nanog mailing list archives

Re: BBN/GTEI


From: dlr () bungi com (Dave Rand)
Date: Sat, 22 Aug 1998 07:14:08 PDT

[In the message entitled "Re: BBN/GTEI" on Aug 21, 23:20, Bruce Hahne writes:]
On-net facilities have made distance-sensitive pricing in most metro areas a
thing of the past. Sub $0.04 per DS0-mile long-haul rates have made long
haul circuits very affordable.  High speed WDM dark fiber routes will make
long haul very, very cheap in the next 2 years.

This is the old "bandwidth is so cheap that it's free" argument.  True,
bandwidth is now inexpensive enough for a single DS0 that it's becoming
counterproductive, from a marketing standpoint, for the telco to attempt to
differentiate based on distance for a voice call.  But if we're ever to
arrive at the day when I can turn on my 100Mbps video-over-IP feed to my
home PC over my FTTH connection, and expect to actually get reasonable
performance, we're probably going to need both metering and inter-provider
settlements.


What I said was "distance-sensitive pricing in most metro areas" is
not a market reality.

Billing for bandwidth used is a good thing.  Billing for
packet-flow-ds0-miles-per-aardvark is madness.

Figure out what your costs are, and bill your customers appropriately. 
A customer in Borneo is going to have to pay more that a customer
in Borneo, Idaho, who may have to pay more than a customer in Dallas,
who may have to pay more than a customer in New York.  Large metro
areas have economies of scale that make very high speed pipes available.


-- 
Dave Rand
dlr () bungi com
http://www.bungi.com


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