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 Dogfather Premium join:2007-12-26 Laguna Hills, CA 1 edit | Re: Going the way of AOL Not to mention charging 50% more than competitors.
But no company in their position, no matter how good, can survive the death of line sharing.
The same thing will happen to Sonic, DSL Extreme and other indy providers, eventually. | |
|   DaneJasper Sonic.Net Premium,VIP join:2001-08-20 Santa Rosa, CA clubs:
| Re: Going the way of AOL said by Dogfather :Not to mention charging 50% more than competitors. But no company in their position, no matter how good, can survive the death of line sharing. The same thing will happen to Sonic, DSL Extreme and other indy providers, eventually. Oh, we're not going anywhere. We'll evolve - as a CLEC, we're now deploying our own DSLAMs. Our first one went live two weeks ago. Some musings here: »corp.sonic.net/blog/
As access to line shared products wanes, next generation products on our own equipment will expand. We're in an industry that's always changing, and this is something we've been working toward for nearly two years now.
-Dane | |
|   Splitpair Premium join:2000-07-29 Cow Towne
·T-Mobile US
| said by Dogfather :But no company in their position, no matter how good, can survive the death of line sharing. I disagree. As an ILEC technician who works almost exclusively with CLECs I can tell you there are some strong and doing well CLECs out there despite line sharing and many other changes from the political winds of Washington. The good ones the successful ones find market niches and moves the ILECs by their sheer size and lack of maneuverability cannot properly serve.
As for EL IMO they grew so fast they totally lost control over spending. Instead of concentrating on stemming losses from dial-up by encouraging an internal shift from dial-up to DSL they let those subscribers slip away to ILECs and CLECs. As for Muni WIFI theres a ton of money out there and I dont see much of it jumping on the Muni WIFI bandwagon so my guess the long term profits are not in that arena. Why EL with their limited resources thought they could re-invent the wheel and move the industry is beyond me. In the end driven by investor demands they tried to be too many things to too many people and ended up failing to serve their customer base which they admit they will continue to under-serve until they whittle down the customer support drivers to what they consider an acceptable level. They also in an attempt to raise subscriber counts bought way too many wholesale subscribers from marketing firms with too little oversight of how the accounts where generated. These are now bleeding from the churn as those accounts cancel before term many times with no recourse for EL. Going forward they have clearly stated in the 4q report never again.
Whats the future of EL? I think EL will stabilize the subscriber base to the point they can just about pull the plug on tech support then if with the economy going south they can pull off a couple of quarters breaking even they will be in a good position to sell off the base pay the debts and at the end of the day jump off with maybe silver parachutes where they will slide laterally into a similar slot probably in the same industry.
Wayne -- Yeah, there's a storm on the loose, sirens in my head Wrapped up in silence, all circuits are dead Cannot decode - my whole life spins into a frenzy
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