If you (hayai) launch connections of 100 mbit/s or 1 gbit/s to households, then it would be revolutionary for India.
It may affect other ISPs also. It may also enforce them to lower their prices or increase the speed...
Ideally, what I would like to see as the net result of a successful launch would be:
[*]Other ISPs remove speed-caps from plans where they restrict data, so you get line-speed (could be anything from 2-20mbit/s depending on the quality of your lines, distance from the exchange or DSLAM etc)
[*]I don't expect high-speed "unlimited" plans because of the market that the other ISPs are in and the economics of unlimited plans, but I would hope that FUPs become fairer (8GB at 899 becomes 25GB at 899 or something)
[*]Maybe some better unlimited options in the 1, 2, 4mbit/s range might become available.
[*]BSNL would see the flaws in it's FTTH pricing and instead of charging for every potential GB that a user can transfer on an FTTH connection, they can ascertain average usage per subscriber and charge accordingly, which may lead to a price-war between us and them.
[*]I don't expect prices to change too much overall, just for the value to increase - Instead of providing 2mbit/s with 2.5GB @ Rs599, MTNL might modify it's plan lineup to be half decent, say, 15GB for the same price.
[*]MTNL & Airtel might also modify their VDSL prices. VDSL equipment isn't much more expensive than
ADSL equipment - instead of charging 20GB @ 20mbit/s for Rs4999 we might see 20GB @ 20mbit/s for Rs 899 from MTNL and Airtel's 200GB @ 30 or 50mbit/s plans at 7999/8999 might come down to more reasonable levels, say, Rs2999 for the same - again, without the speed restrictions (that idea is just stupid).
[*]"Over-use" charges might come down - instead of being 20, 30, 50 even 80 paise per MB, they should come down to below 10, even 5, MAYBE even 3 paise per MB.
[/list]