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A Layman's Guide To Bandwidth Pricing

narramissic links to IT World's A Layman's Guide to Bandwidth Pricing, writing "Time Warner Cable has, for now, abandoned the tiered pricing trials that raised the ire of Congressman Eric Massa, among others. And, as some nice data points in a New York Times article reveal, it's good for us that they did. For instance, Comcast says it costs them $6.85 per home to double the internet capacity of a neighborhood. But the bit of the Times article that we should commit to memory is this: 'If all Time Warner customers decided one day not to check their e-mail or download a single movie, the company's costs would be no different than on a day when every customer was glued to the screen watching one YouTube video after another.'"

203 comments

  1. NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by xmas2003 · · Score: 5, Informative
    While it is true that most costs are fixed and therefore the costs are no different if every customers takes an Internet break one day, one has to plan to for peak capacity ... or something like a 95% threshold. No different than other utilities such as electricity, plumbing, etc.

    So the reverse is also true - if every customer decided to say, watch grass grow one day, the costs are also the same!

    This is exactly why Tony Werner, Comcast chief technical officer said they engineer for the peak hour. Having said that, it would be nice to get 160mbps for $60/month (as in Japan) ... although I always find it disappointing that almost all of these stories focus on the download speeds and ignore the upload speeds which are at least of interest to folks such as /. readers.

    --
    Hulk SMASH Celiac Disease
    1. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by DomNF15 · · Score: 5, Informative

      It is actually different from other utilities - the electric company doesn't cap how much electricity you use, neither does the water company, you can use as much as you want, or rather, as much as can flow through given the physical limitations of your electric wires/breakers and plumbing pipes. Your bandwidth, on the other hand, is capped, and is well below the theoretical limits of the coax or fiber optic medium it travels through. When Time Warner etc. design their systems, they do so with these caps in mind. So they only reason they would need to add capacity (spend money) would be to add more users (make more money).

    2. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, upload is a niche market (though I admit, I'd love to be able to get at least a megabit...Even half a megabit would be nice).

      I think the whole lesson to be learned from TFA can be summed up with the following quote: "Why (is the 160mbit commection offered) so cheap? JCom faces more competition from other Internet providers than companies in the United States do."

      We talk a good line about capitalism, but we don't walk the walk. Competition would change the whole game.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    3. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by pnuema · · Score: 1

      So how is there a "coming bandwidth shortage"? The only way there is a bandwidth shortage is if 1. They have oversold their networks (not my problem), or 2. Have shitty engineers (also not my problem). Why should I pay more for their mistakes?

    4. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 4, Interesting

      While it is true that most costs are fixed and therefore the costs are no different if every customers takes an Internet break one day, one has to plan to for peak capacity ... or something like a 95% threshold. No different than other utilities such as electricity, plumbing, etc.

      Exactly. This is what's so brain-dead about the argument that bandwidth is free - it's only free once you've built out infrastructure to handle capacity, but something has to pay for that. This is common, as you point out, to any industry in which one-time costs dominate per-unit costs.

      I compare it to the pharmaceutical industry - pills cost, say, $0.05 to make. Why do they cost a great deal more on the market? Because you have to price in the cost of research and development.

      I think the fairest thing is to do what many cell phone plans do; namely, metered or capped usage during peak hours, and free access off-peak. If a user is savvy enough to schedule iso downloads or watch video off-peak, it shouldn't cost him much since that traffic truly is nearly free.

    5. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by xmas2003 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      We might be disagreeing on semantics, but at least for my water bill, we have tiered pricing as I live in the Western US.

      I.e. if I use 10,000 gallons of water (ballpark numbers), I get charged a base rate per thousand gallons. However, for each thousand gallons above that, I'm charged 2x that base rate. And then for each thousand gallons above 50,000 gallons, I'm charged 5x the base rate.

      And yes, this is a "monthly load" rather than an instantaneous load ... but I think somewhat similar to tier'ed ala-carte pricing that the bandwidth providers would like to do ... so seems like a reasonable analogy (?)

      --
      Hulk SMASH Celiac Disease
    6. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by phantomfive · · Score: 2, Informative
      Here is the quote that gets me:

      Cable systems in the United States use the same technology and have roughly the same costs. Comcast told investors that the hardware to provide 50-megabits-per-second service costs less than it had been paying for the equipment for 6 megabits per second.

      They are wining that they aren't making enough, even though upgrading the equipment is cheaper? Something's not right here....

      Oh, yeah. Here it is:

      By contrast, JCom, the largest cable company in Japan, sells service as fast as 160 megabits per second for $60 a month, only $5 a month more than its slower service. Why so cheap? JCom faces more competition from other Internet providers than companies in the United States do.

      Competition. They have a monopoly, so if they can push it, why not? I can see dollar signs in their hair. I'm not going to say lots of regulation is the key here, but how about forcing them to let competitors use their networks? Competition is good for the consumer.

      --
      Qxe4
    7. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by RoFLKOPTr · · Score: 1

      This is exactly why Tony Werner, Comcast chief technical officer

      Did anybody else read the bolded part as "Time Warner, Comcast"?

    8. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Informative

      I don't think there is anything wrong with the idea on principle, however TWC was clearly trying to restructure their internet market to protect their cable tv business. A dollar a gig is laughable.

      Any sort of tiered pricing would have to accurately reflect cost and network usage...Being charged the same for peak and non-peak is ridiculous, as we've already established that all their costs are about meeting the peak.

      Geeks being geeks, off peak usage is where the bulk of our traffic will already end up...Mom and pop will be in bed at 9:00 when the raids and the massive porn downloads begin.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    9. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by mcrbids · · Score: 5, Informative

      Except that power companies charge by the unit. So do water companies. This is fine, because it costs money to create a KwH, and the price of delivering more KwHs rises as more KwHs are delivered, as it costs real energy and money to pump water.

      Internet is flat-rate, and should be, IMHO because it represents nothing real. Although it costs something to provide infrastructure for more demand, once that infrastructure is created, the cost of delivery is very near zero.

      Here's an experiment, in case this isn't absolutely clear:

      1) Buy/borrow a 2 Kilowatt gas generator. Start it up, and run it for 1 hour with no load. Note how much gasoline it burns. This represents the energy used to overcome internal friction. Then run it for 1 hour with a 1,500 watt blow-dryer running continuously. Note how much gasoline it burns. You'll be surprised at the difference in fuel consumption!

      2) Get a Gb switching hub, 2 computers, and an amp-meter. Plug the computers into the wall, plug the switch into the amp meter. Note the power usage of the switch with no load. Then set up a load where you are using 1 Mbps of traffic between the two computers, and note the Amp load. Then try 10 Mbsp, 100 Mbps, and 1000 Mbps. You'll notice that the amperage (for most switching hubs) climbs very little as you do so, and that the total power consumption is insignificant.

      * * *

      So bandwidth usage represents nothing "real". There isn't a significant energy or material consumption per bandwidth unit. After the cost of infrastructure, and a small fixed cost for powering the equipment, the cost of delivering 1000 Mbps is only marginally higher than the near-zero cost of 1 Mbps. There *is* an infrastructure cost that needs to be amortized over the life of the connection, and this represents the vast majority of the true cost of bandwidth.

      It's just idiotic that the Nation responsible for building the Internets in the first place is so far behind other industrialized nations for using it!

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    10. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by thpr · · Score: 1
      It is actually different from other utilities - the electric company doesn't cap how much electricity you use...

      Citation needed. I say that because I believe they DO limit how much electricity you use. Here's the proof: I'm on a residential rate, E01, to be exact. I can't exceed 5kW load under that rate, nor can I exceed 7600kWh per month consecutively while remaining on that rate.

    11. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by moderatorrater · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Read further into the article. The companies tell their shareholders that they're paying the same amount for the newest, fastest equipment that provides 50megabit connections as they did for the equipment for 6 megabit, but they're charging a couple times more for it than they've charged for their highest internet in the last 5 years. Their profit margins are solid but the amount they invest in the networks is falling. This at a time when youtube is drawing more and more bandwidth and sites like Hulu are becoming more popular. It's a pretty solid case of the ISPs milking their monopolies for all they're worth.

    12. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by umghhh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      all these analogies are flawed which can be seen if you think for a while what you purchase and how it is delivered. In some countries in EU it is much easier because to deregulate the utilities market authorities require the producers and the grid owners to be different entities and the price at the end consist in principle of two parts: grid usage fee and pay per unit of delievered utility.
      There is of course another aspect of this - utilities are common goods i.e. things that we all need. If there is no difference whether you use little or a lot people have no motivation for being reasonable and some are not. If the bandwith limitation that is caused by extreme usage by some causes then deterioration of service for everybody else then it is only reasonable to introduce progressive fees. They do not have to be drastic but I think they can have few thresholds. When the users are informed and the limits are set properly this should not be such a big deal me thinks.

    13. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Insightful

      While it is true that the equipment doesn't cost more to use than not use, that doesn't mean bandwidth is cost free. There are plenty of costs involved in maintaining high bandwidth lines.

      Now as it applies to consumer connections the problem is one of oversubscription. The reason they can offer you bandwidth for less is that they oversubscribe their lines. That is to say if they have a 10mbps uplink, maybe they sell 100mbps of bandwidth downstream. This works well, so long as everyone isn't trying to use their connection full blast all the time.

      It is the same theory you see in a LAN. For example at work here we have gigabit switches to our desktop machines. However, those gig switches are only connected with a gig back to the distribution switches. There are about 20 ports in the room I'm in (we are computer support so lots of computers) but only 1 gig connection out. Likewise, the distribution switches are oversubscribed. Most of them are 48 port Ciscos, nearly full, and they only have 1 gig back to the core. That then in turn only has 1 gig to the firewall, and 2 gigs to the NetApp. However, despite all this oversubscription it is very fast. It is rare for a person to use their whole connection period, and then not for long. We can all share those links without a big problem.

      However, that would break down if someone wanted to use their whole connection all the time. If someone was doing a solid gig to the NetApp without letting up, well I'd be going up and having a chat with them real fast. It would screw over everyone else.

      Same deal with ISPs. They can afford to cheaply sell you a cable line with 10-15mbps. However they don't have dedicated bandwidth for that upstream. It is oversubscribed at a number of levels, just as with our LAN. So if you use it periodically, and leave it low/idle the rest of the time, it works out fine. However if you try to torrent on it 24/7 to 100% capacity, it is a problem.

    14. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anachragnome · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Competition would change the whole game."

      Provided the ISPs are not in collusion in an attempt to manipulate market value.

      http://www.comscore.com/press/release.asp?press=385

      From the article:
      "By contrast, only 4 percent of those with the fastest connections, over 1 Mbps, report they plan to switch providers."

      The ISPs know this, and ALL bank on this fact when considering price hikes.

      We (those with fast cable connections) are the least likely, and least ABLE, to upgrade out of higher pricing schemes.

    15. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by LotsOfPhil · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      It's just idiotic that the Nation responsible for building the Internets in the first place is so far behind other industrialized nations for using it!

      America also invented the automobile.

      --
      This post climbed Mt. Washington.
    16. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by CleverDan · · Score: 1

      One could argue the aim of capitalism would be the maximization of wealth, not to maximize competition. The best way to maximize wealth is to control the market -- become a monopoly. It seems we walk the talk just fine.

    17. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      If they engineered for peak hour they wouldn't have capacity problems. Let's not spin things creatively.

      Meanwhile, the backbone they use for HDTV is not even having real capacity problems but hey guess what they did! They gave you a free downgrade on the bandwidth for their HD channels!

      What a value.

    18. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      upload is the true key in many online apps, i.e I connect to to my home remotely to view cameras, or slingbox, or manage PC's or to connect to my alarm system all use upload. There are half as much applications for upload today as for download, but only a fraction of the speed is given to upload.

    19. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Propaganda13 · · Score: 1

      I also believe that the water company has a charge based on the size of pipe. Water base and sewer base charge. I'm pretty sure there's an analogy there.

    20. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by FlyingBishop · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Not really. Water is a fixed commodity. Though there is a lot of it, there is not an infinite supply, and it is therefore subtractive. If you use 10,000 gallons of water, it inherently prevents anyone else from using that 10,000 gallons of water, and it is irrelevant when you use them.

      In the case of computers, it is entirely possible to use an amount of data in excess of what everyone else is using, and yet still not deprive anyone of their bandwidth, by using it when no one else is using it.

      They need to stop dicking around and use the sort of pricing structure that has worked excellently in the cellphone industry, where you pay by the minute during peak times (whenever that may be) and you do not pay a dime during non-peak times. I'd be happy to pay by the gigabyte during peak hours, and have an unlimited reserve otherwise.

    21. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Wrath0fb0b · · Score: 5, Insightful

      2) Get a Gb switching hub, 2 computers, and an amp-meter. Plug the computers into the wall, plug the switch into the amp meter. Note the power usage of the switch with no load. Then set up a load where you are using 1 Mbps of traffic between the two computers, and note the Amp load. Then try 10 Mbsp, 100 Mbps, and 1000 Mbps. You'll notice that the amperage (for most switching hubs) climbs very little as you do so, and that the total power consumption is insignificant.

      That's great, you've created an intranet and demonstrated it's pricing. Now, of course, try to get a peering agreement with a tier-1 ISP so that your bits can travel to and from the internet at large. Try one month at 10 Mbps and another at 1000 Mbps and see if your bill changes.

    22. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That's where monopoly busting laws come in. That's what they were designed for...To keep capitalism from eating itself.

