and trust that the average stock market analyst and NYT journalist is too ignorant to know what a joke it is. But at least they can reuse their new fiber nodes and settop boxes in the unlikely event that they finish the job and build FTTH.

    Somebody smart could build dark FTTH networks and lease them to competing carriers, setting up the company as an old-fashioned dividend paying utility (which would work better were it not for the double taxing of dividends that's killed many a capital intensive American company but I digress). Separating the dumb dark fiber that lasts for decades from service providers' rapidly evolving electronics makes a lot of sense. Municipalities could build them, if they could refrain from the control-freakishness that helped kill UTopia. So could the power companies who already have rights-of-way, or new companies could emerge. But the incumbent carriers seem more interested in suing anyone new than engaging in rational cooperation.

  32. Specious by Spazmania · · Score: 1

    $20 per home passed indeed. It doesn't cost much per home to pass an apartment building with hundreds of homes and declare it eligible. Verizon is only building to single family homes right now; the cost per structure is lower than J:Com but the cost per home is higher.

    On the other hand, the $716 per home hooked up is Verizon's own fault. They never have processed the old AT&T lesson that it ain't cool to require the customer to lease the CPE.

    --
    Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
  33. Japan Always FAST? Bull. I live in Sapporo, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    one of those MAJOR cities someone above mentioned, and I even have the fastest service available here- 50mb connection. I live on the edge of a major Japanese city, with 50mb internet connection.

    But it's slow as hell. Granted, it's not cable internet- it's DSL. But that's all that's available here- at the edge of town. I've had the 8mb when I lived in the middle of town, and it was hella fast.

    When we talk about Japan's fast internet- let's get something straight- we're talking about TOKYO. The rest of Japan gets a lot of DSL, still, from what I see, and even FiOS is just still spreading here.

    Tokyo is an EXCEPTION. Granted, you can get internet in most places in Japan except remote places in the countryside, but don't go thinking anything outside Tokyo is even REMOTELY like Tokyo speed!

  34. REGULATIONS by p51d007 · · Score: 1

    I'll be you the Japanese don't have to put up with the mountains of red tape that you do in the USA either!

    1. Re:REGULATIONS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if they did, it stands to reason any red tape they have either encourages continual improvement and reinvestment through incentives or fosters competition instead of preventing it like the laws do here.

    2. Re:REGULATIONS by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1

      Actually Japan is rather famous for its truly byzantine governmental bureaucracy. The same is also true for large corporations, which are essentially a never-ending battle-field of competing factions engaged in subtle, covert, ambiguous and sometimes directly brutal dance of influence peddling and general back-stabbing all revolving around grabbing more power and avoiding any responsibility at the same time.

      So the thing to wonder about is not how do they do it without the red tape, but how do they do it despite of mountains of it.

    3. Re:REGULATIONS by o2sd · · Score: 1

      So the thing to wonder about is not how do they do it without the red tape, but how do they do it despite of mountains of it.

      It's a good question, and I believe the answer lies in the 'common good' argument. If some project can be framed as 'good for Japan', then it will get a lot of traction once the majority agree that it is. Japanese society is basically feudal, but can also be nationalistic given the right incentives.

      I think as soon as South Korea entered the bandwidth arms race, it was a matter of national pride for the Japanese to have faster internet access. I'm sure that their telephone still costs $600 per month though ....

      --
      - Nothing to see hear.
    4. Re:REGULATIONS by gullevek · · Score: 1

      Youp. The tons of paperwork I produce every month just to satisfy buchou & kachou is just amazing. And on the other hand they all cry about Eco ...

      --
      "Freiheit ist immer auch die Freiheit des Andersdenkenden" - Rosa Luxemburg, 1871 - 1919
  35. Re:Why don't the cable companies upgrade? Monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Hybrid Fibre-Coaxial architectures used by the cable companies still suffer from being shared between a large number of people (several hundred or even a thousand, IIRC). Even if you were to use *all* the downstream bandwidth for internet rather than broadcast TV, there's maybe a megabit/s or two per user, sustained. Upstream is much worse. That's plenty for the time being, certainly, but far less than FTTH or even FTTC/VDSL2 is cable of.

  36. Investing in SP network? by HockeyPuck · · Score: 1

    So if the cost to upgrade a house is $60, how much would a typical cable company need to invest in their own infrastructure in the core and distribution networks to deal with the higher amount of bandwidth.

    I've got 16Mb down service wit Comcast, and if they gave me 100Mb, I don't think it would make that much of a difference, since I can almost never find sources that will provide me with enough content to fill that pipe. Even torrents with hundreds of seeders never get that high.

