Forum Moderators: phranque
Also, in the U.S., the telecom deregulation act's attempt to foster competition has instead meant that companies are extremely reluctant to build infrastructure which they must then share with competitors. Here in Washington, the only reliable DSL is through Verizon the incumbent local Bell monopoly, and to get a cable modem you'll generally be talking to the incumbent local cable monopolies, Comcast/Cox/Cablevision. And I'm not paying $60 a month for Internet access.
"In its June newsletter, Enron priced an OC-3 from New York City to Los Angeles, for July delivery, at $29,587 per month. By mid-July, the price was down to $16,437 a month for September delivery, and an amazing $1,879 per month for delivery in January 2002.
Russ Matulich, VP sales for the trading and consulting firm RateXchange said the low prices were not an anomaly. "We are seeing that price compression across the board. We are seeing a general, aggressive decline in bandwidth pricing in all major routes, worldwide. In some cases, the prices are falling 10 to 30 percent month over month."
Source [bcr.com]
Can't find a 2002 source that's from a 3rd party
but the so-called last mile problem-- connecting all this bandwidth to businesses and consumers.
Agree it's a last mile problem, which however should affect more the websurfers and less the website owners - provided their host has a fast connection to a backbone.
Interestingly my (private) flat rate DSL line has no traffic limit, while my site has. I could theoretically be downloading videos 24h/day.
On the end-consumer side, I pay $7.77 monthly for website hosting with 25 gigs of transfer. I pay $29.95 montly for high speed, broadband cable internet service and it's about as fast as the human eye can measure - LOL. Of course, I also use the same cable company for my digital (line) telephone and high def digital TV service, so it's at a discounted rate for each. I feel the expense is very low.