      Anyway, most people can't switch providers right now, since they're locked in with local monopolies, or they don't want to buy new equipment to switch between DSL and Cable...Give them more than one option where they don't have to switch their hardware, and that number will go WAY up.

      Personally I am a proud member of the 4%. I am the anti-customer: I switch every 3 months without fail. When the other company calls and offers me a sweet introductory deal I take it, and then 3 months later, I take the next one.

      It's to the point where I leave all the hardware plugged in, and just switch "live" interfaces on my firewall...AT&T fucks with me, goodbye eth1, hello eth2. Cox fucks with me, goodbye eth2, hello eth1. What's wrong with that picture? I'm like a woman with two abusive husbands! I hate this shit!

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    23. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by noidentity · · Score: 1

      1) Buy/borrow a 2 Kilowatt gas generator. Start it up, and run it for 1 hour with no load. Note how much gasoline it burns. This represents the energy used to overcome internal friction. Then run it for 1 hour with a 1,500 watt blow-dryer running continuously. Note how much gasoline it burns. You'll be surprised at the difference in fuel consumption!

      2) Get a Gb switching hub, 2 computers, and an amp-meter. Plug the computers into the wall, plug the switch into the amp meter. Note the power usage of the switch with no load. Then set up a load where you are using 1 Mbps of traffic between the two computers, and note the Amp load. Then try 10 Mbsp, 100 Mbps, and 1000 Mbps. You'll notice that the amperage (for most switching hubs) climbs very little as you do so, and that the total power consumption is insignificant.

      3) Buy ten 2 KW gas generators and sell power in your neighborhood. Run them for an hour with customers drawing power. Note how all your customers have power. Now start selling power to twice as many people in your neighborhood. Note how many customers were without power, due to insufficient supply. Buy ten more generators, and note how all your customers are now powered.

      Up until saturation, the networking equipment uses (virtually) the same amount of power as when idle, but over that, you need to buy more equipment, which increases power (and maintenance) costs per transferred byte.

    24. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Jurily · · Score: 1

      And yes, this is a "monthly load" rather than an instantaneous load ... but I think somewhat similar to tier'ed ala-carte pricing that the bandwidth providers would like to do ... so seems like a reasonable analogy (?)

      Except if you're proud of being the most advanced Water Technology country in the world, and then get to realize, in Japan everyone has their own Mississipi-sized river now.

    25. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      This is what's so brain-dead about the argument that bandwidth is free - it's only free once you've built out infrastructure to handle capacity, but something has to pay for that. This is common, as you point out, to any industry in which one-time costs dominate per-unit costs.

      BW is free on the margin and not free in aggregate. This means that the value is in getting a connection - incremental usage is a very shaky cost structure.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    26. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by nabsltd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Try one month at 10 Mbps and another at 1000 Mbps and see if your bill changes.

      So, you're saying that Comcast (or other ISPs) change their connection speed to the rest of the Internet on a monthly basis?

      No, of course they don't. They know they need ###Mbps at times, so they pay for that much all the time, and they don't get any price reduction for not using all the available bandwidth.

      This is why it shouldn't matter how much bandwidth end users use...the cost for the ISP is the same regardless. What ISPs should be encouraging is the reduction of peak usage, not total usage. This will allow the ISP to pay for less bandwidth on a long-term basis. And, if done correctly, it won't limit any of their customers in any way that reduces the usefulness of their connection.

    27. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Beyond+Opinion · · Score: 1

      That's true, the size of the pipe leading from water main to house does affect the price, at least where I live. Basically there is a monthly fee just to be connected, then a charge based on the amount you use. The bigger your pipe, the higher the base charge. Someone else will have to make the analogy. . . .

    28. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by PitaBred · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's why a flat-rate fee makes sense, though. There are costs for maintenance, but not incremental costs. More data doesn't cost them anything more. So a flat fee to give them a profit and provide for maintenance and upgrades. Any capping or per-unit pricing is simply a cash grab by a monopoly.

    29. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by moderatorrater · · Score: 2, Funny

      Internet is flat-rate, and should be, IMHO because it represents nothing real

      Reminds me of the joke that the power company, with it's alternating current, is taking advantage of us by charging for the same electrons over and over.

    30. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are plenty of costs involved in maintaining high bandwidth lines.

      And you're implying that there are not similar costs involved in maintaining high-voltage lines?

    31. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by nabsltd · · Score: 0, Troll

      I compare it to the pharmaceutical industry - pills cost, say, $0.05 to make. Why do they cost a great deal more on the market? Because you have to price in the cost of advertising.

      Fixed that for you.

      The average pharmaceutical company spends 5 times the money on advertising that they spend on R&D.

    32. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by cibyr · · Score: 1

      A dollar a gig is laughable.

      My uni charges us $10/GB. :(

      But staff accounts have unlimited quota :)

      --
      It's not exactly rocket surgery.
    33. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Pills actually can be quite complex and expensive to make. The chemical components are often hard to synthesize or isolate, and can take many different processes to get to the desired product. If that weren't the case, aged brandy would cost as much as water. I mean, they're both liquids, right?

    34. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by thpr · · Score: 1

      My water company is the town government, so the bill is sparse in the amount of detail it provides. My sewer charges are based on the number of gallons of water used. The sewer capital charge when building a home is based on the legal number of bedrooms (rooms with closets) in the home (I know this because I have a "study" that I didn't turn into a bedroom :) )... not sure what the capital charges on the water side of things is based on.

    35. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by maxrate · · Score: 1

      You're forgetting that there is something called 'transport' that needs to be paid for. An ISP is much more complicated then 'switching fabric'

    36. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by blackest_k · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It really does depend on how big a consumer of electricity you are, domestic supplies are rather small and insignificant. Industrial Electricity demands can be huge and quite often there are agreements about how much can be used and agreed low use times. it's a trade off better pricing by agreeing to cooperate with the electricity companies.

      Electric companies do offer some incentives for domestic customers e.g Economy 7 in the UK offers cheap electricity in the night and a slightly higher than standard rate for during the day and evening. If you can adjust your usage to take advantage of this scheme you can make quite significant savings.

      Virgin a cable provider seems to get this idea, and limits bandwidth over a certain amount (based on package) during peak times, knowing you can get faster rates after midnight, users can modify their downloading habits to suit.

    37. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Araxen · · Score: 5, Informative

      Wrong...Karl Benz from Germany invented the Automobile.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automobile

      "Although several other German engineers (including Gottlieb Daimler, Wilhelm Maybach, and Siegfried Marcus) were working on the problem at about the same time, Karl Benz generally is acknowledged as the inventor of the modern automobile."

    38. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by hitmark · · Score: 1

      another issue is that while electricity and water has a max supply (that is, you cant use more water then available in storage, and if you do there is nothing left for others on the same source. and when a power plant is maxed out, its maxed out, and it needs to be fuled by something that can run out, even when it comes to something like hydroelectric), data do not really have that.

      but youtube can feed anyone as much data they want, as long as youtube has the outbound bandwidth and server capacity needed.

      the best way to envision it is a video rental with unlimited videos, but with the roads and doors leading to it being narrow and/or metered.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    39. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      I compare it to the pharmaceutical industry - pills cost, say, $0.05 to make. Why do they cost a great deal more on the market? Because you have to price in the cost of research and development.

      Right! because pharmaceutical companies never charge far more than the research costs and milk rich charities for all they have?

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    40. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by peragrin · · Score: 1

      yea but you should know that doubling your customers doubles your requirements.

      ISP oversell their service by a couple orders of magnitude a they think email and web pages are the end of the internet. things like youtube, and VOIP are sucking down as much bandwidth as bittorent but that little bit of information is missing.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    41. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by IcyNeko · · Score: 1

      The restaurant analogy only works if it's an all-you-can-eat buffet. Only idiots pay for the buffet with small amount of items but charges large amounts of money. And only bigger idiots listen to the obese manager who comes out and yells at the customer who eats all the steak.

    42. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by wolrahnaes · · Score: 1

      That's great, you've created an intranet and demonstrated it's pricing. Now, of course, try to get a peering agreement with a tier-1 ISP so that your bits can travel to and from the internet at large. Try one month at 10 Mbps and another at 1000 Mbps and see if your bill changes.

      Bad example, since unlike when I get an internet connection from Time Warner Cable and their ilk, if I get a 10 megabit connection from a tier 1 it comes with the expectation that I can use it to rated capacity 100% of the time and if it is underperforming/down I will be able to get credits.

      Time Warner Cable gives me none of these expectations. All quoted bandwidth numbers are best case, if it's down sucks to be me, and if they had their way I could not even max it out for a week.

      The model I've encountered most when shopping for dedicated servers/colo hosting is what I think is the most fair. I get the choice of an unmetered pipe with a bandwidth limit or a fat pipe with a quota. Either way the total amount of data I can move in a given month is roughly equal and I get to choose what fits my needs better.

      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    43. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      America invented the mass-produced car. (Hail to His Fordship?)

    44. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by kestasjk · · Score: 1

      Internet is flat-rate, and should be, IMHO because it represents nothing real. Although it costs something to provide infrastructure for more demand, once that infrastructure is created, the cost of delivery is very near zero.

      I'm not sure, you could say the same for non-fossil-fuel electricity. The cost of nuclear, wind, solar, hydro power is mostly in construction (and decommissioning) costs. Power-grid to internet comparisons are valid.

      Right now I'm just about out of bandwidth for the month. For a few days now, and for the next few days, I've had to cut down on what I download to avoid getting scaled back to unusable dial-up speeds. There is no option to buy more bandwidth to see me through to the next month. That is insane!
      Imagine if once you passed over 1000 kWh of electricity / made 100 phone calls / used 1000 gallons of water / burned 1000 units of gas you were out for the payment period.

      The sad thing is that the reason seems to be about marketing more than anything.

      --
      // MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
    45. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Geeks being geeks, off peak usage is where the bulk of our traffic will already end up...Mom and pop will be in bed at 9:00 when the raids and the massive porn downloads begin.

      You've got it wrong, we ARE the peak. :)

    46. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by mcrbids · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's great, you've created an intranet and demonstrated it's pricing. Now, of course, try to get a peering agreement with a tier-1 ISP so that your bits can travel to and from the internet at large. Try one month at 10 Mbps and another at 1000 Mbps and see if your bill changes.

      I already do this, in effect. My company has a private hosting farm. We pay a flat rate for our redundant Internet connection at a top-notch hosting facility. It doesn't matter to us how much we use it, because the price is the same either way - the bill doesn't change.

      Do I get a cookie now?

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    47. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by mariushm · · Score: 1

      In reality, the bandwidth is not really free.

      For example, if someone in US tries to download something from a server in Europe, it has to use one of the fiber optic cables under the ocean.

      These cables don't have unlimited capacity, they cost a lot to put in place, a whole ship must be on permanent stand-by to go and fix the cable when it's cut by ship anchors or sharks or earthquakes.

      The companies that maintains these cables gives capacity to ISP companies for a certain price, because they have to recover their investment and make a profit, and at the same time must pay all the people that keep the cables working.

      So there is "free" bandwidth, inside the ISP's network or through peering agreements and internet exchanges and there's also paid capacity.

      The problem is sometimes big companies like Time Warner, AT&T are arrogant and bureaucratic and don't like to do a lot lots of free exchanges because they consider themselves above other networks: they ask to be connected for free to others but ask for money to get traffic from smaller ISPs to them.

      They don't want to limit the bandwidth people have just to decrease the bandwidth they have to pay for. They probably have a lot of infrastructure in place which does not scale well (too many subscribers in certain areas, too little fiber installed) and don't wish to invest a lot to upgrade because they're monopoly anyway and subscribers don't have a choice.

      They want to maximize their profit so they invest very little in the capacity for which they need to be paid and try to minimize the amount of investments they need to make.

    48. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They need to stop dicking around and use the sort of pricing structure that has worked excellently in the cellphone industry, where you pay by the minute during peak times (whenever that may be) and you do not pay a dime during non-peak times. I'd be happy to pay by the gigabyte during peak hours, and have an unlimited reserve otherwise. QFT

    49. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by roystgnr · · Score: 1

      upload is a niche market

      The market for webcams that send lousy video over US 'broadband' connections is pretty huge. So is the market for digital cameras that can record high quality video at much higher bitrates. I suspect the market for uploading high quality live video would still be huge, if only there were home providers with the capability to serve it.

    50. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by cboslin · · Score: 1

      Why should I pay more for their mistakes?

      Could not agree more. They, telcos, have received over $200 Billion (2006 figure) since 1994 to build out Fiber among other offerings. They have not done this.

      So how is there a "coming bandwidth shortage"?

      I could say that it is because they have not built out Fiber as they promised.

      However the truth, and something tells me at least you already know this, is that there is NOT a bandwidth shortage. This is scarcity FUD advertised and marketed by the telcos to support their ever increasing rates, at all costs, in the face of lower usage of their bandwidth, thus more capacity is actually available.

      Remember that the telcos have known for years we would eventually need a minimum of 224 GBs, probably much more than this, in order to watch videos, movie, and basically use the internet in the future. Interesting to not that most CAPs proposed have been lower than this number. Even a CAP of 250 MB would quickly become inadequate and they know it.

      Disgusting in the light of the fact that it costs them less than .50 cents to provide 1 GB of bandwidth to us, yet they insist on forcing our monthly rates up to $150 per month. pathetic, and I too will churn way before I reach $60 per month. So the telcos can forget about ever getting me up to even $99 per month. Just is NOT going to ever happen.