    How would the service providers get a solid return on their investment? Will 100Mb/s connections get more people to switch providers or get more people to move fro dialup? I doubt there are people that are saying, "I'd drop my dialup connection for broadband, but I'm waiting for 100Mb/s." I'd be interested to know what percentage of customers opt for say the highest tiers possible although the price difference might be as small as $10/mo (it is for comcast to go from 6-16Mb).

    1. Re:Investing in SP network? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      I've got 16Mb down service wit Comcast, and if they gave me 100Mb, I don't think it would make that much of a difference, since I can almost never find sources that will provide me with enough content to fill that pipe. Even torrents with hundreds of seeders never get that high.

      Yea, and nobody will ever need more than 640K RAM.

      If the capacity is there it will be used. Maybe not right away but someone will come up with something that can use it.

      Falcon

    2. Re:Investing in SP network? by Cramer · · Score: 1

      A lot more than they want to speed to support all the 5M modems right now.

  37. US companies not increasing speed? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Why they do that all the time, according to their ads :)

    "Blazing fast"

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:US companies not increasing speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Comcast territory, Indiana. Formerly Insight. (RIP)

      We're taking a price hike and a 2MB speed cut all at once this summer.

      Fourth hike since they took over LAST YEAR. Nobody's happy about it.

  38. I hate their protected "monopoly" by rrossman2 · · Score: 1

    I understand why the government may have wanted to protect the markets in a sense... if someone came in and undercut the existing Tele/Cable co, took over the market and then jacked prices up or went bankrupt, things would be worse off. But that's no excuse to allow the existing company to essentially do the same thing with jacking prices up and locking out the market.

    All the investors will bitching about the Socialism aspect of the bailouts, and wha wha wha, but where is all the bitching and government action of the basically Socialized Tele/Cable incumbents?

    I say let the free markets work like they are intended to. Open the markets and allow others to compete, and may the best company win. If Verizon, ATT, etc fail, well too bad. I guess they weren't the best option in the public's eye.

    It's no different than the government giving Denny's a monopolistic area where they are the only Restaurant and have full control over the supply lines of food.

    You want to open a Eat N Park, Perkin's, etc?
    First off, good luck getting past the legal blocks.

    Oh, you successfully managed to get one location open?
    Good for you, too bad we own the food supply lines, and we're not going to allow you to get any.

    Oh so the government finally forced us to open the food supply from our grimy clutched fists?
    Fine, we'll just up your costs to the point where you either won't be able to afford it, or the cost will be so great you'll have to make your customers pay too much for your service so we still win!

  39. Too little equipment for too many customers by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    "... suffer from being shared between a large number of people (several hundred or even a thousand, IIRC)."

    Yes, that's obvious. They are trying to make use too little equipment for too many customers. The cell phone companies do that too; there is no regulation about quality of service, as there is for land line telephones.

    There's an easy solution. Just install more of the latest design of central office equipment, so that there are fewer customers per hardware installation.

    Apparently cable companies don't do that because, if they want more money, they can raise prices any time they like, even if service is poor.

  40. Re:Crazy -Making the Same Error Repeatedly ... by Herschel+Cohen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In the States (aka U.S. of A), tax payer money has been thrown at industries with neither oversight nor review of the lessons learned. For example, American [U.S.] industry, the eighty mile per gallon car resulted in the worst outcome. We got over sized SUVs and the Bummer!, albeit with the long term promise of pristine hydrogen powered electrics vehicles that we will probably never see. However, it scared the Japanese into action where without direct subsidies they were and are better positioned to produce vehicles with superior economy. Then we financed several build outs for the Internet, that resulted in the Telcos demanding more return for their efforts. Now we are savng the Banks and the Brokerage houses that caused our economic disaster. It is long past the time that the guilty should pay, with a reduced life style, which they were never entitled despite their fondest self regard and over estimated self worth.

    [question: why aren't the extrans working?]

  41. I call BS on those numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sorry, I just do not believe the numbers.

    Japan is NOT a cheap place to live. The idea you could do the same task for $20 that costs $1533 in the US says to me that the study is comparing apples to oranges.

    You can't pay someone to walk in your door for $20 bucks, let alone drop line to the router that they supply and hook it all up. Clearly someone is fudging the numbers.

  42. Uverse by rshimizu12 · · Score: 1

    AT&T Uverse has 30mbps download with a 1.5 mbps upload. It's too bad that Uverse only has a 1.5 mbps upload speed. Both AT&T as well as the the cable companies will eventually be forced upgrade their networks if they want ot carry HDTV on all their channels.

