Re: Network end users to pull down 2 gigabytes a day, continuously?

From: Mike Leber (no email)
Date: Sat Jan 13 2007 - 05:57:34 EST

  • Next message: Marshall Eubanks: "Re: Network end users to pull down 2 gigabytes a day, continuously?"

    On Sat, 13 Jan 2007, Sean Donelan wrote:
    > On Fri, 12 Jan 2007, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
    > > There is no technical challenge here; what the pirates are already doing
    > > works pretty well, and with a little UI work it'd even be ready for the mass
    > > market. The challenges are figuring out how to pay for the pipes needed to
    > > deliver all these bits at consumer rates, and how to collect revenue from all
    > > the viewers to fairly compensate the producers -- both business problems,
    > > though for different folks.
    >
    > Will the North American market change from using speed to volume for
    > pricing Internet connections? Web hosting and other markets around the
    > world already use GB/transferred packages instead of the port speed.

    The North American market started with charging per GB transfered and went
    away from it because the drop in cost per Mbps for both circuits and
    transit made costs low enough so that providers could statistically
    multiplex their user base and offer "unlimited" service (unlimited for
    marketing departments is being able to offer something to 99 percent of
    your customer base, which explains all residential service clauses that
    state unlimited doesn't really mean unlimited).

    You can see this repeatedly for all sorts of products as costs have come
    down in the long view. For example, consumer Internet dialup, long
    distance calling plans, local phone service plans, some aspects of cell
    phone service, it might be happening with online storage right now (i.e.
    google gmail/gfs and the browser plugins that let you store files in your
    gmail account).

    What might or might not be trending is a digression, the "unlimited"
    service is a marketing condition that seems to occur when 99 percent of
    your customer base uses less than the cost equal to the benefit of
    offering "unlimited" service.

    Mike.

    +----------------- H U R R I C A N E - E L E C T R I C -----------------+
    | Mike Leber Direct Internet Connections Voice 510 580 4100 |
    | Hurricane Electric Web Hosting Colocation Fax 510 580 4151 |
    | http://www.he.net |
    +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+


  • Next message: Marshall Eubanks: "Re: Network end users to pull down 2 gigabytes a day, continuously?"





    Hosted Email Solutions

    Invaluement Anti-Spam DNSBLs



    Powered By FreeBSD   Powered By FreeBSD