The trend is toward zero. Just port charges. Just like long distance did 10 years ago.
From: Josh Reynolds Sent: Thursday, October 5, 2017 5:16 PM To: af@afmug.com Subject: Re: [AFMUG] New WISP in NC needs backhaul solution! You may be paying in the lowest rate bracket for the amount of bandwidth. I've never heard anything lower unless you were in the 100G+ bracket. On Oct 5, 2017 5:21 PM, <ch...@wbmfg.com> wrote: I pay rates lower than 5 cents per meg... From: Chris Fabien Sent: Thursday, October 5, 2017 3:59 PM To: af@afmug.com Subject: Re: [AFMUG] New WISP in NC needs backhaul solution! For a new startup, the pricing you listed at 2.2/meg plus $750, that actually sounds pretty reasonable to get you into a fiber circuit in the 100-300 meg range. You're not going to be getting 20 cents per meg for DIA unless you are buying a 10gig circuit in a datacenter or other very competitive market. Long term, arranging transport to a data center is the right direction, but it usually isn't cost effective until you are over 1Gig of traffic. Unless you happen to be close to stimulus built fiber you can connect to really cheap. On Sat, Jun 24, 2017 at 9:11 AM, Al Rachide <alrach...@gmail.com> wrote: We are getting ready to go live from a small connection in our office, just to the local community, using a omni antenna. We will be expanding throughout three counties in eastern NC. Having read a number of post where others are claiming rates as low as $0.20 per mbit/sec, we can't get anything here for less than $2.20 per mbit/sec, PLUS a fixed loop fee of $750.00 per month per pop. So, how can we find a cheaper backhaul solution here in the boonies of NC? We have CenturyLink and Spectrum available for local connection, but would like to know about other options for the actual internet / backhaul connection. PS: We attended our first WISPA convention in Memphis and it will not be the last! Al Rachide Eastern Caroline Broadband, LLC Pink Hill, NC 28572