  43. HK Broadband co has been doing 1Gbit for years by HKcastaway · · Score: 1

    160MB so what!

    A few years back HKBN was touted as the worlds most advances metroethernet broadband provider. They are also a big cisco site.

    I think they had 1Gbit to the home in early 2007

  44. Poles, we don't want no stinking poles! by fat_mike · · Score: 1

    A lot of communities in the U.S. (mine included) have voted to increase taxes so utility companies can run everything underground. Where I live they've finished half of the city. We have a road that splits the city and those on the south side have everything buried.

    OK, its the greater (cough) St. Louis Metropolitan area. I've lived in cities here that still use power/telephone poles and have spent days with out both. Since I've moved to where I am now, not even a flicker. Ice storms, ridiculously high winds, snow...doesn't affect me.

    I was out walking my dog after a severe thunderstorm (the weather guy had his sleeves rolled up so you know it was severe) and it was weird to see half the town black and my half lit up.

    But that costs lots and lots of $'s. They have to get permissions, pay off landowners and councils, disrupt traffic, rape sheep.

    And even though it has been pointed out before, the U.S. is very, very, very, very large. That's part of the reason unless you live in a very large city that commuter rail lines don't work.

    Except for that one that our government built with help from the Reptilians with Grey technology that moves at hyper speed from Los Angeles to (scary music) Area 51 and then to New York!!

    1. Re:Poles, we don't want no stinking poles! by u38cg · · Score: 1

      Is the sheep raping *strictly* necessary?

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
  45. not even fastest in Japan by MoFoQ · · Score: 1

    There are several different companies in Japan that offer speeds faster than 160Mbit/s.
    One of them is Japan's largest telephone company: NTT (Nippon Telephone and Telegraph).
    (there are several different companies that provides gigabit services and I think another was mentioned before on slashdot).

    Anyways, NTT offers what's called Flets Hikari (Flets "Light" as in fiberoptic).
    Though it is limited in deployment to locations that are properly wired, speeds can be upto 1Gbit/s up and down as well as other versions that offer 622Mbit/s down and 156Mb/s up.
    Mainly, however, they seem to emphasis 1Gbit/s as being their maximum on their own page

    eoNet is another that provides gigabit services (they offer tiers from 100Mbit, 200Mbit, and 1Gbit)

    KDDI, yet another company, announced their intentions of deploying 1Gbit/s speeds WAY back in 2003.

    This is just one of the examples why I'm awry about NYT...they really need to hire a better fact checker.

  46. All this "high speed" stuff by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    just proves that the Japanese can absorb propaganda must faster than Westerners.
    You know, like that old joke says: I know you can't read very fast, so I'm typing real slow...

    --
    What?
  47. Size of Japan vs Size of the US by 8086 · · Score: 1

    The difference between upgrading the network in the US vs in Japan, is the amount of distance one has to lay cables down on. Japan is nearly half the size of Texas, and the density is such that repeaters are seldom needed. In the US, there are great distances to be covered in laying down any lines because the country is so spread out.
    Also, per capita adoption of such an upgrade will be higher in Japan as opposed to the US.
    This doesn't mean the American ISPs aren't lazy/inefficient, but merely points to the fact that the US is literally a different playing field, and so you can't completely bridge that gap between $20 and $717.

  48. Re:Things to remember by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Most of Japan is high rises and stuff whereas America is all suburban

    Not only are you stuck with horribly slow, disgustingly restricted internet service, but you're also completely clueless about the world outside your own street. Take a 3-day trip to Tokyo or shut the fuck up.

  49. Monpolies charge what they feel like. by TimeAddict · · Score: 1

    Thanks to our fascist economy, public monopolies can charge what ever they feel like charging, regardless of how much it actually costs them. Get used to that boot in your face. Broadband service monopolites were given away years ago.

  50. Canada by j1ggy · · Score: 1

    Our cable company here in Canada is currently upgrading for 100mbit connections in the near future. The bandwidth potential on cable in enormous.

  51. Re:anyone remember the federal universal service f by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have no qualms about upgrading their advertizing campaigns. Anyone ever count the number of Comcast spots during the prime time hours? They can't be all that cheap, can they? Still it doesn't make terribly much sense to push that hard when they have what is essentially a captive market. (And the part of the marketshare they don't have already is that which couldn't afford their service anyways.)

    Now imagine if that same money that went into making all those fancy commercials and putting them into prime time spots instead went into upgrading the actual network and rolling out newer cable modems to replace the old ones. Or if not upgrading, how about lowering fees and expanding the potential marketshare?

