- Oct 14, 2005
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Time Warner: Unlimited Internet for $150 Per Month
I hope Time Warner gets whats coming to them. They claim the costs are causing them to charge more for service, but thats not true according to arstechnica.com:
Time Warner tries again, fails to justify caps and charges
Clearly Time Warner is blowing smoke up everyone's ass to get more money. I hope they go down and hard. The only way that happens is if companies like Verizon can speed up the expansion. I would switch with a smile and a :beer:
Time Warner, criticized for the cost of its broadband services, has slightly altered prices
Time Warner Cable, under pressure because of low bandwidth caps for high prices, has altered its tiered Internet plan, including a new unlimited bandwidth plan.
"With regard to consumption-based billing, we have determined that as broadband usage and penetration grow, there are increasing differences in the amount of bandwidth our customers consume," Time Warner Cable COO Landel Hobbs recently wrote. "Our current pricing plans require all users to pay the same amount, whether they check e-mail once a month or download six movies a day."
I hope Time Warner gets whats coming to them. They claim the costs are causing them to charge more for service, but thats not true according to arstechnica.com:
Time Warner tries again, fails to justify caps and charges
Time Warner Cable, stung by public reaction to the Internet data caps it is now trialing in several markets, has issued yet another public statement. Turns out, the problem here doesn't rest with the caps but with the "press reports" that "were premature and did not tell the full story."
All of which perfectly explains why Time Warner Cable has also boosted cap limits in every tier.
The messenger, we shoot him
What premature, not-full-story-telling press reports might be referenced here? Well, there was our own look at the bizarre price discrepancy between the new TWC cap system and that offered by every other major US Internet provider, for one.
The New York Times Bits blog tried to pry a few answers of out TWC Chief Operating Officer Landel Hobbs?including an explanation of how bandwidth costs TWC money when their network is peered and most costs are fixed?but got approximately nowhere.
And yesterday, Wired followed up on both pieces with a look of its own at TWC revenues, showing that broadband costs had decreased by 12 percent in 2008 even as broadband revenues had increased by 11 percent.
TWC's response to three sets of solid questions? The continued assertion that "Internet demand is rising at a rate that could outpace capacity within a few years. According to industry analysts, the infrastructure may not be able to accommodate the explosion of online content by 2012. This could result in Internet brownouts. It will take a lot of money to fix the problem."
Beware the coming Internet brownouts
This is a reference to Internet "exaflood" theories that are not currently being borne out by the data. For instance, US Internet growth has declined into the 40-60 percent per year range (which TWC's own numbers confirm), well below the 100 percent per year numbers used to generate some of the scariest predictions of doom.
Even as traffic increases, traffic costs on major Internet backbones have been decreasing by 50 percent a year?an obvious market signal that capacity is plentiful at the core and in no danger of "browning out." At the edges, network upgrades to DOCSIS 3.0 are cheap?somewhere in the neighborhood of $20-100 per subscriber.
As for the TWC network in between the headend and the backbone, of course routers, etc. will need constant upgrading; that's how the business works. But TWC's revenues are going up while its costs are going down?making it look like the tiered pricing scheme (with its quite small caps) is more about 1) squeezing cash out of broadband users and 2) keeping TWC's cable TV operation alive by making Internet video less desirable.
The "it's expensive to upgrade" argument certainly seems dubious. How dubious? Let's run a new set of numbers. TWC last night announced the pricing scheme for its new 100GB/month tier for $75/month. Comcast, using the same technology, offers a 250GB cap for $42.95.month (and some Ars users have reported lower numbers in some markets), so it's clear right from the start that the TWC plan is hardly a "good deal."
Speeds aren't great, either, topping out at 10Mbps (and it's a bad sign when a company's COO says that users will get speeds of "10MB/1MB"). Overage charges are a dollar a GB, but TWC helpfully caps these at $75. To equal the Comcast cap, therefore, a TWC user would have to spend $150/month with TWC.
AT&T DSL, meanwhile, offers an uncapped, 6Mbps connection for $35/month.
Verizon's FiOS, which has required an $18 billion infrastructure investment that makes cable modem service look like the world's best bargain for operators, offers a 50Mbps connection with no explicit cap for $144.95/month.
Clearly Time Warner is blowing smoke up everyone's ass to get more money. I hope they go down and hard. The only way that happens is if companies like Verizon can speed up the expansion. I would switch with a smile and a :beer: