Imakeholesinu wrote:My networking team and I talked about the upgrades that would have to be performed on the backbones that could allow for 16 times the amount of bandwidth to go through one line of fiber. Apparently instead of just sending information down one spectrum of light down a peice of fiber you can split it out to 8 different colors now. And then that each one of those 8 spectrums of color can be divided in half again to give you 16GB of bandwidth per 1 peice of fiber channel.
Oh yeah, we know about fiber multiplexers. We use those for our fiber network that interconnects the headends. Though it's not exactly cheap, that part isn't the expensive part. Neither is the backbone links. (We're using Carrier Ethernet, instead of POS/SONET links, for most of our fiber network and some of our backbone links.)
The expensive part is that last mile to the customers' home. The points from the headend to the houses. That's a LOT of cable everywhere. So, at least in terms of FioS, that is the mega-expensive part. As far as cable, it's dealing with all of the video contracts to shift channel space around, the 3.0 modems and other 3.0 hardware.
Imakeholesinu wrote:Now I know this really doesn't help the cable industry but as far as the telco industry these splitters don't cost any more than the first fiber spilters when they first came out. This I know for a fact.
Well, there's labor costs involved (a lot of labor), and even when you add up all of the hardware/labor, you have to multiply it by your number of customers. If you have a 500K customers in a city, that's a lot of money to deal with.
Imakeholesinu wrote:This technology to easily upgrade the infrastructure is out there and quite honestly AT&T makes a lot of money off of my $20 a month 768K DSL. What it all boils down to is money. AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, Time Warner and COX are all more concerned with profit margins than providing customers service at a decent price without limitations. The cap limitations or metered billing would just add more money in the pockets of those people who are getting fat off the land instead of investing more in their infrastructure to make it stronger and safer.
Of course they are concerned about profit margins. Though, the industry makes about a 30-35% profit, which is fairly typical for any company. That's not to say that companies like AT&T, Verizon, or Comcast aren't evil, but compare that to the profit margins of the insurance industry or those damn Santas in the mall. (I paid $32 for a fucking flash drive with one picture on it. Between the camera, Santa suit, and employees, it does not cost anywhere NEAR $32 to make that single picture.)
Imakeholesinu wrote:An example from the cell-phone industry is that AT&T markets itself as a 3G phone company. When Verizon Wireless started running adds to contrast against AT&T meek 3G coverage AT&T cried foul. Sure you still get Shitty edge internet everywhere else can you do anything on edge? Those huge iphone data plans must be getting carved up and sent to steve jobs and apple more than they are in R&D on AT&T's side to actually provide a service that the advertise they have.
Blame Apple. Before the iPhone came out, Apple approached Verizon about the iPhone, but Verizon laughed at the terms. Apple wanted full control over anything to do with the iPhone, including a ridiculous profit sharing model. Instead, AT&T buys into it, hook-line-sinker. So, Apple gets away with the profits and has a clean reputation, while AT&T gets shit on and people will leave in droves when the iPhone is non-exclusive. Fitting for the Death Star, but I hate Apple even more.