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A familiar song
By Scott Bradner
I wonder just why the
announcement a couple of weeks ago that a bunch of the baby Bells decided to
follow the ADSL (asymmetric digital subscriber line) star got so much press.
ADSL technology and plans have been announced with fanfare a number of times
already -- this is a song I have heard before, it just never seems to quite get
to the place where real users join in the chorus.
One question I have is
about the technology itself. It is good stuff. It can run fast over existing
copper phone lines, assuming that your site meets the distance and cable path
restrictions. But should this have been enough to get the big splash that it
got on the front page, above the fold, in the New York Times and extensive
coverage in the Wall Street Journal?
ADSL is not a quantum
leap over already deployed technology such as cable modems. I've been a happy
user of an Internet via cable modem service for a number of years. It performs
very well - I get 1.3 Mbits per second transferring files from my office to my
home and 224 Kbits per second going the other way (the cable modem service I
have also has asymmetric bandwidth.) It has proven to be extremely reliable,
with less than 2 hours of unplanned outage over the last year. It is also quite
popular, AtHome, one of the providers, announced passing 50,000 subscribers the
day before the ADSL announcement. This is quite small when compared to UUNET
but is more than 11 times the current deployment of ADSL according to the
Journal. The cable modem ready cable infrastructure is growing rapidly with
MediaOne, my provider, already offering the service in 55 communities with a
total of about 500,000 homes in eastern Massachusetts and southern New
Hampshire.
Some people worry about
the security implications of the fact that cable modems operate as a shared
LAN. I do not consider this to be a major problem since I use application level
security, such as ssh and secure web browsers, which encrypt the data stream
and anyway it is not that much of a differentiator with ADSL since an ADSL
conversation will normally traverse a shared ISP infrastructure on its way to a
shared LAN at the destination. Anyway, this detail can not explain the level of
press coverage.
Yes, some other big
corporate names were associated with the plans, Microsoft, Intel and Compaq are
part of the party but these corporations make significant announcements almost
daily and those announcements rarely get this coverage.
I think the reason that
this announcement got such prominence is because a lot of people in the press
still don't quite think that the Internet is real. For years they have been
expecting that the real Internet would happen when the regional Bell telephone
companies decide to join in. Every time that a Bellette mumbles anything about
the Internet these people in the press take it as a sign from heaven that the
real Internet may show up soon. Someday they just might notice that it is
already here.
disclaimer: Harvard's
grasp of reality varies but the above is my observation.