I love the line that says, ...."metered broadband policies have been heavily
criticized in the U.S., resulting in the introduction of legislation that
aims to clamp down on such efforts.....".  Just what makes Broadband any
different than Cellular Phones, Electricity and Natural Gas?  Where does any
government in the United States have any say in how we charge for a product?
I say, the government needs to help me out.  I think I should be able to sit
at home with all the lights on, the A/C and the heat running at the same
time with, of course, all the windows and doors open.  (but with screens,
the bugs would piss me off and interfere with my overindulgent activities)
And at the same time, be on a three way conference call on my cell phone to
random persons in Europe and South America (just to say hi and ask about the
weather) and I think the providers should be forced to provide all this
badly needed luxuries at one low flat fee.  Sounds reasonable to me!  Who do
I talk to about getting this legislation started????

Robert West
Just Micro Digital Services Inc.



-----Original Message-----
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Kevin Suitor
Sent: Wednesday, August 19, 2009 11:52 AM
To: wireless@wispa.org
Subject: [WISPA] Metered Wideband

Thought this might open up some debate on what 'broadband' services should
look like ...

Kevin

________________________________

http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=180634&site=cdn&;
Rogers Rolls With Metered Wideband
August 18, 2009 | Jeff
Baumgartner<http://www.lightreading.com/profile.asp?piddl_userid=50> | Post
a
comment<http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=180634&site=cdn&#msg
s>
Post a
Comment<http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=180634&site=cdn&#msg
s>
Rogers Communications
Inc.<http://www.lightreading.com/complink_redirect.asp?vl_id=4707> (Toronto:
RCI<http://www.lightreading.com/quote.asp?Account=lightreading&Page=QUOTE&Ti
cker=RCI>), the largest MSO in Canada, has fitted its new Docsis
3.0<http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=173525> tier with a
"monthly usage allowance" of 175 GBytes.
After dropping a
hint<http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=179096&site=cdn> about
its Docsis 3.0 plans in July, Rogers today followed with the formal launch
of a new 50-Mbit/s downstream by 2-Mbit/s upstream wideband service to the
majority of its Greater Toronto Area (GTA) cable system. The "Ultimate" tier
sells for C$149.99 (US$135.90) per month. Rogers is also using Docsis 3.0
channel bonding to bump the max downstream of its Extreme Plus tier from 18
Mbit/s to 25 Mbit/s.
Rogers, which ended the second quarter with 1.57 million high-speed Internet
subs, said it will expand its deployment of Docsis 3.0 in the GTA and its
other cable markets in the "coming months." The fastest residential Internet
service from BCE Inc. (Bell
Canada)<http://www.lightreading.com/complink_redirect.asp?vl_id=653>
(NYSE/Toronto:
BCE<http://www.lightreading.com/quote.asp?Account=lightreading&Page=QUOTE&Ti
cker=BCE>), Rogers's primary competitor, offers 16 Mbit/s down by 1 Mbit/s
up, with a 75-GByte monthly usage cap.
As for Rogers's 50-meg Ultimate tier, the MSO charges $0.50 per GByte above
the 175GB monthly ceiling, but caps the maximum charge for additional use in
any given month at $25, so the most that even the heaviest Ultimate tier
users would theoretically have to pay is C$174.99 (US$158.94).
Although metered broadband policies have been heavily criticized in the
U.S., resulting in the introduction of legislation that aims to clamp down
on such efforts, Rogers adopted the usage-based model relatively early on.
Comcast Corp.<http://www.lightreading.com/complink_redirect.asp?vl_id=1220>
(Nasdaq: CMCSA, CMCSK) keeps "excessive use" in check with a monthly 250GB
ceiling, but doesn't charge by the gigabyte if customers breach the
threshold. (See Bill Could Kill Broadband Meters
<http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=178176&site=cdn> , TWC
Mothballs New Metering Trials
<http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=175401&site=cdn> , and
Comcast Draws the Line at
250GB<http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=162587&site=cdn>.)
Following a battery of tests and consumer communications efforts, Rogers
began enforcing its consumption-based model last July. (See Rogers Takes
Internet Meter to the
Masses<http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=155814&site=cdn>.)
To keep customers apprised of their usage, Rogers uses PerfTech
Inc.<http://www.lightreading.com/complink_redirect.asp?vl_id=11596> to
deliver in-browser messages when customers reach 75 percent of their monthly
allowance, and again when they actually hit the ceiling (customers can
permanently opt out of this if they wish). Rogers has also set up an area on
its
Website<http://www.hispeed.rogers.com/bband/content/keepingpace/trackyourusa
ge.html> that allows customers to track their Internet usage in real time.
Rogers has not disclosed what percentage of customers has been subject to
additional use charges so far, but "the overwhelming majority of customers
never reach their allowance thresholds," says Rogers Cable VP of product
management Chris Draper.
Here's how all of Rogers's high-speed Internet packages stack up today:
Table 1: Comparing Tiers
Package

