mgcarley
Founder, Hayai Broadband
madhusudhan7 said:thanks @mgcarley - lot of useful information...
---------- Post added at 05:51 AM ---------- Previous post was at 05:48 AM ----------
Not sure if you've answered these question already... so what according to you is the issue then. Why are isp's restricting speeds - My understanding all along was probably to make more money !
I can't say for sure why ISPs are restricting speeds. I can understand why they restrict speeds on unlimited plans, but not on data plans.
solid_snake4rd said:lol
he types alot.
Mostly to you. Mostly because you misread, misinterpret or argue that 1+1=3 even when I have factually proven it to not be.
solid_snake4rd said:as more speeds require more last mile cabling which means more money and biggest of all is the restriction to pu those cabling
No, sorry, but that is absolutely not the case. Most existing ADSL users I've seen should be able to receive 8+ Mbit/s. Most Cable ISPs should be able to deliver 30+ Mbit/s using existing cabling and with minimal equipment upgrades.
But. At these speeds, you'd not get unlimited plans.
solid_snake4rd said:and also the risk that if they provide higher speeds,then users might use more bandwidth
like on 1mbps you can download maximum of 342.5gbs per month
if they give 10mbps,people might download over 1tbs which normally doesn't happen but the risk is still there and an ISP can't afford that much bandwidth at a low cost.so they are taking it up slowly
This would apply to unlimited plans only, and you would expect to see FUPs from most ISPs. For data plans, there's no reason to restrict speeds.
I don't forsee it being a problem for us because our numbers suggest that for the price we shouldn't have many - if any - users exceeding the download amounts which would cause us concern.
solid_snake4rd said:well government of india doesn't
I'd be happy to lease out our fiber to any ISP who wants to pay for it - for the right price.
solid_snake4rd said:so people pay for that 1mbps besides taxes????
Of course they do. Do you think that just because electricity is also a legal right that they don't pay for it? Or water? Or food? How could you possibly assume otherwise?
Internet is provided by COMPANIES not the government. It would be different if the law said "legal right to FREE 1Mbit/s broadband", like Finns have the legal right to FREE education and FREE healthcare etc.
solid_snake4rd said:and i read somewhere that only 4000 homes are left to be connected.i could have misread it though
Probably from me you read that.
solid_snake4rd said:i was not just talking about your company but the entire indian broadband so you saying you company is not in the business of providing lower than 2mbps speed does not come here
You specifically said "I would not buy from your company if it only provided 256kbit/s on a 1mbit/s plan".
solid_snake4rd said:also yeas all users on torrents is an unlikely scenario but even a small portion of indian population downloading will make it very costly
Cost is relative. If that many people are downloading, then surely the revenue is allowing us to purchase sufficient bandwidth or indeed, as Bharti, Reliance and Tata do, own or part-own an international cable.
solid_snake4rd said:it will be alot more when a Billion people jump on the broadband ship or even 200-300million
By which time we'd be making damn sure that there is sufficient capacity to India to handle 200-300 million broadband users. But that is unfortunately a long way off.
solid_snake4rd said:yeah but thats what we are talking about that because if the cost it will be hard to supply to a billion people
If 1 Billion people want broadband, someone will find the money to build more cables. They typically earn back the amount they spent + interest in about 3 years: with a lifespan of 20-25 years, cables have a long time of being profitable for whomever built them.
solid_snake4rd said:yeah that why indian broadband can't have it as there must be done alot more work on policies first then broadband implementation
If we waited for policies to be written, you'd still have 256k as a maximum speed.
solid_snake4rd said:i don't know of these STUDENT housing,can you tell me about them?
i would like to shift there
Depends on your discipline and what degree you want to do. You'd need to be accepted in to a Finnish university first - housing is the least of your worries. You might not end up in Helsinki, rather in Oulu or something which are dealt with by different housing authorities. PM me with more details so that I can try to recommend where to start.
solid_snake4rd said:but will india be able to pay for it?
No... because consumers never get 1:1 contention ever ever ever - the economics simply would not work even in a super-cheap Broadband country like Finland. All I was saying is that sufficient capacity is there.
solid_snake4rd said:so i don't think ISP's SWEDEN have 1mbps bandwidth for 1mbps they sell but that not what i am talking about
i am talking about the following costs
Exactly. Even though ISPs have way less bandwidth per customer than they provision in various parts of the world, that doesn't stop you getting close to the advertised speeds most of the time, even though you're only paying Rs1500 a month or whatever.
It all comes down to metrics.
solid_snake4rd said:but they provide close to that speed
Debatable. In NZ, I was just talking on Friday with a senior manager at Telstra Wholesale who says that they only have to provision 32kbit/s CSR (constant stream rate) per user at the exchange level.
But that doesn't seem to stop me getting 12-13 Mbit/s to servers in other cities and ping times of 74ms from here to Auckland (stock-standard ADSL2+, about 150km), and 10Mbit/s in 130ms from here to Sydney (closer to 2000km).
solid_snake4rd said:and even if you were to have 1mbps bandwidth for each 50 people then you would only have 20million mbps for a billion people
it sounds very low if even 200m people went onto the net at the same time as they wouldn't get the promised speeds like we get today in india and you would have to have more bandwidth
But contention ratios of 1:30-50 are common and work perfectly well even in Europe, and it only matters if all 200m of those people go online to leech. But most users do not do that, and to put it simply, the metrics are in our favour to a certain extent.
When the time comes in India that we have to deal with 200m users leeching Hi-Def movies at Broadband speeds, I very much anticipate that we would have magnitudes more capacity available to use - both domestic and international.
At the moment, 2-3 million won't come close to saturating what's available, and as a single company, that would be a nice figure to achieve by 2020.
solid_snake4rd said:oh,you were talking about Finnish students,i thought indian students,that why i was suprised...........lol
You really need to read my posts more carefully.
solid_snake4rd said:and in india it isn't done.
it is done in my building but not the the caompany's wires to my building except HAthway,fivenet,nivyah,tata,airtel,mtnl which have been used by me and my building people..........hehe
So maybe we need to just make sure our network is open to all, install wires to all apartments in every building we connect and when we lease out the fiber to other ISPs they pay us the connection charge, while we absorb it. It would stop the necessity of having like 7 different cables in to each building (though I suspect in your case even with all those ISPs, it's 1 cablewala + MTNL and maybe Airtel).
solid_snake4rd said:they must be like RICH people,who don't care much about money it as they have it already
Pretty much.