On 11/2/2005 3:41 AM, Tom DeReggi created:
[...]
> Sounds like a good plan. You can do that at gigabit speeds, because
> people that know they need to buy gigabit speeds understand the
> business. Residential End users on the other hand do not.
I actually do it at tens-of-megabits-speed for (mos
This is a situation where additional regulation will only help those
adept at manipulating the regulators. (Additional comments inline)
On 11/1/2005 10:10 PM, Tom DeReggi created:
> The truth is services like VOIP and IPTV are going to challenge end
> user's connections, and they are going to lear
I read this on /. I think its a load of bs. Wont last long and it will
point out just how much of a monopoly
they have become (again). Maybe the FCC/DOJ will step in and break them
up again? Now who gets
to set these fees? I wonder if i can charge $10/bit that his customers
use of mine =-)
J
Have heard the same thing from others concerning voip and iptv.
Guess it's not an isolated thought.
George
Tony Weasler wrote:
--- MarketWatch Quote ---
"How do you think they're going to get to customers? Through a
broadband pipe. Cable companies have them. We have them," said Ed
Whitacre in
--- MarketWatch Quote ---
"How do you think they're going to get to customers? Through a
broadband pipe. Cable companies have them. We have them," said Ed
Whitacre in a BusinessWeek Online interview. "What they would like to
do is use my pipes for free. I ain't going to let them do that."
He argue