Maximum Download Speed

Maximum Upstream Speed

Additional Usage Charge

Monthly Fee

Monthly Usage

Ultra-Lite

500 kbit/s

256 kbit/s

$5/GB*

$25.99

2 GB

Lite

3 Mbit/s

256 kbit/s

$2.50/GB*

$35.99

25 GB

Express

10 Mbit/s

512 kbit/s

$2/GB

$46.66

60 GB

Extreme

10 Mbit/s

1 Mbit/s

$1.50/GB

$59.99

95 GB

Extreme Plus

25 Mbit/s

1 Mbit/s

$1.25/GB

$95.99

125 GB

Ultimate

50 Mbit/s

2 Mbit/s

$0.50/GB

$149.99

175 GB

Source: Rogers Communications
*If this product was purchased before Jan. 14, 2008, there is no maximum
charge for additional use. If this product was purchased after Jan. 14,
2008, the maximum charge for additional use is $25.

Faster upstream on the horizon
Although Rogers's high-end tier limits upstream speeds at 2 Mbit/s, that
number could jump significantly when the MSO takes fuller advantage of
Docsis 3.0 and begins to bond upstream channels.
Rogers may try that in late 2010. "That's where the [usage] curves are
telling us that we need to have channel-bonded upstream available," Draper
says, noting that consumption requirements (upstream and downstream) on the
Rogers cable network are growing 4 percent each month.
'N' gateway standard with Docsis 3.0
Rather than starting off with standalone wideband modems, Rogers is kicking
off its deployment by standardizing on a cable modem gateway from SMC
Networks Inc.<http://www.lightreading.com/complink_redirect.asp?vl_id=5060>
that bakes in 802.11n. The key reason: "The overwhelming number of customers
we talk to about these [Docsis 3.0] service levels say having WiFi enabled
is an absolute must." However, Rogers eventually may "richen the mix of CPE"
for its wideband products, Draper adds.
Cisco Systems
Inc.<http://www.lightreading.com/complink_redirect.asp?vl_id=1131> (Nasdaq:
CSCO<http://www.lightreading.com/quote.asp?Account=lightreading&Page=QUOTE&T
icker=CSCO>) is Rogers's exclusive cable modem termination system (CMTS)
supplier.
- Jeff Baumgartner, Site Editor, Cable Digital
News<http://www.cabledigitalnews.com>




[cid:image001.jpg@01CA20C3.706FFF20]
Redline Communications Inc.
Kevin Suitor
Vice President, Corporate Marketing
302 Town Centre Blvd. Markham, ON L3R 0E8 CANADA
o: +1 905.948.2299     f: +1 647.723.0451     m: +1 416.508.1252
Skype:   ksuitor
e-mail:
ksui...@redlinecommunications.com<mailto:ksui...@redlinecommunications.com>
Web:
www.redlinecommunications.com<http://www.redlinecommunications.com/>














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