ADSL & the service cost equation

By the end of 2002, the DSL market was under duress in the U.S., as DirecTV, a subsidiary of the giant Hughes Corporation (itself owned by General Motors), announced in Dec. the discontinuation of its DIRECTV Broadband service within 60 to 90 days. The company, in a  press release, vowed to work to transition its roughly 160,000 customers to another (so far unnamed) provider.

Indeed, the list of defunct DSL providers is growing long in the U.S. Looking at the DirecTV Broadband lineage alone:

Phoenix Networks transferred DSL users to Telocity when it died. Several months later, Telocity also died, transferring users to Direct TV DSL -- which has now died, too, in the wake of a failed merger between Hughes and EchoStar, owner of the Dish Network.

In eastern Canada, Bell Canada has taken the dramatic step of applying bandwidth caps to some users' accounts -- a "fair access policy" not unlike the FAP implemented by some internet satellite service providers in the U.S.

Meanwhile, in Western Canada, Telus sent emails to customers of its Velocity ADSL service, advising them of an increase in monthly fees to $59.95. According to Telus, the increases affect business customers only and are being implemented to "improve the quality of service."

Others are trimming back the bandwidth of all their users, to reduce their raw bandwidth costs.

How Fast?

BellSouth (download/upload, average): 1280/220; Earthlink: 1050/128. Before it died, DirecTV/DSL delivered around 1500/128.

Another frequently cited complaint about Earthlink is its PPPoE-based service. To its credit, though, Earthlink offers static IP addresses for a small additional cost (US$15/mo over the standard service cost of $50/mo.)-- a necessity for some users.

DSLReports [dslreports.com] (forum)
DirecTV DSL [directvdsl.com] (info for customers)
Press Release [prnewswire.com] from Hughes (parent company of DirecTV)

For Further Reading:

Post new comment

More like this . . .

802.11g versus 802.11a

New Wireless tech promises 54 Megabits of data per second -- and delivers about 22. Introduction One of the most heavily hyped new technologies to...

Wireless Windows XP

Introduction Microsoft promises Windows XP delivers a seamless wireless networking experience, with easy setup and reliable performance. That's just...

802.11a: Faster Wireless

Introduction 802.11a is  higher speed (54Mbps) variant of the 802.11b technology now commonly used in many unlicensed spectrum (local range)...

Firewalls

What is a firewall and why would I need one? Security, according to Rob Davis, a Network Consultant at Lucent Technologies' Network Consulting Group...

Internet Telephony

Free Long Distance Phone calls Free Long Distance Calls Capped:  Microsoft has begun curtailing its free net-based long distance service,...

Wireless Networking part 1

"Customers who want mobility in their home network now have a "simple  way to  take advantage of untethered  Internet and...

Exchange 2000 Setup Tips

Setup Tips Exchange 2000 has been out long enough that users have uncovered more than 160 bugs -- most of which, fortunately, are of a minor nature...