
DSL
DSL Prime News: The Inside Source
DSL Prime decries the regulatory neglect that allowed Covad to
go into Chapter 11, examines the Bells' attempts to monopolize video on demand,
and covers other urgent, breaking news.
"The world needs Covad. Without them, the Bells will just continue to get
all the subscribers, raise prices, and offer bad service."
Mike Lunsford, Earthlink in the final issue of The Industry Standard.
Sony and the rest of Hollywood plan to distribute movies on the net. SBC plans
to block anyone distributing movies without giving SBC a major cut. SBC's "Contract
Killer" is circulating, keeping ISPs off of SBC's video speed channel to the
home. Verizon is taking the opposite approach, with Tom Tauke promising "If
you're a content provider or ISP, you'll have open access to our network, with
non-discriminatory treatment, terms and conditions."
Hollywood now has extraordinary incentive to bring their lobbying power into
play, starting by blocking the Bells' move to eliminate all regulation in D.C.,
Tauzin-Dingell.
Mike Powell can immediately take two actions:
- Enforce ordinary truth-in-advertising and anti-fraud laws, requiring SBC
(and the other providers) to reliably deliver the 1.5 meg speeds promised.
- Make sure ISPs and content providers can connect at those advertised speeds,
without unreasonable tolls. This open access at the edge is the only practical
way to have a network running at 1.5 meg. Full-screen video requires about
1 meg, and that's the real definition of advanced services.
Who controls the fast Internet will be a leading freedom of speech issue for
the next decade. Our report on SBC, Verizon, and how to ensure the future is
below.
Meanwhile, enjoy New Orleans and the DSL Forum meeting. Wish we were there,
but Jennie and I plan Washington twice, ISPCon Vegas in October, London for
Streaming Media and IEC Broadband in late October, Paris in November for publisher
meetings. Hope to meet more of you.
Paradyne's PlumYahoo Japan
Softbank doesn't want to turn away customers
UBS Warburg broke the story, and we confirmed it independently, although Paradyne
refuses to comment. Yahoo Japan has ordered several hundred thousand lines from
Paradyne of Reach DSL. Yahoo's main equipment suppliers will be Medialincs for
DSLAMs (TI chips, confirmed. Unconfirmed that Virata also made a sale) and Ambit/Acer
for modems (Virata, Alcatel?) running world standard Annex A equipment. Annex
A gear has short reach (less than 8,000 feet) when in the same binder as Japan's
version of ISDN, and the low-power Paradyne DSLAMs will be used to serve customers
further away.
Broadband Gateways downed
Evolo looked great, but market isn't there
Rashid Skaf and Greg Jones have been wowing the industry with a gorgeous unit
with interesting features, but the market for consumer VoDSL just isn't there
yet. Everyone has been facing the same bind: the telcos don't want to invest
until the price comes down, but the price can't come down until there is volume.
Soon, with a bill of materials cost between $75 (HPNA) and about $130 (802.11
wireless), pricing should come down to create a market, but many will fail in
the meantime.
Alcatel plugs in voice
7300 VoDSL board a tough competitor
DSL Prime made a significant mistake in our reporting, attributing the software
for the Alcatel 5.2 gateway to partner TdSoft. In fact, the development was
done by Alcatel, as Marc Verhoeyen explains "We began work in early 2000, deciding
we wanted our own product. To get to market quickly we used partners, including
TI for DSP and TI/Telogy for voice handling software. The main processor is
from Motorola and supports 64kbit and 32 kbit ADPCM. Further compression is
possible, but will need new home gateways and additional signaling." It's currently
in trials with a dozen customers, with European CLECs expected to be among early
adopters. "For the CLECs, voice is a no-brainer for extra revenue. The ILECs
are moving more slowly, but want to be ready for competition."
We are journalists, not investment advisers; invest at your own risk and
do further research.
Copyright 2001 Dave Burstein.
The DSL Prime Newsletter is reprinted with permission.
"The power of the printing press belongs solely to those who own the presses"
A.J. Leibling
The Internet is the cheapest printing press ever invented.
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