      Did you know that in many counties and states, the Cable company MUST provide you with basic CABLE TV (not internet) for the low rate of $15.00 per month. They will not advertise it, they will deny that it exists. Find out who is the public figure head in your area, the publics interface to the Cable companies (which typically have to be approved by the local governments to use the right-of-ways to your home or apartment) get the information and insist on this rate. Better yet, get a UHF antenna and say good by to the Cable monopoly forever.

    51. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by cboslin · · Score: 1

      This is exactly why Tony Werner, Comcast chief technical officer

      Did anybody else read the bolded part as "Time Warner, Comcast"?

      And AT&T, Cingular, Verizon, Bell South, T-Mobile, and the list goes on. Every time I see any one of these companies screwing over a customer, I automatically KNOW that they all do it.

      Google Searches and searches in Rip Off Reports verify my assumptions 100%. There are NO good providers anymore. Assuming any one of them can go three to five years with no additional complaints providing excellent customer service, than and only than will I modify that thought process and say, wow there is one good one.

      Whenever I read about Bandwidth CAPs, Deep Packet Inspection, Net Neutrality, I automatically think of all the telcos, cellular companies, etc, as there is no difference among them. One might hit you harder than the others, but they all provide the same crappy customer-no-service experience.

      And get billed from something that arbitrarily gets put on your bill and do not pay, BECAUSE legitimately you did not create the charge, and they all cut you off, send you to collections, and ruin your life.

    52. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

      Here's my question in all this-- if I can buy webserver bandwidth for $0.10 per GB, why does TW/Comcast/Whoever want to charge me a whole dollar for each GB I use over my monthly plan limit?

    53. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the argument that bandwidth doesn't cost anything is ridiculous.

      many of the tier-1 isps have mutually beneficial peering agreements.. a sort of "you pass my network traffic, i'll pass yours" thing.. these are generally governed by strict contracts to ensure that neither party abuses this "friendly agreement" by passing more traffic to their peer's network than they receive from that peer. this works pretty well for the most part, between equally sized networks..

      so verizon peer with att, and they both peer with qwest, and Level3 gets in the mix too.. everyone is happy, and all of their customers can talk to each other.

      Time warners network is not big enough to peer with the big boys. it makes perfect sense for time warner, but none to level3, att etc, what is the point? it gives them relatively little.. it is TWC's customers who will suffer from a lack of connectivity - not theirs. so TWC have to buy transit from some of these guys somewhere along the line.. if they want to supply their customers with "internet" they have to join networks that are globally connected..

      for arguments sake, let's say TWC buys 10gig transit from AT&T, level3 and qwest. they probably don't need 30Gb/s of transit - let's assume that they only need 8Gb/s to provide a reasonable level of service to their customers 95% of the time.. They might try to drive teh cost of the bandwidth down by negotiating a committed data rate of 3Gb/s with each of the tier-1's, let's say they pay $2 per Mb/s for the commit, and that anything over and above that 3Gb/s (burst) will be charged at $6 per Mb/s. so they have a fixed cost of $18'000 per month and a possible additional cost of $126'000, if they were to saturate all three lines all the time.

      This is obviously a /very/ simplistic overview of the billing scenario, it's just for illustration. the more they use, the more they have to pay for - their costs go up as their users unabating thirst for bandwidth continues. sure, when everything was plain old html and a few pictures of nekkid ladies, the costs were nothing, and providing uncapped service plans was not a problem. however, now people are looking at teh same nekkid ladies in 3.5Mb/s HD streams, costs are on the rise...

      all of these companies have costs..they have to pay for engineers, hardware support, maintenance of fibers, expansion of network, teams of sales droids, account managers, project managers, datacentres, power, cooling... the list goes on.. in addition to this they also (holy fuck!) have to make a profit for their shareholders!!! they make money by selling additional capacity on their global networks to the smaller players, just as, in turn, those smaller players make money by selling bandwidth to you.

      metered internet is coming - it's already all over europe, and there's more than twice the amount of available bandwidth running in and out of that continent than north america (~11'000Gb/s vs ~5800Gb/s)

    54. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, monopoly busting laws would do nothing to fix this problem. The problem has more to do with the laws that created the monopolies in the first place, and then gave them buckets of extra (ie tax revenue) money to be a monopoly.

    55. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by AaronW · · Score: 1

      In my case I may not have a cap on electricity, but my rate jumps quite a bit if I go over baseline. I've hit over 300% of baseline where I was paying $0.39/kwh. So I am effectively capped at the pocketbook. Oh, and during heat waves they will kill power with rolling blackouts or by remotely shutting down AC units. There are also many places that do cap water usage as well where fines can be levied as well due to water shortages caused by drought and overpopulation.

      --
      This post is encrypted twice with ROT-13. Documenting or attempting to crack this encryption is illegal.
    56. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 2, Informative

      Here's my question in all this-- if I can buy webserver bandwidth for $0.10 per GB, why does TW/Comcast/Whoever want to charge me a whole dollar for each GB I use over my monthly plan limit?

      It's cheaper to provision for extra bandwidth in a colocation center than at a residence or neighborhood. Whether it's $0.90 cheaper is another question, but you certainly shouldn't judge the cost of residential bandwidth by the cost of colo bandwidth.

    57. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by sonicmerlin · · Score: 2, Informative

      Their costs have been going down you brainless ninny. Did you even RTFA? Just look at their latest financial reports. Their profits *increased* from last year, despite the economic downturn, to over $4 billion. They only invest $200 million in infrastructure. You don't think there's something wrong with that? In a normal free market some companies succeed while others fail. That's how the market derives the best and fairest services possible. Yet all these ISPs are profiting like oil companies. The public is getting gouged for services that cost many times more than it does in other countries. The "market" exists for the betterment of society. Most people here believe a "free market" or something similar to one is best for us. Otherwise we'd all be communists. As for the internet backbone, peak usage and average usage have gone down for the last 2 years in a row, and costs of maintenance are getting cheaper.

    58. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      Why is it the common theme on slashdot and in western society in general is this strange sort of rotating polyandry supported by the likes of nerds like yourself? Are you aware 50% of severe abuse between married couples is perpetrated by females?

    59. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by SEE · · Score: 1

      Only if you assume the internal combustion engine is integral to the definition of an automobile (done here by the slight-of-hand of the word "modern"). Trouvé's electric car beat Benz by four years.

    60. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Netssansfrontieres · · Score: 1

      But the logic you use seems to imply a long life for the asset. In fact, Internet gear gets used up so quickly (as bandwidth demand rises) that in fact it typically has a life-in-place of two or three years. So, while it's charming to assert that the variable costs are low, it's also irrelevant.

      Put it another way. To build an infrastructure that serves several million households and businesses will cost several billions of dollars. To make that network still useful in, say, three years' time, the operator has to again spend billions of dollars.

      So the most useful way to compute the effective variable cost is NOT to assert "it's low" but to actually divide the entire cost by the traffic throughput (current peak offered load). A few years' back, doing the calculation this way suggests a variable cost for transmitting a DVD-quality movie to be about $2, and for transmitting an MP3 song about $0.05. I am sure these estimates are off now, perhaps by a factor of 10. But not by a factor of 100.

      Also: the Comcast figures are obviously nonsense. If the variable cost to CMCSA was so low, they'd have deployed it everywhere. In fact, the figure the Comcast guy cites is the cost to upgrade the shared headend. Unfortunately, they also have to upgrade the taps ($100 plus labor) and the in-home terminal ($100 plus labor). Often, also the coax into the home needs to be replaced. And the hub near the home.

    61. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by BZ · · Score: 1

      > Well, upload is a niche market (though I admit, I'd love to be able to get at least a
      > megabit...Even half a megabit would be nice).

      Upload can gate your download throughput, at least if you're talking TCP. Packet size on the downstream packets is limited, and you have to send ACKs. ACK packets are 40 bytes. So if your downstream bandwidth is 10x your upstream and your MTU below 400 or so, your upstream bandwidth is what determines how much TCP traffic you can actually get.

      In practice, MTUs are closer to 1500 if everything is going well, and the ratio of down to up is usually no worse than 6:1, so the issue rarely arises.

    62. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by darkpixel2k · · Score: 1

      It is actually different from other utilities - the electric company doesn't cap how much electricity you use, neither does the water company, you can use as much as you want, or rather, as much as can flow through given the physical limitations of your electric wires/breakers and plumbing pipes.

      Obviously your water company has never caught you using a torrential amount of water.

      --
      There's no place like ::1 (I've completed my transition to IPv6)
    63. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by laird · · Score: 1

      "it shouldn't matter how much bandwidth end users use...the cost for the ISP is the same regardless. What ISPs should be encouraging is the reduction of peak usage, not total usage"

      Theoretically this is true, in that all bandwidth is free except for the peak bit at the peak instant. In reality, however, nobody would agree to a pricing model in which the one user that uses the top bit of the peak pays the entire cost of the internet, and everyone else is free. So, like all of the other "fixed cost / capacity" companies, like the the phone companies, the power companies, the water companies, etc., the ISPs came up with a pricing model to allocate the cost of the infrastructure to customers. Unlike most of those, the ISPs don't (in the US) charge directly for volume of usage, which is a good thing - flat rate internet access allowed for the massive growth of the internet over the last 15 years! Instead, ISPs charge for tiers of performance, which IMO is a pretty good balance of the interests of consumers and ISPs.

    64. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by laird · · Score: 1

      "The only way there is a bandwidth shortage is if ... They have oversold their networks (not my problem),"

      All ISPs sell consumers "over-sold" bandwidth, in that they build out enough capacity to support average usage, not simultaneous peak for all customers. This is how consumers get such cheap internet access.

      If you want committed bandwidth, you have to pay for it. For example, if I really wanted 15 Mbps of committed bandwidth, that would cost at least $300/month, because they I'd have to pay for the guaranteed capacity (plus local loop charges, and a real router...).

      Instead, I get 15 Mbps of "best effort" bandwidth for $45/month. It's cheap, but there's no guaranteed Service Level Agreement, and if everyone in the system tried to use it at once, there's not enough capacity to support it, because it's a shared infrastructure scaled to support normal usage patterns (i.e. not everyone uses 100% of their bandwidth 24/7).

      If you choose to buy "best effort" bandwidth instead of "committed" bandwidth in order to save money, you don't to get to complain that you're not getting committed bandwidth.

    65. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Grail · · Score: 1

      Off-peak for most Australian ISPs (remember Australia, the land where Internet access used to be $/Mb but recently has started becoming Quota + shaping) is from Midnight to about 6am. That is, off-peak is defined as being the time that nobody is actually using the network.

      Highest peak (9pm to 12pm) is actually about the time that that raids and massive porn downloads begin. That is, peak time is defined as the time that most download traffic is occurring.

    66. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2) Get a Gb switching hub, 2 computers, and an amp-meter [...]

      Then try 10 Mbsp, 100 Mbps, and 1000 Mbps. You'll notice that the amperage (for most switching hubs) climbs very little as you do so [...]

      This just means that current networking gear is horribly inefficient and has very high internal friction.

    67. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. Blatantly lie much, you lying liar? Gee, I wonder if you have an agenda propelling those lies?

      It took me literally 3 minutes of internet searches to determine you were just straight up lying.

    68. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by jasonm23 · · Score: 1

      Because "you" will also pay 50 cents for a SMS message.

    69. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anachragnome · · Score: 2, Funny

      "I'm like a woman with two abusive wives! I hate this shit!"

      Better?

    70. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They pay per meg for their bandwidth. You get a flat rate. Their HFC plant is a finite resource. All of these are valid reasons for them to charge per bit. Use all you want, pay for what you use.

      But in no case does it make sense that they pay by the bit and then sell it at a flat rate, unless that flat rate can cover what you could possibly use in a month.

      The internet business model is not FLAT rate. The only people getting a flat rate are the end users.

    71. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A lot of people also seem to forget that the people who own the international pipes need to be paid also.

    72. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just made a great argument for pricing bandwidth--which is not what [I understood] they wanted to tier in pricing. Rather, they wanted to introduce tiering on total consumption. So we're all oversubscribed and we're getting to the end of the month and we realize, "Hey, I'm still 5 gigs under the price point!" So we all fire up torrent and download puppies on pluto or wtf it was called, and now we're choking the shit out of the backhaul. This is an example case where pricing bw is seen to make sense--highest bidder gets the best service--but where pricing total usage is not reflected in service quality, since I might just be trying to read my email and am having to put up with some crappy lag times even though I was the only one dl'ing during the beginning of the month when no one was on and have already gone to the top price tier.

    73. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by meerling · · Score: 1

      I know of one large company that specializes in software. They have multiple sites. They spent a lot of money to purchase dedicated bandwidth for use between sites.
      (The contract basically states that it's never supposed to decrease, it's just for them, no oversubscribing, or reduction in bandwidth, ever.)

      Funny thing, they had to run bandwidth tests all the time because every couple of weeks the ISP would massively reduce their bandwidth. The company had an advantage, they were big enough that when they screamed at the ISP for ripping them off, again, they had their full dedicated bandwidth back in only a few hours.
      br? Of course, us individuals and small companies don't have that kind of 800lb gorilla effect, so we have even less ability to prevent the ISPs from selling us one thing, and substituting it for an inferior product when they think we aren't looking.

    74. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Lord+Crc · · Score: 1

      Except that power companies charge by the unit. So do water companies.

      Here in Norway, if your household has main fuses above a certain rating (around 100A afaik) or the yearly use exceeds some limit, you'll have to pay per kW as well as per kWh.

    75. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by many_apes · · Score: 1

      Some people have no concept of how Internet Providers operate, or costs involved... To say there are no costs for increasing bandwidth is ridiculous. Not to mention the fact that current technology limitations are holding back the true potential of the coax, not cable companies.

