Charter CEO: Focus on symmetrical speeds due to marketing, not need | Fierce Telecom: Echoing comments made by Comcast CEO Brian Roberts earlier in the week, Rutledge dismissed the competitive threat from fixed wireless access technology, arguing it will fall by the wayside much like DSL has as bandwidth and speed demands rise.
Mettalic COAX cable TV distribution infrastructure won’t be able to keep up either. The U.S. should have
started a massive transition to fiber to the premise (FTTP) advanced telecom infrastructure 30 years ago. Instead, it adopted a laissez faire policy of allowing a wild west, constrained commercial market in "broadband" bandwidth. That created perverse incentive for legacy telephone and cable companies to sell higher bandwidth tiers at a price premium rather than invest in FTTP that would effectively end the scarcity-driven "broadband" market created by their underinvestment in distribution infrastructure.
Now the nation is caught in a never ending game of catch up, attempting to keep the advanced telecom infrastructure sufficient to end user needs with the minimum possible investment. That's beneficial to shareholders of these companies. But despite their relatively much smaller number, national policy of the past three decades has accorded their interests far greater weight than the broader public's.
1 comment:
That is what someone says that can't quickly pivot their networks to provide the symmetrical speeds.
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