    The cable industry in the U.S. is a lot like the other big players affecting the economy, its an example of just how blatantly and annoyingly stupid most of the people with executive money and decision making power are.

  52. Americans don't know what a free market is. by MaWeiTao · · Score: 3, Informative

    Having spent time in Asia I've come to find that Americans wouldn't recognize a free market if it bit them on the ass. And yet they rant and rant that capitalism is screwing us. No, improper regulation is. All this regulation has stifled competition and made it exceedingly difficult for anyone new to enter the market and be competitive.

    These issues could be easily addressed, but with the government heading towards even more regulation things are only going to get worse.

  53. And in America.... by the_macman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is why government mandated duopolies by the cable companies are retarded. From TFA:

    Mr. Fries added another: Fear. Other cable operators, he said, are concerned that not only will prices fall, but that the super-fast service will encourage customers to watch video on the Web and drop their cable service.

  54. Well DUH! by BitZtream · · Score: 1

    I don't think the price gap should be as large as it is but ...

    In Japan they have little space so they build up.

    In America we have lots of space so we build out, cause its easier.

    Building out means a lot more digging trenches than building up when laying cable. Wiring 200 homes in Japan means running cable another block down the street. Wiring 200 homes in most of America requires several miles of cabling in a sub division, all the permits for screwing with roads and digging trenches or putting up polls.

    Of course it costs more here to lay cable, its a different way of life. Still, we already paid the teleco's to do this with tax money and they haven't done it.

    --
    Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
  55. Re:Why don't the cable companies upgrade? Monopoly by BitZtream · · Score: 1

    Their internal infrastructure isn't overloaded ANYWHERE. They just don't want to pay the price for bandwidth to the rest of the world to deal with the number of customers they've sold unlimited bandwidth to.

    --
    Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
  56. "The US" is not upgrading anything.... by brunes69 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Rather, Verizon is rolling out FiOS, because it has no other option. VDSL technology over old twisted-pair phone line has peaked, it has no choice but to roll out FiOS if it wants to keep up with cable.

    Your comparison (and the articles) is therefore very foolish. The real question I have is why Comcast is not rolling out DOCSIS 3 - wait, actually I don't have that question, because they are already.

    Man I hate misinformed articles and postings... I am not even an American and I know about this.

    1. Re:"The US" is not upgrading anything.... by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Yes, but they still have the "unwritten" 250GB cap; which will get you booted if you exceed repeatedly.

  57. Unlikely to happen soon... by Bones3D_mac · · Score: 1

    If I had to guess, the problem with broadband in the US has far more to do with politics than technological limitations. No one wants to risk getting labeled as being "soft on piracy" and held liable for facilitating large-scale content piracy simply by offering bandwidth speeds far higher than the nearest competitor provides. If anything, many of these companies may be artificially holding back network speeds until the potential liability costs from litigation become lower than the loss of profits due to poor quality service.

    Unlike most places, the old addage of "Too much of a good thing is bad for you" really means something here in the US.

    --


    8==8 Bones 8==8
  58. Wait.. a ... second.... by managerialslime · · Score: 1

    In Australia you suffer even more so than we do in the western US in that there's LOTS of space between A and B, making any infrastructure cost much higher than Japan where they measure that space in feet or inches.

    Higher than Japan, maybe, but for the majority of Aussies, the math doesn't support their outrageous rates in comparison to the US. Here is my rationale:

    While Australia and Japan have dramatically different geographies, both countries have majority populations that live near major cities. According to Wikipedia, (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australia), 14.7 million of Australia's 21.7 million citizens or 67.8% live in the 10 largest cities. The top five cities alone account for 58.6% of the population. On my visits to Sydney and Melbourne, I did not observe those cities to have infrastructure barriers or distances significantly worse than in the United States.

    So while the cost to wire the rural areas with the highest speed option is cost-prohibitive, the cost to wire 67.8% of the population should not be appreciably greater than the US (at worst!).

    Those Australians who have commented on Slashdot have indicated that they are paying dramatically more than we pay in the US. Unless Australian Slashdotters are largely rural in location, it suggests that there is something deficient in some part of the high-speed business model as it has been implemented in Australia as compared to the US, South Korea, etc.

    [/tact translation on]: Aussies appear to be getting screwed on high speed rates [/tact translation off]

    --
    Live Long and Prosper - Thanks Leonard. You are missed.
    1. Re:Wait.. a ... second.... by KermitJunior · · Score: 1

      Majority of slashdotters... rural... got it.

      --
      There is a Universal Life Value Check it
  59. IT IS NOT USF AT ALL by way2trivial · · Score: 1

    I know all about the 200 billion broadband scandal, and I consider myself scandalized.

