[olug] the bandwidth cost lecture (again)
Neal Rauhauser
neal at lists.rauhauser.net
Thu Dec 29 02:54:31 UTC 2005
>I have been haggling ISP's again latly and I am looking for DSL.
>I just moved right next to southroads mall right behind sears and I am wondering if any of U out there know where the qwest CO is in relation to my location and why I cant get dsl pro at that location.
>
>
There is an OC12 in that building leading to the tandem (19th and
Douglas) that belongs to IP Revolution (Cosentry now?) and they've got
capacity to burn but they don't want nickle and dime customers. If you
had some colo you maybe could get a decent deal in the unescorted area,
or if you know someone with equipment in the 'friends and family' rack.
Last I talked to them they had OC3 from Qwest, OC3 from AT&T, and a DS3
from Sprint, but its been a while.
A facility the size and vintage of Southroads may very well have its
own CO in the form of a SLC96 (aka slick 96). Bummer for you - these are
refrigerator sized boxes and they won't put in a DSLAM at the location
for one customer.
Bonded DSL can be done a number of ways but it requires the
cooperation of the ISP on the back end to get the job done. Multilink
PPP and load balancing across two routes are two ways it can be done
with Cisco. If you can get two Qwest DSL lines and pick an ISP that
doesn't mind doing some artwork you could get that done, but my guess is
any ISP that is small enough to take the time to do this won't want to
take the hit on the bandwidth you'll use.
> There has to be a way.
I've operated a couple of small ISPs over the last several years.
You're the sort of customer (don't take this personal) that most small
ISPs prefer to have GO AWAY. Here is why:
If you run a small to medium ISP in Omaha you're going to pay maybe
$650/month for the first T1, and maybe you get your cost per T1 down to
$400 or so if you get on net termination and you're bundling a couple of
circuits.
ISP bandwidth is symetric and the inflow and outflow are basically two
different business areas. The inflow is what most small ISPs are
interested in, as they've got a consumer network. If they work things
right they also make revenue on the outflow, too, by hosting. Thusly I
think its an acceptable argument to split the T1 cost up the middle for
inflow/outflow.
What are you asking for? You want 3 mbits of upload speed? That will
be $400 a month for just outflow bandwidth, plus physical plant cost,
plus support ... in other words, buy a pair of T1s. Oh, and you'll
download, too? More bandwidth cost. And guys like you are *always*
wanting to run the thing nonstop during the day, or worse 24/7 for some
reason.
You've seen an aggregated, consumer product produce a good rate of
UL/DL, multiplied by a factor of two or three, and gone shopping for it.
That level of service only exists for a principle in a small ISP who
takes the time to build it for himself and he'd never use it as it would
appear that you want to, because it would kill his business to do so.
Things are what they are and they cost what they cost. If you want a
corporate/carrier level of service on a circuit its going to come out of
a Qwest NIU in T1 form factor and cost many hundreds of dollars per month.
I'm sorry to be the one to break this to you. Hopefully you'll recall
that I saved you some time on your search. You could look into Cox to
see if they'll do better, but I doubt it - their 'fast' business service
gives all of a megabit of upload.
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