This industry is in trouble.  Nobody wants usage based billing.  Customers 
don’t want it for obvious reasons.  ISP’s are afraid to implement it for fear 
of losing customers.  If you lose money on an account is it really an asset to 
your business? I feel that the Large ISP’s have already implemented Usage Based 
Rate Adjustment.  They seem to have an automated process to adjust rates that 
will force off the heavy users.  Our industry will not get respect until it 
asks for it.  UBB or UBRA (New term I coined) is the way ….

 

Steve

 

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mark - Myakka Technologies
Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2017 2:07 PM
To: Simon Westlake
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Ready for the Xbox one X and 100GB games?

 

Simon,

But metered billing makes them think about what they are doing.  Does the baby 
need to be falling asleep watching a 4K movie?  The best way I can put it is 
renting an apartment with utilities included.  If I'm renting an apartment in 
FL with electric included, my AC is going to be set at 68 24/7.  The cat will 
be very comfortable all day, why should I care.  However, if I'm paying for 
electric, the cat will have to deal with 78 during the day and I may have to 
deal with 72 when I get home.

Bandwidth prices are dropping for some, but for others it is still expensive.  
Not to mention the HW costs to upgrade your network to handle the higher 
bandwidth internally.  

4K tvs cost more to buy than 1080  or 720 TV's.  Why should someone who is 
willing to stream at 720 or pay for satellite TV, be forced to pay the same as 
that guy that wants to watch in 4K.  Why should a single person who just needs 
dependable fast internet occasionally be force to pay the same amount as the 
family with 6 kids and 30 devices?  Why should the kid willing to buy his game 
on a disc be forced to pay the same as the guy who doesn't want to get up off 
the couch to change a disc?  

Why is it we are the only industry that is expected to deliver a top notch fast 
and reliable service at a single low price.  The electric company gets to 
charge per KW, the all you can eat buffet charges per person, the cell phone 
company charges per device, cable/satellite charges per box, hell even the 
streaming companies get to put limits on the number of people that can stream 
per account.  Why is it when we ask a heavy user to pay their fair share all 
hell breaks lose and we are the greedy bastards? 



-- 
Best regards,
Mark                             <mailto:[email protected]> mailto:[email protected]

Myakka Technologies, Inc.
 <http://www.MyakkaTech.com> www.MyakkaTech.com

Proud Sponsor of the Myakka City Relay For Life
 <http://www.RelayForLife.org/MyakkaCityFL> 
http://www.RelayForLife.org/MyakkaCityFL

Please Donate at Please Donate at  <http://www.myakkatech.com/RFL.html> 
http://www.myakkatech.com/RFL.html
------

Wednesday, June 21, 2017, 1:11:27 PM, you wrote:

        
The problem with metered billing is that it doesn't solve the problem. The 
customer still purchased a game they want to download, or they have a 4K TV 
they want to watch movies on. Most people are just going to look for other 
options if they have to pay every time they try to use a device in their 
household, and even if people are willing to pay, you still have to be able to 
deliver enough service to them to give them the speeds they want.

Until there is more spectrum available, I think DPI is a much better solution.. 
you can deprioritize and shape things like game downloads, and prioritize/shape 
their video streaming. I wish there was a better option, but I really don't 
think implementing UBB is a solution to this problem. It may give you more 
money to build up your network a bit, but it is poison to most customer's ears, 
and it won't change their behavior that much unless it's extremely painful for 
them financially.

On 6/21/2017 10:51 AM, Steve Jones wrote:

        
metered billing.. wave of the future



On Wed, Jun 21, 2017 at 9:46 AM, Adam Moffett < <mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected]> wrote:

        
I read some scary stuff the other day along a similar vein.

Basically if you're selling 25mbps then you'll need a 4:1 oversubscription 
ratio to support peak hours hi def streaming without complaint.
As adoption of 4K video increases, that ratio will approach 1:1.  You'll have 
to either start supplying 100meg, or start billing for consumption....or jack 
the price way up.

They were looking only at streaming video trends, and didn't even consider 
stuff like this.



------ Original Message ------
From: "Jeremy" < <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>
To:  <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]
Sent: 6/21/2017 1:03:09 AM
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Ready for the Xbox one X and 100GB games?

        
Yeah, this sucks for us.  Even worse, many of these games come out with dual 
licenses so that you can play on Windows 10 or XB1 for the same purchase.  I 
bought a couple games and checked it out.  It was amazing to be able to just 
continue my Halo Wars right where I left off on my laptop, but it was double 
the download size.  This makes Forza potentially 200GB, without DLC.  When you 
are providing customers 300-500GB per month without overages it makes heavy 
Xbox customers very quickly switch providers.  I'm not sure if that is a 
blessing or a curse.  For now, it has not been a gigantic churn issue for us, 
but the future of 4K content will likely hit us all pretty hard. 

My main issue with this is that purchasing a disc is not an option.  I 
initially bought discs, only to find that even after ripping them to the hard 
drive, I have to walk down to the network closet to insert the disc.  Digitally 
purchased games can just be loaded from a menu, like all of the hacked 
consoles.  There is no option to 'upgrade' to a digital license if you have 
purchased a disc.  Also, if you own multiple Xbox One consoles (say at home and 
at work), you can play any of your games on either console, at any time, just 
not simultaneously.  Discs are now useless to me.  The only way to get this 
digital license is to download it from the Internet (or hack the console...not 
yet an option).  This has been a big bummer to heavy Xbox users when they get 
hit with massive overages, and they usually switch to Comcast.

On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 10:19 PM, Eric Kuhnke < <mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected]> wrote:

        
This will be the new normal with the next generation Xbox, when many customers 
start bringing them home... 

 
<https://m.hardocp.com/news/2017/06/18/forza_motorsport_7_will_be_100gb_download>
 https://m.hardocp.com/news/2017/06/18/forza_motorsport_7_will_be_100gb_download


-- 
Simon Westlake
Email:  <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]
Phone: (702) 447-1247 US / (780) 900-1180 CA
---------------------------
Sonar Software Inc
The future of ISP billing and OSS
 <https://sonar.software> https://sonar.software

 

Reply via email to