FreeUTOPIA Podcast for February 14, 2009
Our guest is Tim McClanahan of FuzeCore. I apologize in advance for the audio issues as I had my mic volume a bit too loud and didn’t realize it until after we were done. I’ll be sure to do better sound checks in the future.
First FreeUTOPIA Podcast This Saturday
The first FreeUTOPIA podcast will be recorded live this Saturday Feburary 14 at 1:30PM. You can listen in using Teamspeak and we may even take some “callers”. The conversation will be moderated, but Teamspeak does support text chat. To join in, connect to podcast.freeutopia.org and join the Podcast channel.
If you can questions you’d like me to ask during the podcast or topics you’d like us to discuss, post them in the comments or use Twitter with the #freeutopia hashtag.
Centerville Inches Closer to RDA-Funded Fiber Hub Despite SB205 Threat
Centerville is getting closer to using RDA money to build a fiber hub in the city even as the threat of Sen. Bramble’s RDA amendments loom. The city council was unanimuous in voting to draft final documents to make it all happen. Once built, it would rescue about $2M worth of “stranded investment” at a cost of around $100K.
Sen. Bramble’s boxcar legislation for the changes, SB205, may contain provisions that would allow such carrier-neutral infrastructure to be built with RDA money, but there’s still a very strong chance that the provision would be nixed and telecom spending banned outright. You’d better contact your state senators and representatives to make them aware of what’s coming.
UPDATE: The Standard-Examiner has more on the story.
UTOPIA Mobile Home Spotted in Brigham City
Commenter Dave has noted that he has seen UTOPIA’s mobile home cruising the streets of Brigham City. From what I’ve heard, this is being used as a mobile office to provide local demonstrations and provide local support ahead of any marketing efforts. Don’t know if they were passing through for gas on their way to Tremonton or if it means that service in Brigham is right around the corner. Your best bet is to call up UTOPIA or one of its providers to find out if service is available to you.
Is the wait over in Layton? UTOPIA service may be available!
Forum commenter mabuxton reports that they’re getting UTOPIA installed at their Layton home in just two weeks. XMission and two other providers (I’m guessing FuzeCore and Nuvont) are reportedly going to have residential service available in the area and you can sign up for the install right now. If you’ve been waiting with baited breath to get UTOPIA service in the city, now is the time to call!
Broadband Bytes: January 31-February 6, 2009
It feels like the summer TV season as most of the news this week is reruns from last week. The DTV delay and broadband stimulus continue to dominate the news headlines. We also saw the launch of Lafayette’s fiber project, some new gadget news and more bad news from device manufacturers and SPs. All this and more in this week’s Broadband Bytes!
- The DTV delay has now passed both houses of Congress complete with another $650M for converter box coupons, enough to fund over 16M more of the devices. The bigger problem, however, is that the supply of converter boxes is nowhere near that amount and shortages are projected by the end of this month. That might be alleviated by the relatively small number of homes still unprepared for the switch, currently estimated at 5.1% of all procrastinators viewers or somewhere in the neighborhood of 5.8M homes. Even at two boxes per each remaining home, that still wouldn’t eat up all of the available coupons, even though it would likely out-strip the available supply.A bigger problem, though, is that many broadcasters have said they have no plans to abandon the original transition date since they’ve already spent so much time and money preparing for it and haven’t allocated the funds to continue doing analog transmissions. As many as 61% of broadcasters will not extend analog transmissions all the way until the new June 12 deadline and they have until February 9 to tell the FCC about it. Here in Utah, only the PBS and UEN stations have firmly committed to continue broadcasting in analog past Feburary 17.
- The proposed broadband stimulus continues to take shape as various special interests massage the House and Senate versions of the bills. The Senate dropped their version to $7.5B under pressure to trim back the total cost of the stimulus package. There’s still disagreement as to who should administer the lion’s share of the funding, though the National Cable & Telecommunications Association and Free Press, two groups long at odds with each other, are both in favor of allowing the NTIA to take over instead of RUS. The NCTA and Rural Telecommunications Alliance also are in agreement that money needs to go to unserved areas first. There’s also plenty of nay-sayers who think the state of broadband is just peachy, though it’s not too terribly hard to put them in their place.