    I agree, the telco's fucked the nation in fulfilling those promises.

    but the USF does NOT FIGURE IN TO THAT!

    if you are going to make arguments about how wronged the broadband in this country is, great, I agree with you- and wish it weren't so.

    but just as I'm not going to accept an argument based on it was done by mind controlling unicorns, I'm also not going to accept it was done from USF funds, in both cases- it's just simply not true.

    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
  60. Fastest Consumer Broadband in Japan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Pretty much the fastest consumer broadband in the world is the 160-megabit-per-second service offered by J:Com"

    Actually, the fastest is probably the 1 Gbps (1000-megabit-per-second) service offered by KDDI/AU. Reasonably priced, too. An expensive setup fee (around $300), but then it's about $45 per month.

  61. Speed versus Reach by mahadiga · · Score: 1

    As of today, only 1% of total world population is ONLINE.
    Remaining 99% are connected through Mobile Phones, News Papers and Word of Mouth.
    Let us focus on bringing more people into Internet rather than speed of Internet.

    --
    I'd like to buy homeland for our 10 million people. http://twitter.com/mahadiga
  62. Re:Why don't the cable companies upgrade? Monopoly by Wildclaw · · Score: 1

    they just don't want to pay the price for bandwidth to the rest of the world

    Bandwidth is cheap, very cheap. The only time it gets expensive is when relying on old outdated technology, like the very old T1/T3 technologies or the current last mile US networks. (On a seperate note. I truly cringe every time I see someone using T1s as way to show how expensive bandwidth is. It just shows how far behind the US is, not only in technology, but also mentality)

    When you have a modern fiber network in place, shuffling relativly large amounts of data around is cheap. Not free, but nearly so compared to the costs of these old networks. The cost of Time Warner's laughable top tier at 40GB/month is at most a dollar of data transfer on a modern network. Probably less.

  63. East India Company by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    The King giveth and the King taketh away a limited monopoly to one corporation which in turn pays a large recurring premium for this right. The East-India corporation springs to mind, but the Italians and the French had similar models, back in the 17th century.

    Which one, the Dutch East India Company or the British East India Company? It's good to see someone else on /. knows of the first company(ies) granted corporate charters.

    Falcon

  64. buying a home by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    You buy a home to live in, not to be used as an investment, asshole.

    Actually you, well maybe not you specifically, buy a home to both live in and as an investment.

    Falcon

  65. Bandwidth is cheap, very cheap. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    The only time it gets expensive is when relying on old outdated technology, like the very old T1/T3 technologies

    From what I've been told, while newer technologies can deliver faster speeds the speed is not guaranteed but it is guaranteed with T1s.

    Falcon

  66. Japan good, US suck; middle-lands in Nether. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Japan makes seems to make good use of technology. They have nearly half the world's robots and lead the way in robotic tech. Truly, closest to scifi fantasy of robotic automation aiding society, though social cost has been HIGH getting there but they may have robots to take care of them in old-age, vs. spiraling health-care costs in US because we expand health-care services by adding people instead of intelligence and tech. So we have nursing homes...etc. Progress is much slower here.

    Japan seems to be doing very well in techa/mecha. Social cost has been high but they had social discipline to trade for it. Most in US wouldn't make the same exchange. Most societies don't have discipline for their progress as we value 'freedom'. Freedom to fight, kill, but also become best warrior nation in world, er, I mean, best military...um...best... well we do a good job of making large segments of population stupid enough to believe in fairy-tail creationism, which shows our superior brainwashing tech and freedom of religion benefit.

    Japan did have great benefit of US helping to rebuild them after we blew them to hell for bombing us. Though that was really our benefit too -- good thing only our previous and older battle ships were harbor at pearl harbor and all of our newer models happened to be out on exercises... Now pres gets excuse to rebuild pearl and great weapons budget as we go into mop the floor at end of WWII -- cost Europe major bucks, but US gets major "good vibes" for lending the final (and, importantly, the deciding factor of victory).

    Europe has long road to build back. US has highly rev'ed up war and manufacturing machine, Germany gets aid and quickly builds back economic position in Europe, Japan gets aid and out tech's US. Japan always wanted more isolation than other countries. After war and refunding them, they've gone back to isolation, but exporting their tech to fund their tech expansion. US puts their excess money in war machines, building up cold war arms cost same as entire output of 19th century world. The "sink" for all US war money bankrupts USSR (who foolishly took up opposite side against US-war machine)...big waste of money (US wouldn't have attacked them, I'm fairly sure).

