[IP] more on INTERESTING ARGUMENTS DJF The Myth of Scarcity, or Verizon-MCI is Doomed
Begin forwarded message:
From: Jim Innes <innesj@xxxxxxxxxx>
Date: May 4, 2005 12:00:14 AM EDT
To: dave@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: [IP] more on INTERESTING ARGUMENTS DJF The Myth of
Scarcity, or Verizon-MCI is Doomed
Reply-To: innesj@xxxxxxxxxx
Excellent commentary, right on the mark. My partner and I run
wireless site
infrastructure development firm, doing both antenna site acquisition and
microwave for cell site backhaul and backbone applications for
clients such
as Verizon Wireless and Cingular Wireless. I spend a lot of time in
front
of zoning boards and cantankerous citizens, explaining to them that RF
technology is not going to become miniaturized like microprocessors, and
that cell sites at 850 and 1900 MHz will not some day be shrunken
down to
the size of small streetlight fixtures, and so you will still need to
have
unattractive towers if you expect to keep on using your cell phones and
PDAs. Any time someone starts talking about the Moore's Law of anything
besides microprocessors, I cease reading or listening in any serious
way.
Thanks again for a fresh dose of reality.
Best regards,
Jim Innes
Wireless Access Technologies
4217 Ridge Ave. #2
Philadelphia, PA 19129
267 481 1461
215 438 1220 fax
innesj@xxxxxxxxxx
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-ip@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:owner-ip@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of
David Farber
Sent: Tuesday, May 03, 2005 2:23 PM
To: Ip
Subject: [IP] more on INTERESTING ARGUMENTS DJF The Myth of Scarcity, or
Verizon-MCI is Doomed
Begin forwarded message:
From: vijay gill <vgill@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: May 3, 2005 12:11:45 AM EDT
To: dave@xxxxxxxxxx
Cc: Ip <ip@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [IP] The Myth of Scarcity, or Verizon-MCI is Doomed
David Farber wrote:
http://www.corante.com/mooreslore/archives/2005/05/02/
the_myth_of_scarcity.php
May 02, 2005
The Myth of Scarcity
Posted by Dana Blankenhorn
The bidding war between Verizon and Qwest for MCI is based on a
myth of scarcity. That is, both think they can make the deal pay
by squeezing customers for the scarce resources represented by the
MCI network.
Moores Law of Fiber rendered that inoperative many years ago.
There is no shortage of fiber backbone capacity. And there are
ample replacements for Plain Old Telephone Service -- not just
cable but wireless.
This is starting to read like Gilders Telecosm. Yes, there is no
shortage of fiber backbone capacity. The problem is looking at the
fiber in the ground the major component, when in reality, in building
a backbone, this is only one of many major components. Lets go into
some excruciating detail here (to backup my statements, I present the
amount of traffic on a backbone I am responsible for: http://
www.vijaygill.com/pics/all_wab.png
1) There is no shortage of fiber backbone capacity.
True. There is plenty of fiber in the ground. There are even empty
conduits you can blow more fiber through. However, lighting the fiber
is non-trivial in terms of capital spend. Then you have huts you have
to maintain, and cards in chassis that sometimes go bad, and it costs
you to have 4 hour turnaround in a hut in the middle of Ohio.
Then there are pathing issues. You build a backbone and since there
is infinite capacity of fiber in the ground, you turn up multiple
thousands of gigabits. Then a backhoe or a tunnel fire cuts your
network capacity in half and, well, you're in trouble. There is
plenty of fiber, there are not plenty of PATHS, so to avoid that,
you're doubling up capacity on the same routes and instead of n:1
redundancy, you are now effectively operating a 1:1 redundancy or
3:1, and your cost basis just doubled.
2) Any idiot can build a global backbone and at NANOG 34 (http://
www.nanog.org), yours truly will speak to that, using himself as an
example. Building a backbone is _easy_. Getting people onto the
backbone is _hard_. The issue is not even the last mile or the first
mile. The issue is the last 100-200 feet. Laterals cost you money.
They cost you time. Getting a permit to trench into a building from
your fiber path in the street is non-trivial. Wireless local loop or
lasers are NOT the answer, as many billions in failed ventures will
tell you (Telegent, Monet, winstar et al).
3) Operating a backbone costs money. Everyone buys the same
equipment, and their COGS tends to be about the same for the layer 3
side of the house. Things like OSS/NMS will become the competitive
advantage. Today, we're used to living in high margin situations.
This is untenable and the companies will have to learn how to survive
on 10%-15% margins. The SG&A will have to be cut down to the bone,
and the way to do this is automation. And building automation is
beyond hard, ask Mike O'Dell, who I believe is a reader, about his
time at UUNET. It takes an amazing amount of force of will, time and
talent to automate the network and that costs money. Unless you have
deep pockets already, you cannot afford to fund this, and you will
get crushed trying to make a business out of that "abundant" capacity.
4) Wireless. POTs is being supplanted by wireless, and the dominant
players in wireless also just happen to be verizon/sbcs of the world.
This is because building a wireless network is also hard. And did I
mention it is expensive? Building a RAN is spendy enough that the
cost of IP equipment to backhaul the packets/voice is trivial in
comparison. Waving the magical wireless wand is easy. Circumventing
laws of physics is hard. Circumventing community resistance to
putting up towers, care and feeding of towers, backhaul capacity from
towers and the maintenance of the equipment is harder still.
The myth on which this deal is based is, simply, untrue.
[snipped]
I do not think so. Maybe I am too focused on the operational
realities of networking that I am not seeing the forest for the
trees, but I deal with spreadsheets and they almost never lie. At the
end of the day, is the return on the spend on the network greater
than my cost of capital? Yes/No.
The same scarcity myth has long underlain the FCC's regulation of
broadcast content. The FCC regulates what is broadcast only
because there is a limited frequency spectrum, thus limited choice
in each market. Without that myth all content regulation is a
direct violation of the First Amendment.
And it is a myth. Moore's Law of Radios proves it. Cellular
telephony proves it. Frequencies can be re-used, and transmit far
more than we once thought. The resource is, in fact, practically
unlimited.
Frequencies can be re-used. However, re-use looks great from the 100k
foot view. On the ground, reality is a bit different. High re-use.
Ok, that means smaller "cells" of coverage. Smaller cells means more
cell-sites. More equipment. More backhaul. More maintenance, more
capital spend. At this point we hear the mantra about moores law
making the electronics cheaper every n months. That is true for the
processing elements, but things like antennas, housings, power, and
maintenance are fixed and don't come down as quickly.
All efforts at controlling the mind are subject to this myth of
scarcity. Try to control education and smart kids learn to reject
you. Try to control the Internet and Chinese people learn just how
precious a sip of freedom is, while the rest of us get bored by
the firehose.
Freedom is the answer to tyranny because freedom creates
abundance, or discovers the abundance that is in fact all around us.
To all those who feel oppressed, no matter their cause, I hope
this brings some comfort. In the end, freedom will win out. Maybe
not today, maybe not tomorrow, maybe not even in your lifetime,
but it will. Freedom, knowledge, and truth are all plastic, all
powerful, and all unlimited.
The universe, whether we're talking about your mind, this planet,
or the stars themselves, is far more infinite than you or I can
possibly know.
And the only way to get a taste of it is to open your mind, as
scientists do, and prepare always to have it changed.
This is definitely very pretty wording.
/vijay
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