    76. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First we have to agree that the parent's idea that overselling bandwidth is at least somewhat reasonable (i.e. 10 mbps pipe to a neighborhood node with 100 mbps worth of subscribers)

      Now if people increase their average bandwidth usage beyond the capacity their local node can handle, then the ISPs are going to have to either upgrade that local node or deal with angry customers complaining about slow internet (and possibly canceling).

      So their incremental costs are demand based upgrades. The more you use, the more they will have to upgrade.

      The solution to this is to purchase business grade dedicated lines, which are a heck of a lot more expensive but are (better) provisioned to provide full bandwidth at capacity 24/7...but this gets expensive.

      And just to play devil's advocate, I somewhat doubt the 160 mbps home internet in Japan is business grade, they probably have their congested periods too.

    77. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well then a good case for traffic shaping instead of caps then, and at that, only shape when necessary which is the better solution but no answer for severe over subscription. People expect to get what they pay for.

      What has happened just lately is providers getting caught out in a money grab and now find themselves needing to devise and sell a plausible excuse. It's not working. Almost daily we are finding what costs are and what the markup is which paints a picture that isn't pretty. In North America we have been and are getting gouged. with some of these ISP's trying to engage full on rape mode.

      If they're not careful they just might find core infrastructure regulated like any other utility. I'm not an advocate of that but without competition there isn't much of an alternative solution at hand.

      Charter Cable has had the high speed market to themselves since forever where I live. Within the past couple months AT&T began offering their Uverse product but we can only get that as part of a triple play package.

      Note: AT&T can bring Uverse to my house but not a stand alone DSL line. The latter they say is not possible since I'm too far away from the CO or some such, a story I've been hearing from them for years. So what does Uverse run over? Fiber or a DSL Line and a Dish?

      Now their talking about making a quad play - Phone, TV, Internet and CSell.

      In the case of Charter - They paid off those lines 30 years ago with the TV business and continue to maintain them just the same. It didn't take much to add Internet as far as their infrastructure and at that, every Internet customer paid for their cable modem via (ongoing) rental fees which they also make money from. Of course they had to roll up some fresh equipment at the head end and order out some fat pipes. I wonder what a Gigabyte costs Charter? A penny? Half a penny? I pay $50/month for 100GB which like most people I don't begin to use and wound up paying $2.50 a GB last month considering what I actually used for the money. At that rate I should have only paid $10 for what I actually used at my agreed to 50 cents a Gig.

      And 50 Cents a Gig is still pretty damn stiff.

      Considering Charter will sell me 60Mb/s unlimited and uncapped for $120/month and still make a profit... I'll leave it to readers to do the math on that one.

      Now Charter wants to be my portal too and are rolling out an iTunes competitor only better because theirs doesn't go against the cap! So in other words we're being held hostage and it all folds back into Net Neutrality which is why hundreds of millions of dollars are being funneled into Washington via Lobbyist to help insure our Senators and Congressmen make the right decision. Votes only count on election day leaving the paupered people... well who cares about them. Money talks, bullshit walks.

      For the record, Charter looks like your Fairy God Mother compared to much of the rest and we might just as well call AT&T what it is; Spook Central, the Domestic branch of the NSA. /rant

      So what we're we talking about again?

      Oh ya... the NYT article being a bit unfair...

    78. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Philip_the_physicist · · Score: 0
      Interestingly, in oe of the driest developed regions in the world, after 5+ years of drought and several years of restrictions on garden irrigation and car washing, we still pay almost a flat rate for residential water. Most of the water bill is either fixed, or based on house price, with a tiny mount based on usage (I can't remember the exact amount as I live off the mains water).

      Interestingly, the pricing is so fucked up that it is economically nonsense to call out a licensed plumber (required by some insurance companies) to fix a dripping tap even if the drip is nearly a continuous flow, because the plumber will cost $100 or so, and you will never save enough water to make up for the lost interest on that money.

    79. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Philip_the_physicist · · Score: 0

      Trevithick built was was arguably the first car in 1803: a steam road vehicle with a carriage body for passengers. There were also two earlier steam vehicles, the first being a lorry (French) and the second a tractor (English). The London Steam Carriage was definitely a working car, but it crashed soon after its first run and he never built another.

    80. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 1
      http://www.iconnectdots.com/ctd/2009/04/would-you-pay-the-20-cost-to-get-160mbps-internet-at-home.html It has 10Mbps upload. Which is sweet as you could then stream an HD divx even if you are limited by the other guys upload speed (assuming everyone had this kind of service).

      I found it interesting that they said that their cost was lower for a 50Mbps connection than it is for a 6Mbps. That said as my econ prof said "it is stupid to use cost to determine your price". You charge customers based on what the product is worth to them with the goal of maximizing the profit of the firm. It doesn't matter that diamonds aren't overly rare or expensive to mine, if they really want one you can charge them several multiples of the cost. The reverse is true for water in most countries. You can only charge the price that the "last user" is willing to pay for that use. That is typically for something of little value to them, like spraying down their driveway with a house. So even though people have to have water they pay a small price for it.

      I have a good internet connection, 16/1 for around $30 (got to love europe), it is fast enough that I can download the regular quality TV I want to watch so I don't need cable. Of course I could always download more HD content to use up any extra bandwidth, but going from 16/1 to 30/2 which would cost me another $10 wasn't worth it to me. That "last use", which essentially is the difference from a regular format to HD content on my TV wasn't worth the 33% to me. I think it would be even harder to convince people of the need to go from say 50Mbps to 160Mbps, there just really isn't the need right now. The only think I can think that it would do for you as far as downloading goes, is if you didn't think ahead of what you wanted to watch, then the time you have to wait for the download would be less. Mmmh, I guess some people care about seeing the latest simpsons 10 minutes after it aired versus 20, but I don't :-).

    81. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Well, in my personal experience, it was one alcoholic female with a mere one abusive husband, dragging one severely fucked up kid around like a ping pong ball. Forgive me for speaking from experience, you politically correct twit.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    82. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Luke+has+no+name · · Score: 1

      I'd just queue up my torrents to work at night :)

    83. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Holy crap that sucks. When I went to school we had unlimited bandwidth on a T3 line. Of course, that was long enough ago that the bandwidth was primarily being absorbed by online gaming and actual work, rather than file sharing.

      Even there, the admins were cool as hell, and they had in-house servers for some of the popular FPS games, so the speed was obscene.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    84. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Dansteeleuk · · Score: 1

      50% - How about "I'm like a shemale with an abusive wife and husband!"

    85. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by ResidentSourcerer · · Score: 1

      Yesterday my meter was replaced. The old mechanical one replaced with a new electronic one. Not only do they no longer have to send a meter reader around every two months, but they (and I) will be able to pull down hour by hour readings.

      Power companies also have to plan for the peak time. One of the things they are trying in places is variable rate power. Peak power costs more than off peak, which in turn is more than night power. In California it's worth while to run the air conditioners at night, and cool a honking big tank of water. Then during the day circulate the cold water.

      I chuckle at everyone's whining about non-capped bandwidth.

      I pay $60/month for theoretical 2 Mbit down, 500 Mbit up.
      (Anik satellite link. )

      I say theoretical as:

      * 80% of that is the max throughput, what with the message overhead.

      * From after school to 9 p.m. it may be 1/3 of that, due to
      everyone and his dog using the system.

      * Any one connection runs through some kind of bucket scheme, so if I want to download an ISO image the first 24 MB come down fairly fast, but after that it is only about 12 MB/hour.

      While, as a previous poster remarked, everyone spent all day pulling youtube, the company would make the same money is true, people would find that the download speed would be disgustingly slow. At some point upstream there is a link whose capacity was planned for the average evening peak with it's mix of Youtube, gmail, Craigslist, and World of Warcraft.

      You plan capacity knowing that. Usage peaks in late afternoon, early evening. Amoung the users, most of them are
      doing casual surfing, email, online games, that don't put the load that shared vidio, massive software downloads put on the system.

      Even if the last link to the house is rated at 50 MByte/s,
      the aggregation into the trunks is not the sum of the leaf
      nodes.

      You see this on local networks too. A classroom network connected to the server with a 100Mbit LAN is fine -- until class change time when 30 kids save their profiles at the same time. Each computer's link to the switch is fast enough, but the link from switch to server isn't. Or the server disk isn't fast enough.

      In a non-monopolistic system, a company can best use their infrastructure by helping their users spread their use.

      1. A widget in their browser toolbar that says what the current rate is.

      2. A download widget/bit torrent client that can be configured to do it's work when the network is loafing, perhaps by checking a server for overall congestion.

      --
      Third Career: Tree Farmer Second Career: Computer Geek First Career: Teacher, Outdoor Instructor, Photographer.
    86. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ya, you'd learn to live within your methods, or secure an alternative source of communication/heat/water.

      1,000 gallons of water is alot of water when you think about it.

      [The point being, support alternative ISPs.. stop dicking with the big boys if you can avoid it.. but what? they are cheaper? Sounds like a Walmart arguement to me.. :p ]

    87. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by bschonec · · Score: 0

      Actually, the electric companies DO care how much electricity you use. Ask the people in California. They have rolling blackouts all the time. Electric companies really don't want to build more power plants. It's expensive and time consuming. It really is in everyone's best interest to minimize consumption. That being said, I'm not a proponent of limiting consumption to anyone. If you're willing to pay for it, you should be allowed to consume it.

    88. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by mabhatter654 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      why not, all the cable lines from all the neighborhoods go to one colocation center that provisions the lines, just like the TV signal comes from one place. The "distribution" cost is part of the "cable" part of my bill. The internet part should be just for the equipment to connect to the internet! So yeah, serving 10,000 houses should be the same cost as a data center.

    89. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      OF course a dedicated T1 line (1.5 Mbps) costs upwards of $500 per month versus your 15 Mb for $50... but you have an SLA for 24/7 service with 5 9's of reliability and can sue them if they don't perform.

    90. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its a lot i just called level3 and asked they said for a 48mbit its around 1700/month and for a gigbit its about 10000/month

    91. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by mattwarden · · Score: 1

      > If you use 10,000 gallons of water, it inherently prevents anyone else from
      > using that 10,000 gallons of water, and it is irrelevant when you use them.

      Perhaps you missed that day in 3rd grade... http://cd7.e2bn.net/e2bn/leas/c99/schools/cd7/website/images/bp-watercycle2.jpg

      Both bandwidth and water are finite only within a particular time period.

    92. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by mattwarden · · Score: 1

      > I think the fairest thing is to do what many cell phone plans do; namely,
      > metered or capped usage during peak hours, and free access off-peak. If a
      > user is savvy enough to schedule iso downloads or watch video off-peak,
      > it shouldn't cost him much since that traffic truly is nearly free.

      And, by the way, this is what would happen. Tools would be developed by smart people to allow users to easily schedule retrieval of content at opportune times. It would have a smoothing effect on the peaks.

      It's amazing what market forces can do when we actually use prices to reflect, you know, the cost of things.

    93. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1

      Pills actually can be quite complex and expensive to make. The chemical components are often hard to synthesize or isolate, and can take many different processes to get to the desired product. If that weren't the case, aged brandy would cost as much as water. I mean, they're both liquids, right?

      The synthesis of a drug is a pittance compared to the staggering R&D costs. Put another way, the chemical components are often hard to *figure out how* to synthesize, but once that's done, it's rather cheap on a comparative basis to actually *do* the synthesis. For what it's worth, I'm a chemist, so been there, done that.

      This is also why patents are so important in the Pharm business, and why generics inevitably are dirt cheap.

      If that weren't the case, aged brandy would cost as much as water. I mean, they're both liquids, right?

      And yet you can still get 750 mL of brandy for $20. Now, if brandy cost $2B to learn to make and get approved by the FDA, that bottle would cost a whole helluvalot more.

    94. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by nabsltd · · Score: 1

      OK, so some of the latest stats show drug companies only spend twice as much on advertising as R&D.

      Seeing as how only recently were drug companies allowed to spend money on direct-to-consumer advertising, it's amazing they manage to spend even a small percentage of their overall budget on advertising, much less 100% of their R&D budget. But, no, they manage 200% with no real effort. Of course, it's OK, because it doesn't raise the price we pay for drugs. Oh, wait, it does.

    95. Re:NYT quote is a bit unfair ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We moved last year and went looking around for an ISP. There was exactly one cable ISP and exactly one DSL ISP. The cable company was Comcast and I told my roomate I'd set fire to my PC before I connected it to Comcast. The DSL company was Embarq and my roomie had had a terrible experience with that company before, so he didn't want to use them.

      Not one single other company offered any sort of broadband access to that neighborhood, because Embarq had a lock on the phone lines and Comcast had a lock on the cable. So, for lack of options and because I was paying the bill, we went with Embarq.

      If I'd wanted to just use dial-up however, there was massive competition for that locally. Just taking a guess here, but I'll bet the fact that a dial-up modem only needs to make a phone call to work has something to do with that. I bet that if dial-up required the local telco to send a special signal over the phone line like DSL, there would only have been a single dial-up ISP in that city as well.

      That problem will never be solved as long as the phone companies own the phone lines and the cable companies own the cables. And the telcos/cable companies know that too. What happens every time a city tries to bypass the local monopolies and announce plans to build a public network? The local monopolists file a lawsuit to kill it.

  2. I'd pay 6.85... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would pay 6.85 for double speeds... I may even pay $7 for that... but not $7.01 now that I know...

    1. Re:I'd pay 6.85... by PitaBred · · Score: 2

      That's a $6.85 ONE-TIME fee. They're making money hand over fist... it's simply the fact that broadband ISP's are completely unregulated and unabashed monopolies that is preventing us from getting better value for our dollar.

