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The Alternate Reality of the Standard-Examiner

The Standard-Examiner published an anti-UTOPIA editorial yesterday that, quite frankly, makes me wonder if some sort of illicit substances are in use by their editorial board. Granted, these kinds of opinion pieces are not uncommon, but this one sets a new “standard” in incoherence and inaccuracy. Allow me to “examine” the various ways in which their editorial could only make sense in a conveniently parallel dimension.

Fife wondered why suggested prices quoted by Beehive Broadband are so pricey…

Actually, $45 per month for service is actually not too shabby. The only plan that Comcast offers near that price is both a temporary 6-month introductory offer and significantly less speed. It also undercuts Beehive’s own pricing on their own FTTH network ($60/mo and up to a $895 install) for what I can assume is less speed (20Mbps both ways). On UTOPIA, they charge either $45 per month (half of which disappears in about 20 years) or $22 per month with a $2750 install cost. In a pure apples-to-apples comparison, UTOPIA is offering a very competitive price, especially when you compare like speeds (or as like as you can get) from Comcast and CenturyLink. But they deny this reality as well:

If the Beehive Broadband deal is approved, customers will still have to pay Internet prices that frankly, are not very much different from prices that can be found in the private sector.

Oh really? Comcast charges around $60/mo for 25Mbps down, 4Mbps up. CenturyLink will do 40Mbps down, 5Mbps up for the same price. XMission and InfoWest are happy to sell you a 50Mbps bi-directional connection for that much, and $23 of that monthly cost vanishes when you’ve paid off the connection.

The fact-free piece doesn’t end there, though. Consider this gem:

While elected officials in UTOPIA-yoked cities are for the most part, too stubborn to admit they made a mistake hooking up with the public/private group…

Wait, what? Cities didn’t join UTOPIA, cities created UTOPIA. It’s their baby. As much as choice elected officials like to disown it for cheap political points, that’s about as asinine as insisting that the fire department is a separate entity.

While it’s pretty obvious that the editorial board is already failing math and civics, they decide to flunk out on history as well.

And again, as mentioned, while UTOPIA may provide quality services, the prices are still similar to what could have been garnered without cities having shelled out millions in dollars.

That’s another thing that just isn’t so. Brigham City tried for years to get Comcast and Qwest to deploy more broadband with no success. Lindon even offered to pay them for it and was declined. Tremonton residents could barely get 1.5Mbps DSL, a connection that would have been top-notch more than a decade ago. Once they decided to join UTOPIA, higher-end services magically became feasible in their town and the incumbents got busy digging. Had they not joined, what would they have right now?

I don’t necessarily have an issue with someone opposing UTOPIA. I do, however, have a problem with people who have zero grasp of the facts and try to do so. It appears that the editorial board of the Standard-Examiner is such an uninformed group, although to such a degree as to have me question if they are perhaps in the wrong line of work. We expect our journalists to dig in a find facts, a task to which they appear to be ill-suited.

Can US Ignite Succeed Where Other Efforts Have Failed?

Last Thursday, The White House announced the launch of US Ignite, a new initiative whose goal is to spur better broadband and applications to take advantage of it. It brings in some heavy players including UTOPIA and UEN from our own state, incumbents like AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast, and tech giants like Mozilla, Cisco, and Juniper. I know I should get excited about something like this, but the best I can muster up is ambivalence.

In many cases, a consortium will often fall victim to the selfish interests of individual members. Many of us will remember how Rambus joined JEDEC, seeded the standards with their patent-encumbered technologies, and then went on a spree of lawsuits demanding royalties and licensing fees for using the standards they helped create. Despite eventually losing most of the suits and having a number of their patents invalidated, they pulled an entire technology industry into courtrooms for well over a decade. Most of the players in US Ignite have significant patent portfolios, and make no mistake that many of them participate in standards bodies not because it’s for our own good, but because there’s a buck to be made.

Another problem is that US Ignite has an all-too-standard “big on vision, light on specifics” mission statement. Granted, there are some good ideas in there. Dynamically switching VLANs can open up a bunch of possibilities for service providers. Gigabit and beyond connections are pretty much required for doing any kind of serious heavy lifting. Locally provisioned virtualized computing resources are pretty slick. All of these are really important and good ideas, but they feel more evolutionary than revolutionary.

And then there’s the elephant in the room that nobody really wants to talk about: why don’t we already have these networks in more places? US Ignite seems to assume that the problem is that we don’t have applications to drive demand from end users, so that’s why the networks don’t get built. That, unfortunately, turns the actual problem on its head. Because of the severe lack of competition in the telecommunications space (which is only getting worse as telcos fail to upgrade), networks have no incentive to build those next-generation networks because what they offer now is cheap to build and just good enough to stay marginally competitive with the only other option in town. With the heavy involvement of incumbent operators and their vendors, you’re unlikely to see the barrier of an anti-competitive market get addressed.

