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DSL Prime: Underperformance in Closed Markets Kennard's Carlyle fails to grow subscribers in Hawaii. In Britain, government intervention will be required in order to equal the high standards in the rest of Europe.
Gordon Brown, Mr. Prime Minister, has decided Britain can't afford the second rate Internet BT is proposing. (1 Mbps up, 20 Mbps down or so.) His OFCOM chief, Ed Richards, is refusing to give BT a subsidy; Ben Verwaayen is holding out for government money or increased monopoly power. Stepping in to make a deal is cabinet minister Shriti Vadera. Insider Kip Meeks holds out little hope for avoiding a giveaway to BT. "Success will depend on securing the support of the big playersthe BTs, the Skys and the Carphone Warehouses" (next issue, UK, Who Will Pay). Franco Bernabč at Telecom Italia has just canceled hundreds of millions in investments until he also gets a government handout. Vivianne Reding at the EU might object to a subsidy to a dominant carrier. She deeply believes in making competition effective. To my surprise, she strongly recommends point-to-point fibre deployment rather than GPON or VDSL. "It is the only approach to next generation access that permits a completely open access policy with the unbundling that has put Europe in the lead today." GPON has been the almost exclusive choice in the West (BT, Verizon, AT&T), but Amsterdam and Geneva want a more open system. Her battle with Germany over VDSL competition show how problematic that can be, and GPON could be even more trouble. Sorry this issue ran so long. I didn't have enough time to write anything shorter. Maybe some of you will be at Victor Harwood's Media Summit Wednesday and Thursday in New York. Say hello to the round fellow with a (temporarily diminished) beard. If I had the travel budget I'd be off to Ultrabroadband in Paris and Telco 2.0 in London, but for now they are an ocean too far.
Stories not yet written
A disagreement, not a correction: Comcast strongly asserts I should not have written the story that they intend for DOCSIS 3.0 to reach 50 percent of their subscribers in 2009. I'm waiting for them to get back to me with better information about what their real plans are for 2009 if that story is mistaken. I have indirect confirmation their build will come very rapidly, unless more technical problems come up. Moving fast is the best way to resolve some of their D.C. problems. DOCSIS 3.0 is at least 12 times faster than what they have now on the upstream, and even more compared to AT&T and Qwest.
Trouble in Kennard's Hawaiian Paradise Korea and Japan are actually seeing DSL subscribers fall as many switch to fiber. Hawaii is the first example I've seen of an actual drop in DSL numbers because of slow growth and a loss to cable. I was amazed at such a severe problem, because Bill Kennard at owner Carlyle is among the most brilliant and thoughtful people I've met in this industry. I remember an event at which he spoke after half a dozen senior CEOs, and clearly was thinking ahead of any of them. Hawaii Tel's problem is apparently that the private equity group is trying to pull out too much cash after overpaying when they bought the property from Verizon. Buyout firms for the last decade have developed a strategy of cutting expenditures dramatically and pulling out enough cash to guarantee a profit. They hope to raise efficiency enough to compensate, but that's not always possible. Hawaii Tel has serious service problems likely to become worse as they cut staff. They've upgraded to ADSL2 in some areas, but haven't invested in fiber or many remote cabinets.
Copyright 2008 Dave Burstein. "The power of the printing press belongs solely to those who own the
presses" The Internet is the cheapest printing press ever invented.
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