On 6/20/23 15:20, Mike Hammett wrote:
Sometimes yes, sometimes no.
When you go down in density, your fixed cost per customer really
escalates and you simply can't afford to provision as much as you'd
like to. When you leave glass as a transport mechanism, scaling isn't
easy. When you don't have a wireline to the customer prem, scaling
isn't easy.
You might have a licensed backhaul going 10 - 20 miles to feed a
remote cluster of customers (be it wireless, copper, coax, or glass as
the last mile). Those are more or less limited to about 1.5 gb/s.
Spectrum availability can reduce that. You can sometimes stack them,
but again, spectrum availability would be king in that decision.
You might have fixed wireless as the last mile. We're starting to see
platforms capable of multi-hundred megabit per customer with a sector
capacity of low gigabits, but again, spectrum availability comes into
play here. Those solutions require line of sight (or close to it) and
only go a few miles. The systems that can penetrate foliage really cut
your per-sector capacity to around 100 megabit, shared amongst all
customers. Those are simply limitations of physics.
When you don't have the benefits of scale, the only viable path
forward in a managed setting is usage-based billing, with some amount
of included data.
We are saying the same thing re: mobile (when I say mobile I mean
wireless) providers. Because spectrum is a limitation, capped services
make sense.
When I say "fixed line", I mean end-to-end, i.e., from CPE to nearest
ISP PoP, all on wire. In such a case, if an operator is still offering a
capped service, it is because they have no incentive (competition) to do
otherwise.
Mark.