I wish US Ignite all the best and hope that they can come up with something useful. That said, I’m kind of resigned to the idea that after the initial fanfare, they’ll fizzle out a die quietly in the corner.

Broadband Bytes for 2012-06-16

  • Comcast anti-trust suit from 2003 still alive. http://t.co/xS4ADj51 #
  • .@UTOPIAnet announces availability of 1Gbps symmetrical connections to all homes in their footprint. #utpol #
  • Highest bandwidth customer on @UTOPIAnet using 20Gbps of total bandwidth. Can your Internet do that? #
  • Now demonstrating remote HD security cameras with two-way voice. Uses at least 20Mbps per stream. @UTOPIAnet #
  • Upload capacity sets @UTOPIAnet apart. Now demonstrating full home control with lights, sprinkler controls, door locks. #
  • 300Mbps wireless is less useful if your ISP can’t saturate the connection. @UTOPIAnet can. #
  • Speed tests can’t keep up with @UTOPIAnet connections, won’t show the full speed of 1Gbps connections. #
  • Showing off a HD instant-response security camera in WVC with a stabilizer from a review of the top stabilizers on the market. Very impressive. #
  • Just showed a DVD copied from Centerville to SLC in under a minute. #
  • 100Mbps is not enough for homes with multiple set-top boxes. 4-5 of them can saturate the connection. 1Gbps is needed. #
  • Centerville used to have problems uploading their city budget to the website. With @UTOPIAnet, it finished instantly. #
  • Centerville is using @UTOPIAnet to build free public wifi in their parks. #
  • Centerville has over 500 active customers, entire town can be signed up. The city has reduced costs by using @UTOPIAnet. #
  • City GIS can now access data city-wide, greatly improves productivity. #
  • One resident is saving $1000 per year in connectivity costs with @UTOPIAnet and yet getting a better connection. #
  • Almost all residents who have signed up are saving money by switching, talk up the network to their neighbors. #
  • West side of Centerville had almost no broadband until @UTOPIAnet showed up. #
  • Very few providers can offer 1Gbps. @UTOPIAnet is one of them. #
  • “They never think they need it [100Mbps+] until they get it.” Gary Jones of @UTOPIAnet #
  • .@UTOPIAnet Exec. Director Todd Marriott estimates 30-100 users will sign up for 1Gbps immediately. #
  • .@UTOPIAnet is looking at ways on a daily basis to drive down install costs. Economy of scale is the big one. #
  • High bandwidth enables seniors to live at home longer with remote medical monitoring. #
  • Infrastructure like @UTOPIAnet provides a platform for next-generation applications. #
  • Check out our pictures of UTOPIA’s media day! http://t.co/krODj06z #
  • Palo Alto calls it quits on fiber. http://t.co/ghvkw1iB #
  • Rep Issa and Sen Wyden working on a “Digital Bill of Rights”. http://t.co/wvDwUNDa #
  • What we all knew: proliferation of wifi networks cuts performance significantly. http://t.co/q6QtWGIQ #
  • Comcast amazingly takes a stand against copyright trolls. http://t.co/wHzpf9o3 #
  • DOJ wants to make sure your ISP isn’t throttling video. http://t.co/5yDhItfY #
  • Feds to ease right-of-way for fiber on federal roads and property. http://t.co/hWoSMDaN #
  • .@UTOPIAnet part of the new US Ignite initiative to improve US broadband. http://t.co/Kb4C3elL #
  • Unsurprisingly, aggressive caps drive up broadband costs. http://t.co/arwoI8nW #

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UTOPIA Joins the Exclusive 1Gbps Club

Today UTOPIA announced that they will be offering 1Gbps connections to every home they pass. Word on the street is that getting a connection that’s faster than your hard drive (!) should run in the neighborhood of $330-ish per month if you’re leasing the connection. Right now, only a handful of providers in the country offer such blistering speeds to residential customers.

Some other fun facts from the media day:

  • UTOPIA’s highest bandwidth customer consumes 20Gbps worth.
  • Centerville is completely built out. If you live in Centerville, you can get service right now. About 500 residents have already chosen to do so, just over 10% of total households.
  • Homes with multiple set-top boxes will have the greatest need for 1Gbps connections. Currently, 4-5 of them can saturate a 100Mbps connection.
  • You could, in theory, get 10Gbps at your home, but UTOPIA isn’t all that comfortable leaving $10K worth of electronics sitting in your house.

You can check out pictures of the event on Google+ or Facebook.

Here’s UTOPIA’s full press release: Continue reading