  3. Why limit ourselves? by Statecraftsman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I prefer the government installs the fiber and leases it to companies that provide billing, maintenance, and tech support services. Let competition in those areas bring prices down. Internet access is a public good and greases the wheels of the commerce. It's not something to be taxed and exploited by large monopolistic corporations.

    1. Re:Why limit ourselves? by InsaneProcessor · · Score: 1

      That would put the government in charge of maintenance on the system. This would guarantee poor service for everybody. Have you ever tried helping an elderly person get their medicare straightened out or get their SS benefits corrected?

      --

      Athiesm is a religion like not collecting stamps is a hobby.
    2. Re:Why limit ourselves? by Lord+Ender · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yes, if we were really a capitalist society, government would maintain ownership of natural monopolies (roads, utilities) and set up competitive systems whereby businesses compete for operating (not owning) them.

      Today, we let the businesses own these natural monopolies outright. That's the opposite of capitalism; there's no competition.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    3. Re:Why limit ourselves? by MobyDisk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are mostly right, but it is actually worse than that.

      The natural monopoly is on the LINES, not the SERVICE. But the US government grants a monopoly for BOTH. I am okay with only having two companies providing lines to my house: cable and telephone. The problem is that there are only two companies offering service over those lines: the local cable company, and the local telephone company.

    4. Re:Why limit ourselves? by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Have you ever driven down a road? Oh, wait... that's government maintained, too. And much closer to what government-owned comms cables would be like than medicare or social security programs. Are you sure you aren't just an alternate login for BadAnalogyGuy?

    5. Re:Why limit ourselves? by moderatorrater · · Score: 1

      My hometown did that, and then sold the fiber network after a few years rather than continue bleeding money. That's not to say that it can't be done (there are a few other cities around here that seem to be doing it just fine), but there are risks and people need to be willing to research it thoroughly and stick to it. Unfortunately, governments in the US don't seem to be able to stick to anything for more than a few years.

    6. Re:Why limit ourselves? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That would put the government in charge of maintenance on the system. This would guarantee poor service for everybody.

      Not necessarily it wouldn't.

      First, even if a government owns the basic infrastructure they could still contract out maintenance work. So for those who believe any governement activity is inheirently incompentent, competition between private companies is still possible.

      Second, I know it's popular on Slashdot to mock anyone who works in the public sector as being lazy and stupid, but some people have other motivations than maximizing their income. I'm not talking about pure alturism, but some people actually like to help others or have more time to spend with their friends and family. These people will take decent compensation for a job that allows to staisfy those desires over one that pays significantly more but doesn't allow them to fulfill their non-monetarily based motives.

    7. Re:Why limit ourselves? by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Have you ever driven down a road?

      I didn't realize you were using this to support your argument at first, I thought you were agreeing with him and then trying to say it was better. I was confused.

      My government maintained roads are terrible, always under repair, and even freshly laid they tend to only be decent. Highways are usually good for a year or two, though they'll be bad for the next 6 before they are replaced again.

      Are you sure you aren't just an alternate login for BadAnalogyGuy? ;)

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    8. Re:Why limit ourselves? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Yeah. There's your problem. Capitalism doesn't necessitate competition. Maybe you're using the New Age definition of capitalism.

      Maybe you can make up a new word for your concept like competitionalism or something.

      I'm not even saying your 100% wrong per se in the reasoning, it's just that capitalism doesn't mean what you think it means. Or more accurately, what you think disqualifies us as a capitalist society...most definitely does not.

    9. Re:Why limit ourselves? by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      If the government were to, for example, grant one private individual 100% ownership of all industry, would you call that a capitalist society, then?

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    10. Re:Why limit ourselves? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the government were to, for example, grant one private individual 100% ownership of all industry, would you call that a capitalist society, then?

      Let's see... One online site has 5 different dictionary definitions of "capitalism". Your proposed scenario would easily fit three of the five, because those only stipulate private ownership of the means of production (as opposed to communal or government ownership). Another may or may not be appliciable, depending on how one defines "free market". The final and lengthest makes frequent references to multiple parties, so while it doesn't explicitly forbid one private agent from owning everything it implies captialism requires multiple owners or investors.

      CAPTCHA: "either"

    11. Re:Why limit ourselves? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      That granting in itself would probably disqualify it. If after that, however, everyone traded goods and services for work it would qualify.

  4. I look forward to my new $13.7 by Dan667 · · Score: 4, Informative

    In the mean time, support Massa get his bill passed. If we wait, TWC will just come up with something else equally bad and US taxpayers paid for $200 billion in infrastructure so there should be limits on what Time Warner can do.
    http://blog.wired.com/business/2009/04/congressman-to.html
    Write your congressman to support this bill
    https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml
    Get it passed.

  5. no transit/upstream? by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If all Time Warner customers decided one day not to check their e-mail or download a single movie, the company's costs would be no different than on a day when every customer was glued to the screen watching one YouTube video after another.

    Does this just mean that Time Warner is big enough to only have settlement-free peering instead of paying anyone else for connectivity, or does it mean that their connectivity is priced by pipe size rather than data transfer?

    1. Re:no transit/upstream? by jcm · · Score: 2, Informative

      Does this just mean that Time Warner is big enough to only have settlement-free peering instead of paying anyone else for connectivity, or does it mean that their connectivity is priced by pipe size rather than data transfer?

      No, they purchase transit from Level 3.

    2. Re:no transit/upstream? by c_g_hills · · Score: 1

      It sounded like the OP was asking a rhetorical question. The point is if the customers are communicating with hosts through peers with which they do not have SFI, then the ISP's costs are higher since they have to pay for transit.

    3. Re:no transit/upstream? by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      What ballpark figure does transit cost anyway? 1&1 sells a web hosting plan with 1.2TB transfer for $5/month. I suspect that price is subsidized by their low volume users, though. TW is in a different position from a web hoster because they have to build out bandwidth for backhaul to the peering points.

  6. This is modern business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They don't want to do anything new, but they want more money, because business these days is about finding new ways to charge more while doing the same or less. I believe this is another cause of our current economic woes that is not getting enough attention, because we aren't creating any new value but the economy somehow continues to grow.

  7. Not the way it works... by jcm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Disappointed in the "research" that went into the original article. Most definitely if everyone didn't use any bandwidth for a day or two, then a cable company would likely pay less that month for the their transit bandwidth. In Time Warner Cable's case, they get their transit bandwidth from Level 3.

    I'd guess Time Warner Cable is paying about $10/mbps (or less) on the 95th percentile. So if the top 5% five-minute averages of traffic to Level is thrown out, then the top average left is what they pay for. I would bet there are a few samples each night that are in that top 5% of samples, if everyone did NOT use the Internet one night during peak, the sample that is left at the 95th percentile would likely be less and they'd pay less that month for transit charges.

  8. Could there be another reason? by FurryOne · · Score: 4, Informative

    TW announced that it was going to test market tiered broadband in Rochester and a few other cities, but just announced that they were shelving those plans. Most publications pointed to protests by TW customers as the reason. Was it? While it's true that there were protests, I think another "influence" caused them to take a second look at their plans. Here's what I think... TW right now works hard to bundle their Broadband service with their VoIP and TV services. Sure, they can hide the cost in the bundle, but they can't hide the bandwidth. Right now, they pump at 1.2MB/s, or about 10Mb/s. that sounds pretty good until you realize that some 3rd world nations provide 8 times that much for only the equivalent of $10/month! - but that's another story. So what could get TW's panties in a bunch? Let's see... Right now, my "old" iPhone is on the Edge network, which is, I think, around 750Kb/s. Not very fast, but slow & steady. The data plan for it is $20/month. No competition there for TW! How about the "newer" iPhone?... it uses 3G (HSPA) for it's data. Right now, 3G from AT&T goes at 3.6Mb/s and costs $30/month. Still no big competition, but for lots of users, it would suffice in place of TW if AT&T would allow "Tethering" - using the phone as the network connection. (Which they don't right now) What worries TW is what is coming next. AT&T and others are currently upgrading their HSPA networks to the next "bump" in speed, to 7.2Mb/s, and that's where they become direct competitors to TW's Broadband. What's even worse is that "NetBooks" from Dell, LG, and Acer are due to start shipping in the near future, and they have built-in HSPA & WiFi support. Who needs TW's cable when you can be connected almost anywhere, anytime - wirelessly. But it doesn't stop there. HSPA can be tweaked up to 14.4Kb/s, but the next phase - "HSPA+" is already proven. It requires more hardware changes though. AT&T's goal is to rollout HSPA+ by 2011, and that's 21Mb/s!! Yup, that's twice what TW is allowing right now over cable, and you'll be able to get that over the air. That's what's got TW scared shitless. The idea that you won't need a cable to get your phone, internet, or even TV shows. That makes their whole monopolistic infrastructure about worthless!! AT&T and Verizon will rollout plans for access not just for phones, but for loads of electronic goodies, from computers to cameras to game sets. The netbook idea has been tried before, but it always required a cable. What got this new paradigm started was the introduction of the iPhone - not just as another "phone", but as a "portable computer," or an extension of your office. More and more people are finding themselves using the mail, the browser, and other applications on a daily basis, and becoming dependent on a constant internet connection. Why do we need to sit at home in a room when we can be at the beach, or in a hammock, or even at a bar, and extend ourselves into the rest of the world?

    1. Re:Could there be another reason? by airjrdn · · Score: 1

      You raise some excellent points, and if rolled out correctly, you're right, 21MB/s wireless will wipe the floor with wired connections for the masses. The problem is whether or not it's done correctly.

      The iPhone ushered in the portable/handheld computer with internet access for the average person. You could get an add-in card from a carrier for your laptop, but most people wouldn't. If that same data plan was part of your existing phone bill and your phone had an actual (usable) browser...things get different.

      If you look at how poor 3G is in a lot of the areas, it's clear something isn't right. In Springfield, IL 3G coverage is here, but regardless of phone type, network issues abound. Try doing anything remotely intensive w/the phone, and you'll see how slow their 3G implementation is. It's NO where near 3.6MB/s. If they couldn't roll that out right, what's to make me think they'll do it right at 7x faster?

    2. Re:Could there be another reason? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you read the terms of service on your iphone you will notice your "unlimited" service is capped at 5GB/month

    3. Re:Could there be another reason? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is an interesting point, but I think it might just defer the real issue of ownership of wired infrastructure: Even if a day arrives where the 21 Mbps wireless network covers 99% of the customers, the way that the base stations, cell towers, etc. will be interconnected to each other and the rest of the Internet will most likely be wired, not wireless. Hence the problem with "natural monopolies" will simply become an issue for the wireless carriers and not the wired end users as is the case today.

    4. Re:Could there be another reason? by Weedhopper · · Score: 1

      Which "Third World" nations are providing 8x10Mbps at $10 a month?

      The quality of life in some of these places American called "3rd world nations" 20 years ago, particularly those in Asia, is better than the US these days.

  9. ...And no bandwidth... by gavron · · Score: 1
    Yes, if EVERY TW customer watched high-bandwidth video all day TW wouldn't pay more.

    However all those customers would suffer lack of bandwidth.

    TW uses an oversell model, meaning they sell the same bandwidth they buy to many people over and over and over. If all of them use it, it won't cost TW more, but the bandwidth won't be there for all those users.

    E

  10. The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by Twillerror · · Score: 3, Interesting

    At the consumer level power is generally sold by the Kilowatt. Phone converstaions used to be by the minute, still are for cell. Water is sold in cubic feet.

    I think we have finally reached a point where bandwith should be sold by the Gigabyte.

    Ultimately I think cable companies and straight ISPs should sell the fastest cable connection possible. Maybe charge a flat fee at first if the new
    speed requires a new modem and that sort of thing. We are fast approaching speeds of 50mpbs which if we actually could obtain from
    servers out there would be pretty close. Once we hit 100mbps we are good with speeds above only needed for special circumastance. Most content
    won't be streamed live, but rather pre-cached almost as DVRs do it now.

    Just like the other type of resources we can give breaks for per unit the more you purchase. So 1-20 gig is 50 cents a gig. 20-40 is 30 cents and so on.

    Users who want to stream HD movies can instead of buying the HD channel package on their cable bill.

    I wish it was possible to distinguish between the guy downloading a linux .iso and someone downloading a pirated movie, but we can't.
    Either way both are using more than the grandma checking her email, but somehow pay the same amount.

    This might not be popular, but I think deep down most of us know it's the compromise we need. If you want to drop you cable bill and
    go with Hulu...fine. Just realize you have to pay. This idea that we can get everything we always had for 20-40 dollars a month just
    because the magic internet came along is bs.

    What really irks me about cable companies is they want to put caps, but provide absolutlely no way to contest it. My bill
    does not have a usage number on it, but if I go over it they'll let me know. You can go look at your power meter, call your phone company, or look at
    your water meter. Put in usage monitoring first then we can talk. You could even put out a bill with IP, number of packets, and amount of data.

    1. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by Immostlyharmless · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Just like the other type of resources we can give breaks for per unit the more you purchase. So 1-20 gig is 50 cents a gig. 20-40 is 30 cents and so on.

      This would be fantastic if that were the actual price, but TW wanted to charge 75 bucks a pop and then a buck a gig after the initial cap. When it becomes more expensive to download something than it does to have it burned to a CD and sent via snail mail, the internet ceases to have credibility as a medium. (Case in point, a game I just bought online, 3 bucks to ship it, its 4 gigs in size on a DVD, why should it cost me more to download it, than to have someone pack it, carry it 750 miles, transfer it by hand onto 3 different trucks and walk it to my doorstep?)