- After years of lawsuits, construction and industry sock puppetry, Lafayette finally has a fiber network open for business with highly competitive pricing. The utility system owns and operates the network as the sole service provider, offering both triple-play packages and 100Mbit connections on-network. The network should be fully deployed by 2011. Prices are averaging a good 20% below what Cox Communications and AT&T, the local incumbents, currently offer. I’m sure you can expect both of them to go on a price-slashing frenzy, much like local incumbents have done ahead of UTOPIA and iProvo. Of course, you could be a smart incumbent like Dutch provider KPN. They partnered with municipal efforts to deploy FTTP and have reaped big rewards, even with a bunch of competing service providers.
- Your customers are perfectly content to stick with free TV choices, especially as programmers cook up new DTV uses like more programs, more options, and more local programming. Options like PlayOn, which streams video from your PC to your XBox360, PS3 or any DNLA-compliant device give consumers even more free and paid VOD options. Roku, makers of the $99 Netflix box, is also looking at adding support for Amazon’s VOD platform. So what are you doing to get a cut of that action? Are you partnering with online video providers to stream online video from your own STBs? Do you offer an over-the-air HD DVR? What are you doing about Netflix’s 1.5 billion minutes of video served to XBox360 owners since November? And, more importantly, how can you keep savvy customers who know how to slash their bill? Free is a very competitive price. Verizon is trying to get ahead of the curve by streaming video to the Verizon Hub.
Speaking of streaming video, it seems that cable networks are content to use streaming to sell directly to customers. Netflix is reportedly working on streaming HBO’s library of original programming for $10/mo. With cable networks producing more original content than ever before, it’s incumbent upon service providers to find ways to keep on delivering the content and getting a slice of the revenue or risk being put out of the video business entirely. Internet video viewing was up 41% in December and shows no signs of slowing down. One of the few things that keeps advertisers from jumping ship entirely is a lack of standards for online video and a glut of data on who’s viewing what and how.
- It wouldn’t be 2009 without some bad economic news, would it? Motorola, Time Warner, Cisco, and Windstream are all reporting hard times. Time Warner topped the field at a $16B Q4 loss and plans to cut over 1200 jobs.
- Caps and throttling refuse to get out of the news. Cox Communications is busy trying to defend its network management plan to the FCC as video provider Vuze keeps on sniping at them in the news. Comcast also had to explain how its VoIP system works in relation to its network management policies, claiming that because it is a managed service it shouldn’t be treated the same as other traffic types. Time Warner, meanwhile, is rolling out caps to more markets, albeit with higher caps that what they’ve been playing with in Beaumont, TX. Charter is going whole-hog with a system-wide cap policy that’s about as generous as Comcast’s. The best way to make sure you don’t get on the bad side of customers, the FCC or some of the “net neutrality” zealots is to make a clear and concise policy, publish the full details and make sure that any management scheme is generous, fair and only active when absolutely necessary. Software companies are already putting out packages to make management easier and less likely to alienate your customers.
- The need for speed continues. Canadian cable company Shaw launched a 100Mbps service for CDN$250 a month (albeit with a 200GB monthly cap) and Time Warner rolled out 20Mbps service to Hawaii, the highest speed the island has seen from residential service. Cox Communications also plans to upgrade more of its network to 1GHz equipment; combined with SDV, Cox will be able to offer more SD and HD channels as well as a 25M/4M service without DOCSIS 3.0 upgrades. Verizon finally caught a break in Comcast’s hometown of Philadelphia and will be installing FIOS. Fiber competition is especially noteworthy for consumers. Powell, WY has sparked a price war just days after opening its FTTH system for business. Don’t count Comcast out, however; they’ve got DOCSIS 3.0 in a large swath of their footprint. And Time Warner is pulling its head out of the sand and realizing that as long as the trenches are open in a greenfield, they might as well drop in fiber.
Of course, we’re still being put to shame internationally. Korea plans to drop in 1Gbps fiber by 2012 with an investment of nearly $25B to deploy the network upgrades.
- Are you moving beyond the triple-play? AT&T is doing just that with an integrated network portal and femtocell. Such a device could let them turn every U-Verse subscriber into a miniature cell tower. Networks without their own wireless solution should look at partnering with wireless companies to roll these out along their own footprint and pick up some extra revenue. Qwest has gotten into the game by offering up to 2GB of free online backup space to its subscribers (while, simultaneously, trying to screw over landline customers with higher rates). Verizon is also exploring new network services, albeit only the kind that next-generation fiber can support. They plan to roll out videoconferencing, home security and home energy management services Real Soon Now™. Distance education could also take a big leap forward with new low-cost online universities that use peer learning and open coursework to offer classes for as little as $15 a pop.
