The cable companies are idiots (run by idiots). From a consumer  perspective
they are greedy and have close to zero interest in customer  satisfaction.
 
They listen to no-one except themselves. 
 
Then there are all those excuses  -threats to cut off services like  C-Span-
about why a la carte is not possible. But as much as I think McCain is a  
has-been
and should retire, when he does something right, why is it that he is  
getting nowhere 
in Congress promoting a good and decent plan to require providers to offer  
a la carte?
Its not just the cable companies that are at fault, it is also  Congress.
 
A simple system ought to be very easy to put  together:
* Basic package, say $15, local channels, plus the networks, and
any infomerical channels a cable service wants to add, and
* Various plans for pick-and-choose, say $ 10 increments
for each additional 10 channels. Maybe each 10 channels
would come with 3 or 4 infomercial channels 
as part of the deal. I could live with that,
couldn't you?
 
What's wrong with this idea?  Nothing.
 
Therefore it will be totally ignored.
 
I'm used to it by now.
Billy
 
==================================
 
 
 
Consumerist
 
 
Why New Fiber Networks Are Required To  Shatter Monopolies Of Comcast & 
Other ISPs
By _Chris  Morran_ (http://consumerist.com/author/chrismorranconsumerist/)  
October 2, 2013 

 
 
It’s one thing if a company earns a dominant market share in a region  
because consumers have voted with their wallets and decided that Company X is  
the best around and it’s the only one they want. It’s another when, in the 
case  of the cable industry, that monopoly isn’t earned, but is instead the 
result of  outdated regulations that force a certain company on consumers 
based on ZIP  code. The introduction of higher-speed fiber-optic networks like 
Google Fiber  and AT&T’s new experiment in Austin may shatter the concrete 
feet of a cable  colossus like Comcast.  
In a _really good piece for the Washington Post, Timothy Lee  demonstrates_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-switch/wp/2013/10/01/these-charts-s
how-comcast-acting-more-and-more-like-a-monopolist/)  how he believes 
Comcast is reining in access to faster Internet  download speeds in order to 
cash 
in on customers with few other options. 
He points out that while Comcast has increased the speed of its most 
popular  broadband offering, the “Performance” tier, from 3Mbps to 20Mbps over 
the last  10 years, the company is now able to deliver speeds of up to 105Mbps 
without the  customer having to upgrade her in-home equipment. But in order 
to reach that  level of speed, you would need to pay around $115 per month, 
more than double  what most people pay for the Performance tier. 
Lee explains: 
Comcast is engaging in what economists call price discrimination. Different 
 customers are willing to pay dramatically different amounts for broadband  
connectivity. So offering different tiers of service, with dramatically  
different speeds, helps to maximize Comcast’s profits. 
Comcast knows the majority of its customers are not going to pay much more  
than $50 per month for broadband service no matter how fast it is. So  
upgrading its Performance tier wouldn’t earn Comcast much more revenue than  it’
s already getting. At the same time, keeping the Performance tier at a  
pokey 20 Mbps makes Comcast’s higher tiers more attractive in  comparison.
Comcast — and they’re not the only ones who do this, by far — would not be 
 able to do this (or would have a more difficult time doing it) if it had 
any  competition whatsoever in the markets it serves. For comparison’s sake, 
Lee  points to the wireless industry, where smartphone manufacturers and 
network  operators are continually trying to outperform each other, introducing 
 innovations at a heretofore unseen rate. And that is in an industry 
dominated by  four providers and a handful of manufacturers. 
Cable companies like Comcast might have competition for TV service from the 
 likes of DirecTV and Dish, most satellite TV subscribers are still using 
their  local cable or phone company for Internet service, and very few phone 
companies  offer Internet service that competes with even the slowest tier 
from a cable  company. 
“In other words, Comcast’s strategy only works because Comcast faces 
limited  competition in many markets,” writes Lee. “If Comcast had more 
competitors, they  would pressure Comcast to cut the price of its highest speed 
tiers and raise the  speed of its cheapest offerings.” 
Verizon has made some inroads in cable-dominated regions, offering FiOS,  
which competes with the cable companies for both TV and ISP customers. I’m 
still  hoping that FiOS continues to grow (and that other companies follow 
suit), but I  question Verizon’s commitment to building out that network in the 
wake of a  recent deal that formed marketing partnerships between Verizon 
Wireless and  various cable providers. Why would the company invest more 
money in building out  the network and then try to lure in customers when it 
can 
make money selling its  existing wireless service to established cable 
customers?  
There is some hope on the horizon, with Google Fiber — which has only been  
charging $70/month for gigabit Internet service — moving beyond its initial 
 testing in Kansas City and into Provo, Utah. The company also wants to lay 
fiber  in Austin, which would make for an interesting showdown with AT&T, 
which has  announced plans for its own fiber network in the Texas city.  
But it doesn’t require the investment of a national company to provide a  
fiber network. Some cities and towns, like Chattanooga, TN, have gone ahead 
and  built out their own fiber networks. In fact, _this recent survey_ 
(http://consumerist.com/2013/09/05/want-fast-internet-live-near-rich-people/)  
found that the fastest average download  speeds in the nation are in tiny 
Ephrata, WA, where the 7,600 residents have  access to a high-speed fiber 
network. 
With traditional TV viewing becoming less popular while services like  
Netflix, Google Play, Hulu Plus and others grow in popularity, you will begin 
to 
 see consumers willing to jump ship to any fiber provider who can offer  
dependable, fast downloads at a reasonable price. But this requires the  
construction of networks, which requires that municipal leaders are on board  
(and not in the cable companies’ pockets).  
So if you want fiber for your town or city, tell your local community  
leaders. Demand competition and the chance to decide for yourself which company 
 
you give your money to each month.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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