      Left to their own devices, TW/Comcast/Cox, etc would certainly price internet right out of the range of most normal beings. Witness the current price of messaging costing more on a per bit basis than controlling a satellite..

    2. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by BcNexus · · Score: 1

      Once we hit 100mbps we are good with speeds above only needed for special circumastance.

      You're foolish to suggest that a certain amount of bandwidth is enough for an unspecified period of time. The influential Mr. Bill Gates has pointed that out quite nicely: http://web.archive.org/web/19970107024714/http://htimes.com/htimes/today/access/oldfiles/gates23.html

      QUESTION: I read in a newspaper that in 1981 you said, "640K of memory should be enough for anybody." What did you mean when you said this? (L. Marshall, lmarshal@science.watstar.uwaterloo.ca)
      ANSWER: I've said some stupid things and some wrong things, but not that. No one involved in computers would ever say that a certain amount of memory is enough for all time.

    3. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by don+depresor · · Score: 1

      You realize that unlike all your other examples, using that bandwidth has no real costs versus no using it once it's instaled and running, right?

      Bandwidth is like highways, the real cost is in the laying process, once you've done that, the maintenance is marginal when you compare it to the original cost. Of course you have those greedy bastards top level providers who are like the bastard companies that keep asking for expensive tolls once the highway has been more than paid (and the government pays for maintenance), they just care about their profits, and having a fair pricing isn't their goal.

      The only real fair deal would if they made the numbers required to figure what kind of bandwidth infrastructure they would require to fulfill the needs of all their users, and make them pay that once... maybe as a subscription fee. And after that you would pay monthly the running costs, like the electricity the need to keep the net working... But that sounds a lot like those federal funds they got some time ago, right?

    4. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      Do you understand how the cable infrastructure works? How about DSL?

      What you are talking about might work, if there was a single unbroken fiber link between your home and the connection to the Internet backbone. It doesn't work that way. Instead, your cable connection goes to a network node which has a single fiber link to the cable company distribution point. Which then has one or more links to further on up until you finally reach a backbone point.

      DSL is pretty much the same way - there is one shared fiber link between the DSLAM and the backbone.

      Sure these links can be pretty hefty, but they aren't infinite in capacity. I seriously doubt they are more than OC3 (48Mbit) and probably less than that in reality. This means they can advertise all they want about getting 100Mbit connections between your house and the network node, but the node can't possibly give you more than its connection. And its connection is shared by the other 999 homes on the same node.

      And yes, everything (TV, Internet, phone, etc.) is moving across that fiber link. The good news is the TV part of it is fixed - it doesn't change no matter how many people are watching. Which is why we're unlikely to move away from broadcast media in the near future. If everyone had their own pipe each node would require 100 times (or more) the bandwidth to the head end. No, I seriously doubt you are going to find any 4800Mbit fiber connections anytime soon.

      To move beyond this we need to change the way that the Internet is delivered. Instead of network nodes being placed between the head end (any head end, cable, DSL, FIOS or whatever) we need individual unique connections all the way to the backbone. It is the only way that you could drop broadcast media and survive. Either that or continue to work within the confines of using the neighborhood network node as a shared resource with limited bandwidth.

    5. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by Geoff-with-a-G · · Score: 1

      I think we have finally reached a point where bandwith should be sold by the Gigabyte.

      Ultimately I think cable companies and straight ISPs should sell the fastest cable connection possible.

      Except that the actual economics are the complete opposite. It costs a large amount of resources (both labor and equipment) to provide you with that fast connection. It's the "running coax or fiber to your house and connecting it to high-capacity network gear" part that's costly and difficult. Once you're connected, it's not cheaper to run your 100 Mbps port at 5% utilization than 95%.

      The only part where your utilization costs them more resources is when they have to upgrade their upstream connections. But even that is also not on a "per GB" basis, but rather a "per Gbps" basis (again, adding cabling and network gear, or paying upstream providers). And what matters there is the peak utilization during the peak hours. On off-peak hours, that bandwidth is effectively "free". Giving everyone 100 Mbps links at the access layer is not a terribly effective way to limit peak bandwidth.

    6. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by russotto · · Score: 1

      Just like the other type of resources we can give breaks for per unit the more you purchase. So 1-20 gig is 50 cents a gig. 20-40 is 30 cents and so on.

      The economics of it work the other way. Most of the cost is fixed; there's little (though not zero) marginal cost for those first few gigs. When users start pulling enough that the capacity of the network is strained, THEN you start getting big costs. And of course time matters -- the user pulling 10GB distributed over the entire month is adding a lot less to the cost of the system than the user who pulls those 10GB all at 6:30pm one Friday, for example.

      So as a matter of reflecting the underlying costs, usage-based plans don't make sense unless they are much more complex than simple metered billing. As a matter of simply discouraging use of the network, metered billing makes perfect sense -- and that's what TW wants. They want most to pay the minimum rate AND not use the network much. No additional capital costs for that, and big profit from those few who DO continue to use heavily (because there won't be enough of them to trigger a need to upgrade).

    7. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by Wrath0fb0b · · Score: 1

      Bandwidth is like highways, the real cost is in the laying process, once you've done that, the maintenance is marginal when you compare it to the original cost.

      You have no idea what you are talking about. Road maintenance over the useful life is a huge fraction of the total cost and is directly correlated with the number of vehicles that use the road, especially 18-wheelers. More trucks means more frequent maintenance which adds up very quickly.

      http://ideas.repec.org/p/hhs/vtiwps/2007_007.html

    8. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by S77IM · · Score: 1

      I think we have finally reached a point where bandwith should be sold by the Gigabyte.

      Why, though? Why should someone who uses GMail all day pay less than someone who uses NetFlix for an hour every night?

      Ultimately I think cable companies and straight ISPs should sell the fastest cable connection possible.

      Why? Why not do the opposite -- sell unlimited bandwidth, and price it based on speed (so if you need to video-conference over Skype you pay more than someone who is just downloading WoW patches in the background)?

      Why not do both (pay per Gb*Gb/sec)? Why not do neither (keep flat pricing as it is)?

      A lot of people say how the pricing "should" be but then fail to justify their reasoning...

        -- 77IM

      --
      Student: Is it true that the foundation of the universe is paradox?
      Master: Well, yes and no.
    9. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by noidentity · · Score: 1

      I wish it was possible to distinguish between the guy downloading a linux .iso and someone downloading a pirated movie, but we can't.

      Agreed, then we could round up all those commies, and commend those consuming corporate content (even if they aren't paying for some of it)!

    10. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excellent example. Evidently, Fedex & UPS need to get into the ISP business.

    11. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by don+depresor · · Score: 1

      Yup, because the whole world is a plain with no rivers, mountains or any feature whatsoever... Usually the most expensive part of highways are bridges, tunnels, and all kind of landscaping.

    12. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by don+depresor · · Score: 1

      Nice paper, now tell me where it says that running costs are higher than the building costs please, because to me, it seems that the paper is about how having more cars and trucks running over a road makes maintenance more expensive :P

    13. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by curtix7 · · Score: 1

      so grandma pays 7 cents a month for her usage to check her email 3 times a year and the guy streaming HD TV pays $60 a month even though both users are costing the provider the same amount of money?

    14. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by Wrath0fb0b · · Score: 1

      Nice paper, now tell me where it says that running costs are higher than the building costs please, because to me, it seems that the paper is about how having more cars and trucks running over a road makes maintenance more expensive :P

      But that fact disputes precisely the point you were making. You said that the cost is all in the sunk capital and does not depend on traffic. I cited a paper that demonstrates that the cost does, in fact, scale with the traffic. The same sort of thing is true for ISPs -- sunk costs are large but the operational costs scale with traffic.

    15. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd just like to quickly point out that an OC3 is 150Mbps, though you might be thinking of a DS3 (45Mbps). Also, OC192s (which aren't even the highest available tier) run at 10000Mbps, so there most certainly are connections available that could carry that kind of traffic (though an OC192 at the edge is of course unthinkable today).

    16. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by don+depresor · · Score: 1

      the maintenance is marginal when you compare it to the original cost

      If you think that marginal==none then you have some reading cromprehension problems.

      Once you have a bunch of high capacity routers and fiberoptic channels, the costs get reduced to the utilities bill, a number of maintenance guys and sysops and a repair here and there, wich is a tiny cost if you compare to the cost of laying maybe thousands of miles of fiberoptic and buying those super-duper-powered routers.

      Of course you have more costs when you have more bandwidth but the cost isn't that big compared to the instalation costs, and you can't tell me it's otherwise....

    17. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      You don't know much about fiber optic able do you? The amount of bandwidth you can transfer through a fiber line is near limitless. It's all about the equipment used at both ends of the line. They've managed to reach 25 tbps in lab tests.

    18. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      And that's the basic issue with tiered pricing or metered bandwidth schemes. It's the heavy users that encourage/force ISPs to use even a fraction of their billions in dollars of profit to upgrade their networks. Without heavy users constantly demanding better services, we'd all be stuck with connections barely fast enough to let us access e-mail and browse the basic web.

    19. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Still wrong... OC3 is 155Mbps. [See also: The wiki]

    20. Re:The Kilowatt, minute, cubic foot, Gigabyte by huge · · Score: 1

      Case in point, a game I just bought online, 3 bucks to ship it, its 4 gigs in size on a DVD, why should it cost me more to download it, than to have someone pack it, carry it 750 miles, transfer it by hand onto 3 different trucks and walk it to my doorstep?

      How long did it take for you to receive the said 4 gigs by mail? What was the throughput in kbps? Would you be happy with internet connection that had similar download times?

      --
      -- Reality checks don't bounce.
  11. Wait! by camperdave · · Score: 3, Funny

    'If all Time Warner customers decided one day not to check their e-mail or download a single movie, the company's costs would be no different than on a day when every customer was glued to the screen watching one YouTube video after another.'

    Wait! Are you trying to say that the cost of transmitting a bunch of zeros is no different than transmitting a mix of zeros and ones?

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    1. Re:Wait! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Depending on the equipment, it could theoretically be more to transmit zeros. e.g., if zero is signaled as high voltage and 1 as low. [/tounge-in-cheek]

      But seriously, 0,1 and nothing are all different voltages on the wire. Transmitting nothing will probably be close to no voltage. NICs don't just sit there and Tx 0s when there isn't anything to send.

    2. Re:Wait! by smallfries · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately the internet tends to be packet-switched rather than circuit-switched, so yes, it costs more to transmit a bunch of ones and zero than (not) to transmit a bunch of zeros.

      Besides, the zeros compress better :)

      --
      Slashdot: where don knuth is an idiot because he cant grasp the awesome power of php
  12. Private Sector by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A business should be free to price it's products as it chooses.
    The market will naturally determine the price the public is willing to pay for such products. The only time a problem arises is with a monopoly (or price fixing - but anti-trust law should take care of that).
    The only issue with cable providers is the lack of alternatives. Technically there is DSL, FIOS, and some slower alternatives, but the customer is locked into only one cable provider. In certain geographical area's (and high density buildings) these alternative choices are not be available, this creates a pseudo-monopoly.
    I hope this problem can be solved with private sector alternatives and not with legislation. Government intervention in the free market tends to have negative consequences.

  13. Bad Logic by fm6 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If all Time Warner customers decided one day not to check their e-mail or download a single movie, the company's costs would be no different than on a day when every customer was glued to the screen watching one YouTube video after another.

    And if no tweenies show up to tonight's Miley Cyrus concert, the cost of putting it on will be pretty much the same. Does that mean that Miley should go to a flat rate, come-as-often-as-like model?

    All retail businesses are based on assumptions about normal behavior. Hypotheticals that posit unlikely behavior aren't arguments. If they were, then we could suppose that every TW customer might decide to visit YouTube at precisely the same moment, and that TW should build out its network to support that and charge accordingly. Are you ready for $1,000 a month for DSL?

    Let me anticipate the same lame point that gets made every time we have this discussion: Even if TW ripped off the government by pocketing the money they were supposed to use for expanding their infrastructure, we still have a "no free lunch" scenario. Even thieves need a sustainable business model.

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

      Actually that's not quite true...if people show up there is a lot of cleaning that has to be done afterward in addition to breaking down the set. If no one shows up then all that has to be done is break down, which should be somewhat cheaper than clean and break down. Of course in the real world if no one shows up to a concert then usually you don't bother to preform...that's a lot less time that you have to be paying those people to run and clean your concession stands. Unless of course you pay your people on a flat rate model...not arguing with you just pointing out that your analogy is really really flawed

    2. Re:Bad Logic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about this, Miley Cyrus puts on the concert, then everyone who bought a ticket gets to enter and exit during the concert as many times as they want? This is the reality. If he/she sold tickets to a concert series, and the people with those tickets could show up or not as they chose during it, you end up with the same example. No one (who bought tickets) shows up? You put on the concerts, and those who paid for access to the concerts view them. The fact that the concert sold out indicates that a larger venue should be chosen in the future, not that you should oversell tickets and turn away those who don't show up "on time".

  14. Upstream and downstream transfers are not the same by Wrath0fb0b · · Score: 1

    If all Time Warner customers decided one day not to check their e-mail or download a single movie, the company's costs would be no different than on a day when every customer was glued to the screen watching one YouTube video after another.

    No, but if each uploaded the equivalent bandwidth of a YouTube video to a non Time Warner customer, the company's cost would be quite different. The internet is fundamentally a sender-pays system at every tier -- you can only justify peering with a large provider if you can take from him roughly as much traffic as you load onto him. You can get your peering agreement terminated pretty quickly if you dump lots on the other guy but don't take any back (see, e.g. http://tech.slashdot.org/tech/08/11/03/0143239.shtml?tid=230.

