We have fiber optic to the apartment buildings and six competing providers, so we can get online .
Wow! Six competing providers for the fiber optic cable.
Now that represents an enlightened society.
Other examples appreciated here.
Moi
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Sun Feb 28, 2010 11:00 pm Is that six competing providers of fiber, or of content carried on the fiber?
moi621 (imported) wrote: Sun Feb 28, 2010 9:56 pm Our EA Nation member from St. Petersburg aka Petrograd, fhunter reports
We have fiber optic to the apartment buildings and six competing providers, so we can get online .
Wow! Six competing providers for the fiber optic cable.
Now that represents an enlightened society.
Other examples appreciated here.
Moi
where the free market is not free, it is a monopoly.
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Mon Mar 01, 2010 1:38 am Someone provided the fiber. The six competitors are content providers.
Economists recognize the existence of "natural monopolies," when it's so much more effective to have one provider that it makes no sense to do anything else. Government does this in some cases.
Telephony was another example of a natural monopoly. There were once many different phone companies, each of which had its own network and own phones. That meant that people who wanted to be able to call anyone with a phone had to have many phones - as many as ten or more, with separate wires for each one - and know which network everyone was on, so they could use the right phone to make the call. This was so inefficient that when Theodore Vail, then AT&T's chairman, approached the government with a proposal to grant AT&T a monopoly in exchange for AT&T's guarantee of Universal Service and acceptance of government regulation, the government was quick to agree. The resulting Bell System was responsible for wiring America for phones. The value it offered was that you could call anyone from any phone. Today, this seems obvious, but it was a historic innovation when it occurred.
Now, of course, electronic technology allows the invisible linking of networks, so that we can still enjoy universal service even though there are numerous independent providers. But remember that it's only a marvel of modern technology that makes this possible.
Carping about monopolies in the pre-computer age makes no sense, because only monopolies or large near-monopolies achieved the economies of scale needed for mass production, which was the chief vehicle for the unprecedented rise in living standards of working people during the century before 1970.
That computers allow us to make small-scale manufacture profitable shouldn't blind us to the immense historical importance of mass production by big businesses in raising ordinary people from their 19th century squalor.
bobover3 (imported) wrote: Mon Mar 01, 2010 1:47 am Though there may be competing providers, I can't believe each home has separate Ethernet cabling from each provider. The providers have separate local hubs, and each home may be connected to a different hub via its own fixed cabling. Nice, but not ahead of the US.