- Comcast got some egg on its face during the Superbowl when its Tuscon operation accidentally popped 30 seconds of porn into the last few minutes of the game. They handled it very gracefully, however, by offering all affected customers a $10 service credit along with profuse apologies and a vow to track down the culprit. Comcast has been claiming it was a malicious act, but cheekier suggestions are that an employee was watching porn and accidentally hit the wrong button on the switchboard. In either case… oops.
Is Frontier Blowing Smoke on LNP?
After posting that Frontier Communications was giving competing telcos a hard time with porting numbers, commenter Aaron Wilcox, the Utah Account Manager for Frontier, advised that Frontier would be more than happy to port numbers given the proper paperwork was filed with the Utah Public Services Commission. At least one service provider called bunk on that claim citing that under current telecommunications law, the Utah PSC doesn’t issue the Certificates of Public Convenience and Necessity that Aaron refers to if the service area in question has less than 5,000 lines. Documents I received from the PSC indicated that they suspended LNP waivers for rural telecoms, but those documents only reference wireline-to-wireless transfers, not wireline-to-wireline.
So which is it? Can customers in Tremonton port their numbers or does Frontier have those numbers permanently locked down? Is the suspension of the wavier a boon only to wireless companies? Could customers get their phone number to a UTOPIA provider by transferring to a wireless carrier and then porting the number again? It sounds like Frontier has been taking advantage of the current regulatory structure and resulting confusion to keep customers locked into their service.
Sen. Bramble Looking to Ban RDA Funds for Telecom
Senator Curt “Take My Check, Pizza Girl” Bramble is working on amending RDA laws in Utah to make sure that funds aren’t spent on any telecommunications projects. This is reportedly a direct reaction to Centerville’s proposed use of RDA funds to build fiber-optic infrastructure within the city, even though the proposal on the table allows any network to use it. Sen. Bramble has a well-deserved reputation for being prickly, so be prepared if you decide to communicate directly with him.
It’s very important that you write, call or speak with your senator or representative to make sure they know how you feel about this change. UTOPIA cities are working to make sure that the language will allow for it so long as it is vendor-neutral, but your voices are much, much louder.
A Note to All Commenters
I thought the last post on this topic would have summed it up, but apparently not. I even tried to inject a little humor into the conversation so that it wouldn’t sound like I’m being a jerk or overreacting. Apparently that went in one ear and right out the other, so now it’s time to lay it all out.
To date, I’ve used a very light hand with comments both on blog posts and on the forum. I haven’t edited or deleted any comment from the site and have allowed the obvious sock puppets and trolls to do as they please, content to let the behavior and content speak for itself. I’ve never outed an anonymous commenter either, even if they probably deserved it. I think I’ve given everyone a lot of latitude to do more-or-less whatever they want around here.
All that said, I’ve got a problem with some of the piling on that some of you have engaged in. It’s not okay to continuously, over the course of months, misrepresent someone’s clearly stated position. I especially don’t like it when you push someone’s buttons over and over to get them to flip out. That’s grade school stuff, especially when you try and make them out to be the bad guy when it happens. I recently had to call crap on someone for continuing to do it and I hate that it came to that.
I’m also not looking to preach to the choir around here. That’s why I’ve used a light hand on comments and forum posts. I want both people who agree with me and disagree with me to feel welcome to say their piece. I want to be corrected when I have something wrong, something that several service providers have been gracious enough to do. When there’s roving gangs looking to purge out whatever heresy it is that they’re objecting to, that process gets ruined. Remember back before the Broadweave sale was approved and there were commenters on both sides of the issue? That’s what I’m talking about.
Guys, chill out. If all you want to do is insult other commenters, go back to 4chan where you belong. If you’ve been afraid to comment because of the trolls, ignore them. Post anyway. Don’t let them intimidate you. Good heavens, you’re grown adults. It’s time to start acting the part.
I’m not singling anyone out here. Too many have been guilty of this at some point or another to even try naming names. It’s time to move on and stop being childish. I’m not going to start moderating comments or blocking users. I’m just going to ignore anyone who proves less-than-useful in their contributions and would encourage everyone else to do the same. I spend too much time working on this site (most of it for free, I might add) to be a babysitter. If you don’t like what I’m doing, feel free to spend two and a half years building up your own blog and contacts because I don’t need your crap.
Note: Comments are closed on this post. If you have a problem with it, feel free to e-mail me, complain on your blog or whatever it is that makes you feel better.