    So US doesn't jump ahead w/tech (focused on war), Europe recovers from war, not as much excess spending to tech.
    70's energy crunch one hurts world economy. 80's US jumps ahead using its position to funnel trillions of $$ into economy starting w/Reagan, slowing in Bush-I, reversing under Clinton (at loss of social-net of welfare), then jumps ahead again under Bush as he triples (quadruples?) previous debt. Obama gets in and will try to repair damage before right-wing loonie assassinates him (not a foregone conclusion, just a logically predicted 'risk').

    Meanwhile. Widespread democracy of uneducated-masses (helped by sticking to non-standard English system -- increasing residents intellectual isolation) makes US (and world) vulnerable to freako's steering country via fear. How close was US to having Palin (an Ozark-hick mom living in AK...her relatives arrested for various crimes, her kids barefoot and pregnant in high school, and the ex-son-in-law on national TV..."reality TV" hosted by Appalachian-Heroin druggy, Rush Limbaugh -- biggest hick audience and voting block in US) as prez... There's the big threat to world peas.
    All money spent on war, insufficient tech to solve problems making peas for world poor, recipe for chaos and war. Is there a way out? -eoln-

    Oh--yeah,
    Netherlands:
    Why they aren't at Japan's level. Besides not getting bailed out by US in 50's, Netherlands has more value on human individual, and has to deal with more geographic challenges, so not as much extra $$ for tech advance, and a bit less willingness to live as conformingly as may have been required in Japan (where today's children see Western culture and are exploding(suicide, rebellion) more, and parents worked too hard to maintain even a 'flat' population count (insuff. sex). result

  67. Capitalism does not like innovation. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    They will probably provide 50Mbit service also. They will charge $300 for 50Mbit.

    That is not capitalism, that is corporatism and a monopoly. Under capitalism Comcast would have competition.

    Falcon

  68. Re:Crazy -Making the Same Error Repeatedly ... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
    "In the States (aka U.S. of A), tax payer money has been thrown at industries with neither oversight nor review of the lessons learned. For example, American [U.S.] industry"

    You don't need all the special emphasis, if you say America, or The States....we all know you are talking about the United States of America.

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  69. Re:Why don't the cable companies upgrade? Monopoly by Cramer · · Score: 1

    The problem with T1s are the regulations. Tariffs dictate the price -- which is hundreds of times higher than it actually costs to deliver today. We pay ~500$ per month for a T1 (voice and data), but the "last mile" is a 300ft run -- all inside the building -- from an optical shelf to our phone room. (the same shelf feeds us a DS3, 'tho I don't see the bills for that one.)

    (BTW, it's VDSL for that 300ft.)

  70. capitalism by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    OK, that explains why you define Capitalism as Free-Market Capitalism only.

    No, I use capitalism as a voluntary exchange. A free market is included in that though. I am a member of 2 coops, and I include that as well.

    You are into Mises/Austrian "economics."

    Actually I don't know that I am, I don't know much more about it than what I posted earlier.

    The Theory of Moral Sentiments is classic. Smith was a great empirical philosopher.

    Another author I should have included as recommended reading is Thomas Paine, especially his "Common Sense" and "Rights of Man". I'd also include the book "Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution".

    Falcon

    1. Re:capitalism by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1

      No, I use capitalism as a voluntary exchange. A free market is included in that though. I am a member of 2 coops, and I include that as well.

      That doesn't leave much room for Market Socialism. Your definition would seriously disappoint market socialists like Sam Bowles or Ben Tucker. Neither of them would be very happy about being called a capitalist.

      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
  71. KDDI? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't KDDI and their Hikari-One service offering gigabit fiber to houses and anybody in 3 story or less apartments now in Japan?

    Though odds are they'll pull some stunt like gigabit media connection, but with a bandwidth block allocated to their streaming VoD/VoIP services, then make you share the fiber with between you and your closest 63 neighbors.

    My 100Mbit fiber is like that, but at least I only share with 31 people (15 if I pay more).

  72. That doesn't leave much room for Market Socialism. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    I am not a socialist, not even a market socialist, whatever that is. I believe in free trade, private (real) property, and voluntary exchanges. I put real in parentheses because I oppose imaginary Intellectual Property, IP, like patents. They may of been useful at one tyme but now they hinder progress.

    Your definition would seriously disappoint market socialists like Sam Bowles or Ben Tucker.

    I don't know who either one is, I don't recall ever hearing of either one, so I don't care.