    One day probably wouldn't be enough, but if everyone on the TW network started using their full upstream allotment 24/7, TW's peers would eventually demand renegotiation.

  15. Re:Nice fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Water and power have inherent costs to the producer based upon my usage, but there are no cost differences to my internet provider if I use 1mbit or 100mbit.

    Nice fallacy tho, looks like you spend a while typing it up...

  16. Homeowners Associations by 3p1ph4ny · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Why don't homeowners associations for neighborhoods provide internet, like they do for other utilities? You pay a flat fee "last mile" when you build your house just like you do with water/septic/electric.

    The homeowner's association runs the utilities. Just like with everything else, they contract for a say 100mbit guaranteed line, and then the 20 or whatever homes connect to that. The homeowners association polices problems/abuse, much like it does with everything else. It works because: you don't want to piss off your neighbors.

    More generally, why can't I buy into a "1 gigabit pool" with a cable company? Make it blatantly obvious that they're overselling, and let the user decide. Company A says "we've got a gigabit of bandwith with 100 users", Company B says "we've got a gigabit of bandwith with 150 users", and I decide.

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

      You know that if homeowners associations got involved, they would insist on filtering the connection for everyone. As soon as one child caught a whif of porn, there'd be a demand among all the parents that NONE of that filth travel over those lines. And anything else they might find objectionaable as well.

  17. get a clue... PLEASE! by bigwavedave33 · · Score: 1

    Bandwidth cost money... real money. Unless your upstream provider is stupid and or sucks, you pay a fixed rate per megabit every month for a fixed amount and a per megabit for bursting over. If you think you can do it better, come up with a better model and kick their asses. And for god sakes quit whining about your CHEAP connection. Want to see expensive go to a 3rd world country. As a former ISP, and as less and less mom and pop ISPs are out there, if it could be done someone would already be doing it. Japan and other densely populated countries have a significant advantage... They don't have to run thousands of miles of fiber to reach thousands of customers... The can run a couple of miles and reach a 100,000+ customers. AND they don't have every tom, dick and harry complaining and stopping them from cutting up streets to get it there. They just do it because the government lets them. I know I used to live there.

    1. Re:get a clue... PLEASE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Bandwidth cost money... real money. Unless your upstream provider is stupid and or sucks, you pay a fixed rate per megabit every month for a fixed amount and a per megabit for bursting over.

      So apparently my Crown Corporation (look it up) ISP that has no caps, and a flat-use fee for metered access with no charge for usage is "stupid and or sucks".

      Silly me, thinking that because their corporate charter dictated their obligation is to provide service rather than generate profit for private money they were doing me any good.

      So I should switch to cable that caps and charges me per GB then so I won't be "stupid and or suck"?

      How the hell did that post get modded up?

    2. Re:get a clue... PLEASE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen

    3. Re:get a clue... PLEASE! by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      Unless your upstream provider is stupid and or sucks, you pay a fixed rate per megabit every month for a fixed amount and a per megabit for bursting over.

      My provider is Comcast, and I pay a flat rate. If you were using tiered pricing for Internet access, it's no wonder you're a former ISP.

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    4. Re:get a clue... PLEASE! by bigwavedave33 · · Score: 1

      No I was not using tiered pricing. Your provider may be using flat now, but it will change. It might actually save you money. All the ISPs are trying to do is make the abusers pay for what they use and the normal users pay less. But obviously the ones that complain the most are the abusers. I'd like to see you give me one rational and legal reason why you would need to download 100+GB per month. There isn't enough time or free content to justify it, PERIOD.

    5. Re:get a clue... PLEASE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow you sure have a hate-on for internet users. You should just shut off your own connection, I think you'd be happier.

    6. Re:get a clue... PLEASE! by matazar · · Score: 1

      Netflix?
      Photographer? (upload)
      Steam Purchases + Updates.

      If I had an HDTV, I'd be using Netflix or renting movings from my Xbox, I could probably go through a movie each night. Each movie is going to be big if it's in HD.

      Also, a lot of my games on Steam are over 5+GB. If I formated and needed to re-download them, well, I'd definatly go through more than 100GB.

      Who says the cotent is always free? You can buy things and DOWNLOAD them. Have you ever been on the internet?

    7. Re:get a clue... PLEASE! by DMalic · · Score: 1

      the NIN concert footage is ~400 gigs. if bandwidth was regularly available at decent pricing (20 cents a gig instead of a buck), consumers could buy/stream decent quality video. 720/1080 video will look like crap unless it's given a decent bitrate. That uses LOTS of bandwidth.

    8. Re:get a clue... PLEASE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      makes no sense to stream across the entire internet. Its a waste of BW and resources. Its up to the content providers to put that at the edge so it doesn't affect the global internet. Mcasting is a way better solution, but can't be done unless the infrastructure is there and people are willing to pay for it.

    9. Re:get a clue... PLEASE! by residieu · · Score: 1

      There are no internet abusers. It may be that the ISPs are not charging enough to provide the level of service they are offering. If so, they will have to change their pricing model. But the people who are making use of the service they are buying are NOT abusing it.

  18. Ha ha ha ha by cdrguru · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you believe that you can get 3.6Mb/sec on a 3G phone continuously, you are in for a rude surprise. You can get this in short bursts but you can't get anywhere near that for longer period of time. How many phones are competing for the same bandwidth? 100? More like 500. Do you really believe any cell site has a 1.5Tb/sec connection?

    No, you get your 3.6Mb/sec for about a second and they you wait for everyone else's phone. Fortunately, you get most things done in under a second and you aren't looking for a continuous high bandwidth connection. Because if you were, you'd be disappointed.

    1. Re:Ha ha ha ha by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      Mobile broadband providers have much more restrictive limits on bandwidth usage and P2P. Even "unlimited" plans have a cap around 5GB.

    2. Re:Ha ha ha ha by paitre · · Score: 1

      Hrmm, I don't see any sort of limits even in the fine print on my plan.

      Narf.

    3. Re:Ha ha ha ha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this is different from my 3 Mbps max connection that peaks there for 1KB and then drops to about 100 Kbps for the remainder of the connection how, exactly?

  19. Light at the end of the fiber tunnel? by DJRumpy · · Score: 2, Informative

    Excellent article. The end is the best part of all. The bits at the end are my favorite:

    "Cable systems in the United States use the same technology and have roughly the same costs. Comcast told investors that the hardware to provide 50-megabits-per-second service costs less than it had been paying for the equipment for 6 megabits per second.

    Questions about the speed, availability and affordability of Internet service in the United States will be central to the study Congress has required from the Federal Communications Commission next year. And cable and phone executives are worried that the commission may call for more regulation of Internet service, which currently is free from any government price controls."

    This industry is screaming for more regulation and competition. They have had a stranglehold on the market for well over 10 years and it shows in the exploding cable and internet costs. Burn the MOFO down!

    1. Re:Light at the end of the fiber tunnel? by Aerynvala · · Score: 1

      I agree with this entirely. I'm lucky enough to live in a large, competitive market (Verizon FiOS, TWCable, AT&T DSL) but in my circle of friends I am the exception. I'm the only one who has choices that don't included capped usage levels. And I'm the only one with Verizon FiOS as an option. Consumers shouldn't have to move into competitive markets just to get fair service levels and prices.

      --
      http://transformativeworks.org/
  20. 6.85 to double the bandwidth of a home? by MasseKid · · Score: 1

    If it is really $6.85 to double the bandwidth of everyhome then, let's add a 6.85$ charge to everyone's bill every month and if we start with a 10GB cap the first month, we'll be at 41 TB in a year.... Oh, yeah this was actually about greed and not bandwidth wasn't it...

    1. Re:6.85 to double the bandwidth of a home? by joocemann · · Score: 1

      Count me in. I can come up with 7 bucks. Hell, I can do it at least 2 or 3 times. They don't have to take it to 41TB, but something better than what I have would be awesome. I think simply asking the customers might get them all the response and support they need to upgrade.

  21. Disingenuous by Spazmania · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If all Time Warner customers decided one day not to check their e-mail or download a single movie, the company's costs would be no different than on a day when every customer was glued to the screen watching one YouTube video after another.'"

    Of course, those customers would be glued to blank screens since TWC lacks the capacity to have every customer watching youtube at once. Their network would grind to a halt. And the network expansion necessary to handle all of them watching youtube all day would have a considerable additional cost.

    Comcast says it costs them $6.85 per home to double the internet capacity of a neighborhood.

    Comcast also says that their users like their service and don't leave it the instant Verizon installs FiOS in the neighborhood. You shouldn't put much faith in what Comcast says.

    --
    Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    1. Re:Disingenuous by DragonTHC · · Score: 1

      even if that's what it costs, shouldn't they charge every subscriber that $6.85 fee so they can double the capacity?

      I'd pay a $6.85 fee once to double my bandwidth. I'm sure everyone else would also.

      but the truth is this, bandwidth costs nothing once you have the infrastructure in place.

      of course you are limited by your equipment though. So the statement actually holds merit.

      --
      They're using their grammar skills there.
    2. Re:Disingenuous by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Comcast says it costs them $6.85 per home to double the internet capacity of a neighborhood.

      Comcast also says that their users like their service and don't leave it the instant Verizon installs FiOS in the neighborhood. You shouldn't put much faith in what Comcast says.

      The actual line in the article is "Comcast, the nation's largest cable provider, has told investors that doubling the Internet capacity of a neighborhood costs an average of $6.85 a home.". We should believe them in this case, since AIUI they can get in actual real trouble with the SEC if they lie to their investors.

    3. Re:Disingenuous by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      bandwidth costs nothing once you have the infrastructure in place.

      Actually, not so. Unless you're a so-called "tier 1" provider, or more precisely a "transit free" provider, you pay by the 95th percentile megabit for your traffic. A customer who uses 1 megabit *all the time* will cost you between $5 and $100 just for the bandwidth between your network core and the cores of other ISPs, before you even factor in the local infrastructure cost to get that megabit from your network core down to his computer.

      FYI, there are 8 transit-free providers, including neither Comcast nor TWC. And they have other costs which replace the direct bandwidth costs. Ain't nothin' free in this world.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    4. Re:Disingenuous by Atario · · Score: 1

      Comcast says it costs them $6.85 per home to double the internet capacity of a neighborhood.

      I say we take them at their word. I have a twenty right here, can I get my 8-fold increase in bandwidth now, plzkthxbai.

      --
      "A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
  22. Compression used? by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

    You bring up a good point. Do cable providers use compression techniques? Could the cable modems be used to compress and decompress items as they come in and go out? I realize that anything leaving their networks would have to be decompressed but could they use an internal scheme to compress data once it's on their network?

  23. I can find $7 in my couch! by joocemann · · Score: 2, Funny

    Someone please double my internet bandwidth!

  24. Stop the nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "then a cable company would likely pay less that month for the their transit bandwidth"

    Comcast and verizon's bandwidth costs are trivial because they have an extremely large and highly desirable user base.

    If you're going to give us some B.S. about "building OC3's and I know personally these cost $xxxx/month and if you take the cost of that, and when you use your 20mb/s connection, you're costing the equivalent of $$$$ per month so it's a bargain..." you're merely showing your knowledge of how the internet worked in 1994.

    In 2009, you correctly note the transit bandwidth charges but these are not likely to be a significant cost to somebody like Comcast. Their bulk of their cost is *fixed* since it's the physical maintenance of their own network. The charges to connect to the backbone? Almost nothing compared with the fixed costs.

    Besides, if you look at TW's annual report, you'll see their cost for bandwidth is going down, despite bandwidth use going up from their subscribers.

    What does that tell you?

    I know what it tells me. It says that if TW keeps at it, NYS should do their best to heavily tax TW's "bandwidth overage charges" so that there is no financial advantage for TW to charge people for additional bandwidth. It goes against my laisse-faire instincts of many decades, but these guys are crooks who lie with a straight face.

    No wonder people hate cable companies.

    1. Re:Stop the nonsense by Wrath0fb0b · · Score: 1

      In 2009, you correctly note the transit bandwidth charges but these are not likely to be a significant cost to somebody like Comcast. Their bulk of their cost is *fixed* since it's the physical maintenance of their own network.

      But those are the SAME COST -- physical maintenance of their own network allows them to carry other ISPs traffic and get favorable peering agreements. You can either pay transit fees OR maintain your network but either way you pay per bandwidth.

    2. Re:Stop the nonsense by jcm · · Score: 1

      If you're going to give us some B.S. about "building OC3's and I know personally these cost $xxxx/month and if you take the cost of that, and when you use your 20mb/s connection, you're costing the equivalent of $$$$ per month so it's a bargain..." you're merely showing your knowledge of how the internet worked in 1994.

      Screw OC3s, more like lots of OC192s. No OC768s though, overpriced especially on T640s. Afraid in 1994 I was on the Enterprise side of networking, not on the Service Provider side; so my '94 knowledge is more about Ethernet switching and Novell NOSes. Only moved to Service Provider Architecture in the last 3 years, so generally my knowledge is hopefully up to date, but maybe not.

      In 2009, you correctly note the transit bandwidth charges but these are not likely to be a significant cost to somebody like Comcast. Their bulk of their cost is *fixed* since it's the physical maintenance of their own network. The charges to connect to the backbone? Almost nothing compared with the fixed costs.

