Re: single homed public-peer bandwidth ... pricing survey ?

From: Patrick W. Gilmore (no email)
Date: Tue Mar 06 2007 - 18:08:26 EST

  • Next message: Justin M. Streiner: "Re: single homed public-peer bandwidth ... pricing survey ?"

    On Mar 6, 2007, at 6:00 PM, Jason Arnaute wrote:
    > --- Patrick Giagnocavo <> wrote:
    >> Jason Arnaute wrote:

    >>> I am currently hosted in a small, independent
    >>> datacenter that has 4 or 5 public peers (L3,
    >> Sprint,
    >>> UUnet, AT&T and ... ?)
    >>>
    >>> They are a very nice facility, very technical and
    >>> professional, and have real people on-site 24
    >> hours
    >>> per day ... remote hands, etc. All very high end
    >> and
    >>> well managed.
    >>>
    >>> But, I am charged between $150 and $180 per
    >> megabit/s
    >>> for non-redundant, single-homed bandwidth (not
    >> sure
    >>> which provider they put it on) and even if I
    >> commit to
    >>> 20 or 30 megabits/s it still only drops down to
    >> $100 -
    >>> $120 per megabit/s.
    >>>
    >>>
    >> Are you sure that you are connected to only one
    >> provider? You mean that
    >> they are not doing BGP so that if one connection
    >> goes down, another path
    >> to the Internet is available?
    >
    >
    > Yes, that's what I am saying - one pipe only, and if
    > it goes down, I go down.

    I am confused.

    You list 4 very, very large providers, yet say the datacenter has one
    pipe. Those two statements are in conflict - you can't get all 4 of
    them on one pipe.

    Also, you have not mentioned your volume. You say L3 is $30/Mbps,
    but they are no where near that for 1-5 Mbps of traffic.

    -- 
    TTFN,
    patrick
    > So ... I am wondering if roughly $150/mb/s is just way
    > off the charts for something like that, or if I am
    > only overpaying by roughly 10-30% or so ...
    >
    > And then, of course, I'd like to be pointed to where I
    > can learn why HE.NET and L3 are so cheap compared to
    > that, and what my cost/benefit would be to
    > switching...
    >
    > (as for racks and power, it is on the high average
    > side.  Roughly $1000/mo for a full cabinet)
    >
    >
    >
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  • Next message: Justin M. Streiner: "Re: single homed public-peer bandwidth ... pricing survey ?"





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