    Falcon

  73. Re:That doesn't leave much room for Market Sociali by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1

    I am not a socialist, not even a market socialist, whatever that is. I believe in free trade, private (real) property, and voluntary exchanges. I put real in parentheses because I oppose imaginary Intellectual Property, IP, like patents. They may of been useful at one tyme but now they hinder progress.

    Your definition would seriously disappoint market socialists like Sam Bowles or Ben Tucker.

    I don't know who either one is, I don't recall ever hearing of either one, so I don't care.

    Falcon

    I think Market Socialism is pretty self explanatory. It is a system of free markets and public ownership. Because, you know, Socialism and Capitalism are not market models in and of themselves. Sam Bowles is a famous American economist. Benjamin Tucker was America's foremost Individualist Anarchist. He founded and edited the journal Liberty. He was a 19th/20th century market socialist who argued passionately against private property, which he called the land monopoly, and for free markets. Many American Libertarians worship him, presumably because they don't understand his beliefs fully.

    But why should you care about anyone you haven't heard of? They couldn't have been important.

    Oh also, anyone who reads Paine should also read Mary Wollstonecraft.

    --
    It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

    -James Baldwin
  74. Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is exactly what's happening in the Netherlands right now; the second largest cable company (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UPC_Broadband) is delivering subscriptions of 60Mbps for â 60,50 a month, or 120mpbs for â 80,50. Meanwhile, the largest cable company is in the process of swapping their old modems for DOCSIS 3 modems, because they too will be raising the speeds of their existing subscriptions to over 50mbps.
    Interestingly, the Dutch situation also shows both sides of the argument: on the one hand, Holland is one of the more densely populated countries in the world, which seems to support the theory that it's easier/cheaper to deliver high speeds to more closely placed residencies, on the other hand, there have been small regions which have been supplied with glass fiber connections way before the cable companies caught up. But those regions are those which have the smallest amount of residencies per square kilometer, because of the obviously lower cost of laying the fiber cables when there's less stuff in the way. I'd say the population factor is a factor indeed, just not the only one, I gather not even the key one.

    1. Re:Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meh this forum doesn't accept euro signs? Well obviously, those are supposed to be where the Ã's are. Also, I forgot to mention the wiki page of the largest cable company, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ziggo

  75. Re:That doesn't leave much room for Market Sociali by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    I think Market Socialism is pretty self explanatory. It is a system of free markets and public ownership

    A free market is a two way street not one way. If I can't own my own business it's not a free market.

    Benjamin Tucker was America's foremost Individualist Anarchist. He founded and edited the journal Liberty.

    Let me check that... My copies don't list him but wiki says he published it.

    Many American Libertarians worship him, presumably because they don't understand his beliefs fully.

    I read "Liberty" semi-regularly, and subscribe to "Reason" magazine, and don't recall reading about him before.

    But why should you care about anyone you haven't heard of? They couldn't have been important.

    Perhaps I phrased it wrong. I hadn't heard of them before and didn't know if they were important.

    Oh also, anyone who reads Paine should also read Mary Wollstonecraft.

    The name looks familiar but I don't really recall why. According to your link she supported woman's rights in the late 1700s. That's two people I know of that did back then, Thomas Jefferson also supported equal rights for women and Blacks. In his early drafts of the "Declaration of Independence" he included both as enjoying rights also. However others had to sign it and they opposed this.

    Falcon

  76. Re:That doesn't leave much room for Market Sociali by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1

    A free market is a two way street not one way. If I can't own my own business it's not a free market.

    Control is not ownership. According to Tucker, if the state grants you a monopoly on capital (by enforcing property rights), even if you don't contribute to product, the market can't be free. In other words, If you don't farm your land yourself, you shouldn't exercise any rights over it. He opposed rents and interest. Markets were Tucker's thing. He hated capitalism, but often said it was preferable to State Socialism, because it at least allowed for SOME choice.

    Let me check that... My copies don't list him but wiki says he published it.

    Maybe Lysander Spooner founded it and he took it over. I don't remember. They were practically the same person. Best friends.

    I read "Liberty" semi-regularly, and subscribe to "Reason" magazine, and don't recall reading about him before.

    Well, he was a big influence on Murray Rothbard. I don't really get why, except that Rothbard was intent on appropriating the term Anarchism from the Socialists. I guess he thought it sounded cooler than Libertarian.

    Perhaps I phrased it wrong. I hadn't heard of them before and didn't know if they were important.

    The name looks familiar but I don't really recall why. According to your link she supported woman's rights in the late 1700s. That's two people I know of that did back then, Thomas Jefferson also supported equal rights for women and Blacks. In his early drafts of the "Declaration of Independence" he included both as enjoying rights also. However others had to sign it and they opposed this.