      They do have lots of Capital Expenditures to purchase all that gear on the edge and their metro networks. And if they're paying about 4-5% (for Cisco/Scientific Atlanta) of their actual costs after discounts for hardware/software/support maintenance (OpEx) on all that equipment, then that is a really large number. However, generally those numbers aren't too variable. They only have to upgrade when the peak averages increase. If the peaks just last longer each day but the absolute maxes do not increase, they're not spending more CapEx and thus no more OpEx. So the Transit BW costs are a pretty big part of what is costing them OIBDA dollars, and to top it off, their customers control whether they have to pay more one more month or not.

      Besides, if you look at TW's annual report, you'll see their cost for bandwidth is going down, despite bandwidth use going up from their subscribers.

      What does that tell you?

      That Level 3 is charging them less per Mbps now? Maybe $8? It can never be free. Maybe they get to Cogent pricing at $5/Mbps, but it will always cost money to run backbone networks for people who need transit. TWC (and other eyeball networks) will always pay for their transit. No one else is getting Settlement Free Peering.

      I know what it tells me. It says that if TW keeps at it, NYS should do their best to heavily tax TW's "bandwidth overage charges" so that there is no financial advantage for TW to charge people for additional bandwidth. It goes against my laisse-faire instincts of many decades, but these guys are crooks who lie with a straight face.

      No wonder people hate cable companies.

      I do not disagree that they are milking this. However I also believe that their highest profits come from the Cable TV side of the house. They don't have to upgrade capacity for that side of the house. Most folks just watch those broadcast channels and pay massive amounts for the pay subscription movie channels, again no real incremental costs, nearly pure profit once they have the infrastructure built out. For the less watched channels that aren't always broadcast, they don't even send the signal if no one is watching. If someone does start watching, they multicast those channels in case a second person down from the Head End starts watching. Again, once you get the first person watching, there are no additional costs, unlike when two people decide to download an episide of the Daily Show and start minutes apart from one another.

      Now if more and more folks all decide they don't need to pay for all of that TV and instead all want to watch The Daily Show as a download whenever they want to, then they are all getting those bits from a CDN server somewhere on the Internet. It is likely that TWC won't pay for transit to get to that CDN provider though. Comedy Central uses Akamai (at least from my Comcast home network) for their CDN. AKAM might have caches at e

    3. Re:Stop the nonsense by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

      "You can either pay transit fees OR maintain your network but either way you pay per bandwidth."

      Well, okay. But the point is there is no additional cost to TW if the network is 1/4 used, 1/2 used, or fully used. And with DOSCIS 3.0 already here, the cost to upgrade is a one-time upgrade to make their internal network deliver a lot more bandwidth for the same cost. And they want to charge more for that?

      So if user X is using 100% of his allocated "bits per second" and user Y is using .1% of his allocated "bits per seconds", it doesn't make any sense to charge user X more, since he isn't costing anything more. Likewise it doesn't make sense to charge user Y less, since he isn't costing you less.

      Thus, you quickly conclude that it makes sense to tier users based on capability for marketing reasons (and let me be clear that I think it's a legitimate tiering), but there's no technical reason to tier users. And what's more, the argument that people make which goes something like this "Well, those that use more should pay more", they never say what we're using *more* of that we need to be charged for. You can't use it up, and you can't save it. It's nothing like electricity or water.

      Verizon (for right now) has the right idea. Build a big frickin' network with fiber to people's homes put a modem in place that limits the rate so that they can't overload the network and then let people go to town. Perhaps they have a different viewpoint since they came from the data side and moved over to TV rather than the cable companies history of starting with TV and adding data as a sideline.

      When you think about it, Comcast's and TW's biggest accomplishment to date is that they make Verizon look like a good guy when it comes to the internet.

      --
      You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
  25. No bulk bandwidth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here our local ISP refuses to sell bulk bandwidth to anyone. When the city was forced to switch to this ISP, its internet costs increased by tens of thousands of dollars. The ISP refused to sell them any additional bandwidth, they were wedged into a typical business plan. This in spite of the fact the ISP knew there was absolutely no way the city could ever stay without the meager limits.

    The city's solution? Fuck 'em. Now they install their own fiber when they rip up a road to their buildings and complete bypass the ISP. Most of their traffic was local, inter-agency mail anyway.

  26. If this is true, why is bandwidth 1/40th in Japan? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Price per MB is 1/40th what it is here.

    Max bandwidth is also 1/40th what it is here.

    I smell price fixing and corporate collusion ...

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  27. Simple accounting by DirtyCanuck · · Score: 1

    The infrastructure cost has been amortized and is a fixed cost.

    Electricity to power the infrastructure although variable is essentially a fixed cost as it will not change once a precedent has been made.

    After breaking even on overhead costs the contribution margin becomes nearly 100%.

    The best analogy is when phone and cable companies used to charge per outlet. My grandfather went before the supreme court of Canada to argue that once the service has reached your house it is your business how you want to use it, or split it. (R. v. Fulop, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 695) As it doesn't COST the companies anything extra.

  28. Re:If this is true, why is bandwidth 1/40th in Jap by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

    Max bandwidth is also 1/40th what it is here.

    Jcom has no bandwidth cap. Either you got that mixed up, or you have an interesting way of reading. It's 160mb/s uncapped for $60 a month.

    That's about 16 times faster than the fastest I can get where I am, for $20 less, AND I have a 20gb cap.

    Internet sucks in Alaska.

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    Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
  29. Troll much? by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

    I'm a kernel developer AND a gcc developer.

  30. Re:If this is true, why is bandwidth 1/40th in Jap by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    source - Computerworld, somewhere around Feb 2009

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  31. Japan up speeds by MasaMuneCyrus · · Score: 1

    I had 100mbps down 50mbps up for ~$40 in Japan in a modest-sized city of 400,000 while I was staying there. It was part of NTT's new B FLETS package that they're pushing throughout the entire country.

    I might add that right before I left, they began the ~controversial~ practice of bandwidth capping. They sent out a letter to everyone asking to please not upload more than 500 gigabytes in a single month, but downloads remained unlimited.

  32. Monopolies aren't illegal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An interesting little tidbit I read somewhere about monopoly law is that being a monopoly isn't illegal, abusing your monopoly is illegal. An interesting distinction.

  33. The telco story SEEMS necessary but its NOT. by cboslin · · Score: 1
    I am sure a few of you are familiar with this article, Assuring Scarcity from 2006. Bob you were ahead of your time. Enjoy, here are a few quotes:
    • They ve kept the cellular phone from becoming a real portable computing device. (Thank goodness for Linux hand-held (Nokia N800) and embedded devices that do away with any tethering issues as they just work, granted they are NOT cellular, but WiFi access is almost everywhere today.; over 343 different applications available for the Nokia N800 and N810 and no monthly service fees unless you want them.)
    • They are explicit in expressing their need to prevent abundance. Why do we tolerate such harmful behavior?
    • They use the word quality but never tell how it is to be measured
    • What is important is what contributes to their revenue or, to put it another way, how much value they can take from their users.
    • Quality is a dangerous word - it s used to justify arbitrary policies.
    • Their story is accepted because it seems necessary to pay them to give us connectivity but thatâ(TM)s not true. Itâ(TM)s like paying the railroads to build roadways. You dont do that, you build roads based on the need for roads. You fund connectivity in the same way - so it can support other activities and not as a profit center in its own right. You re paying people to carry your bit just like you pay them to carry your garbage - you dont expect to sell them your garbage.
    • They are simply rigging a marketplace because they seem to be necessary - where is the enthusiasm for enforcing antitrust they use against Microsoft?
    • It starts out using the term End-to-End but in the opposite sense that its used for the Internet. In this its more like Womb-to-Tomb - they control every aspect of the service. Its that QoS thing. That along with ideas like Acceptable Usage Policy (AUP) is a way to impose their rules on users and maintain their control and value (AKA, high prices).
    • They are bringing back circuits, AKA sessions for no purpose other than being able to charge for them and their ability to apply their own definition of quality. A circuit gives the carriers control over relationships - if you allow the relationships to be maintained outside their network they lose control.
    • The purpose of a session is to create a billable event out of nothing.
    • You don t need them to charge for a service but you do need them if the carrier wants to get in the middle so it can meter your time and bill you.
    • Even if you are not exchanging packets and using resources you can still be billed!

    We honestly should have abundance here in the USA. In fact we should have had abundance here in the USA since 2000. By 2006, leveraging the fiber that the telcos should have already put in place to our homes in every large and medium city (even most small cities if it were deregulated, giving business incentives for others to lay some of the fiber) we should have increasing downstream / upstream bandwidths with decreasing costs like they had in Japan once the Fiber was put in the last mile.

    The joke will ultimately be on the Telcos. As they continue their current anti-American business, customer-no-service practices they just continue to make more and more Americans angrier and angrier at them.

    Eventually the resentment will build to a point that as soon as some independent party (all of the current US telcos have arrangements and have for years...thus there can be NO FREE MARKET without either government intervention and/or some other non telco company entering the market. When that happens, the resentment and anger will insure the CHURN

  34. Cable Systems and bandwidth by bmullan · · Score: 1

    Cable Systems provide internet on a shared media in the neighborhoods. There is often fiber to the local fibernode in a neighborhood which then splits the RF to feed many homes... how many well that depends and is one of the techniques that the Cable MSO (multi-service operators) use to manage bandwidth.

    DOCSIS or Data Over Cable Interface Specification is currently at DOCSIS 3.0 which defines how to implement what is generally termed wide-band DOCSIS. With wide-band the cable providers can continue to compete regarding bandwidth offerings with the Telcos who are deploying technologies like FIOS.

    However, this also means the Cable MSOs are required to re-engineer their cable plants with different combining/splitting algorithms which may require more fibernodes deployed to some neighborhoods (which would be a capital cost) may more likely be a software exercise.

    To see what is possible the best competition is probably with Cablevision in the NY and NJ area which competes against FIOS. Cablevision is working hard to deploy DOCSIS 3.0 wideband and allow greatly increased bandwidth offerings to customers... to compete and keep its NY/NJ customer base from jumping to FIOS.

    Cable operators are caught between a rock & a hard place. Their Cable TV and Movie business is their bread & butter. So to protect those they could try to cap their High Speed Internet offerings BUT that could lead to customers leaving the Cable operator's High Speed Internet service... then using their Internet to enable themselves to also drop the Cable MSO's TV/Movie services.

    Age old problem... FAT PIPE or Content Provider.

  35. Re:Upstream and downstream transfers are not the s by smallfries · · Score: 1

    What you've said doesn't quite stack up. Peering agreements do mandate that traffic must be about the same in both direction. But this does not imply a sender pays system. It implies that anyone that has a surfeit of senders, or of receivers, pays. For example the AT&T peering agreement mandates that traffic flows must be within 2:1 in both directions.

    Most ISPs are largely receivers of data. As a result they try and attract server business because it helps them balance their flows for negotiating peering agreements. So if everyone on TW maxed out their upstream allowance it may actually reduce TW's transit fees.

    It's hard to find out how much upstream bandwidth costs as most colo providers seem to only do quotes by email these days, but Burst offer $0.05/GB. Unlike Verizon I'm guessing they understand what the decimal point is :)

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  36. Thankfully I live in the middle of nowhere by SlappyBastard · · Score: 1

    My pricing options are: Verizon DSL Comcast 6 Mb Dial-up

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    I scream. You scream. I assume that means we're both acquainted with the problem. We proceed.
  37. If its $10/mbit continuous.. by P1erce · · Score: 1

    then for $100/month id like a dedicated 10mbit in each direction.

  38. If only one turns up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they don't charge that one person 1/4 million to attend either.

    They also don't sell 2x the number of tickets and then throw out the regular customers because they're using up more of the tickets than the occasional watcher.

  39. $1mb != $1mb at any location by uncledrax · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Because the physical plant your webhost has to provide is 1 hardened structure with a buncha equipment.. expensive.. yes.. but now imagine you have to run a few of those buildings, and of course all the physical plant that connects them together and the COs to the houses?
    Once you have plant that large, you also have to deal with repairing it, since you'll have a higher failure rate (downed utility pole if you're overhead, or some guy with a backhoe if it's underground).
    Everyone seems to think that 1mb==1mb regardless of where and how it gets there.. sorry.. that's just not the case.

    If you -want- $0.10GB for b/w, rent out a full cage in a colo and live in it.

    As for the $ now vs the $ spent for 6mb.. keep in mind that the $ the spent to get 6mb was -alot- back then.. It'd be like trying to buy a 1gb switch 10 years ago.. you can do it, but it's ALOT more cost.. you can get the same 1gb switch now for -alot- cheaper.

    Also when comparing Japan/Europe to the US, remember the biggest benefit to the US is also it's biggest hardship.. we're a f-n big country. A (in my mind typical) Euro town is alot smaller in area compared to a US town of the equivalent population (at least outside the NE corridor) That distance means extra physical plant needs to be installed, operated, and maintained. [citation needed]

    That said, I personally dislike my cable company, and the Bell's have fallen by the wayside unless it's your only option, and I wish everyone would just run Ethernet to the home already.

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    ----- The internet has given everyone the ability to have their voice heard equally as loud.. even if they shouldn't be
    1. Re:$1mb != $1mb at any location by shaitand · · Score: 1

      'but now imagine you have to run a few of those buildings, and of course all the physical plant that connects them together and the COs to the houses?'

      A few of those buildings is just a question of scale, they need a few because they have a metric butt ton of customers and therefore a metric butt ton of cash coming in, probably more return for gb after all costs are settled than a web host. As for the rest of the infrastructure to the houses etc, that is part of the expense of providing CABLE or TELEPHONE service, they don't get to charge extra for those costs twice over!