    Jefferson was a flaming hypocrite. His support for black and women's civil right extended as far as his conversation. He literally kept an underage black sex slave. I don't think holding black women in bondage and repeatedly raping them shows much support for their civil rights. Perhaps you are confusing him with John Adams, whose deeds more closely matched his rhetoric. Adams and his equal partner/wife Abigail actively supported black causes and opposed slavery in deed as well as word. Their son John Quincy was an even more active civil rights advocate.

    That said, another influential 18th century feminist was Mme. Olympe de Gouge. If you are interested in such things, read her.

    Mary Wollstonecraft was married to the first Anarchist philosopher, William Godwin. Their daughter was Mary Shelley.

    --
    It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

    -James Baldwin
  77. Benjamin Tucker by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Well, he was a big influence on Murray Rothbard.

    Well, both "Liberty" and "Reason" have some words about Murray Rothbard. But usually in reference to Ayn Rand.

    I don't really get why, except that Rothbard was intent on appropriating the term Anarchism from the Socialists. I guess he thought it sounded cooler than Libertarian.

    Ump, using Anarchism for Socialism? As I learned them anarchism is the absence of government, unlike libertarians which advocates small and limited government, and socialism is the government owns the means of production. A person could own their own home but not their own business. Actually under Tito's Yugoslavia a person could run their own business but the government owned part of it.

    Jefferson was a flaming hypocrite. His support for black and women's civil right extended as far as his conversation. He literally kept an underage black sex slave.

    Not really, not everyone is able to live up to their ideology. Yes he owned slaves but he never bought or sold any. All the slaves he owned he inherited from his father and father-in-law. He did however free some slaves, including Sally Hemming's children. In his will he left instructions to make sure Sally was taken care of. He wanted to free all of the slaves, but I believe he made a mistake because he thought he couldn't afford to free them all. He thought it would cost too much. For the slaves too, afterall they had food and a roof. However thinking about it it should be cheaper to employ freemen than to own slaves. Slaves cost more, there's the cost of a blacksmith and chains as well as guards to prevent them from running away. Economists studying the period before the Civil War concluded slavery would have ended without the war, though it may of taken longer.

    Oh, BTW TJ once said he thought farmers should grow hemp, AKA marijuana.

    Fslcon

    1. Re:Benjamin Tucker by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1

      Ump, using Anarchism for Socialism? As I learned them anarchism is the absence of government, unlike libertarians which advocates small and limited government, and socialism is the government owns the means of production. A person could own their own home but not their own business. Actually under Tito's [wikipedia.org] Yugoslavia a person could run their own business but the government owned part of it.

      Well, you learned the first one right. However what you describe as Socialism is actually State Socialism. Socialism is defined by public ownership of the means of production, not specifically government ownership. The reason why libertarians need government is to enforce private property rights. Anarchists don't believe in private property, so there is no need for government. In much of 19th century Europe Anarchism was called Libertarian-Socialism. All the anarchist philosophers, Proudhon ("property is theft"), Bakunin, Kropotkin etc., were avowed socialists.

      In discussing Yugoslavia you remind me of a real world market socialist scenario. In the 1980s the Chinese government started to liberalize agriculture by allowing farmers to sell a portion of their product in open markets with less regulated pricing. The government still owned all the land. The farmers essentially rented from them for a portion of their product and sold the rest for themselves. I don't keep up with China, so I have no idea where this went in the interim. And my memory is that the markets weren't all that free, but there is no reason they couldn't be. That was an administrative decision on the CCP's part.

      As for Jefferson, that is quite a justification.

      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
  78. economic systems by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    The reason why libertarians need government is to enforce private property rights. Anarchists don't believe in private property, so there is no need for government.

    Another function of government for libertarians is defense. Myself I do believe in property rights but I don't believe a person should be able to do whatever they want with their property. If something they do harms another they shouldn't be able to do it.

    In discussing Yugoslavia you remind me of a real world market socialist scenario. In the 1980s the Chinese government started to liberalize agriculture by allowing farmers to sell a portion of their product in open markets with less regulated pricing. The government still owned all the land. The farmers essentially rented from them for a portion of their product and sold the rest for themselves.

    Yea, I heard that before. The people who were able to grow their own gardens actually produced more food than what was grown on collective farms.

    I don't keep up with China, so I have no idea where this went in the interim.

    It's still something like that today, at least in some parts of the economy. For instance developer/builders who build housing don't own the land instead the land is leased for 99 years I believe. The cities where factories are built own the land as well. Or the regional or national government may.

    Falcon