IPTVision > Permanent Link to "Changes Afoot In Balance Between Cablecos and Telcos in the USA"

[ Thermo[SAT]] Aucun commentaires / No Responses “Changes Afoot In Balance Between Cablecos and Telcos in the USA”  

Previous [Previous] L.A. Times Covers My Blog.......

Next [Next] Beyond broadcasting: IPTV can be local, too...

Some related posts from Technorati and Google.

[ Thermo[SAT]] Permanent Link to "TV-Type Shows Coming To The... : Aucun commentaires / No Responses “TV-Type Shows Coming To The Web - Another Example”  

[Wirelessbrasil.org] EDUARDO PRADO NOVAS TECNOLOGIAS NOVOS NEGÓCIOS: Soon customers will be able to enjoy voice, video and internet on their TV sets as French telecom equipment maker Alcatel talks with Indian telecom service providers to sell its Internet Protocol TV (IPTV) solutions which will enable the operators to offer television content using the broadband network. Telecom operators are all set to bring IPTV in India in a big way even as the industry on Friday urged the telecom regulator (TRAI) to bring in laws to regulate the content.

Alwayson-network.comhttp://www.alwayson-network.com [Alwayson-network.com] David Isenberg and The Rise of The Stupid Network :: AO: Over one weekend in May of 1997 David Isenberg, who then worked at AT&T Labs Research (nee Bell labs), wrote a paper called The Rise of The Stupid Network which explained (and still explains) with breathtaking simplicity why the Internet is superior to the “intelligent networks” favored by traditional telcos and was about to crater the value of these expensive networks. The paper is especially relevant now at a time when telcos and organizations like the ITU (a communications arm of the UN) are trying to use regulation to reconstitute the outmoded intelligent network regardless of the demonstrated success of the stupid network in doing everything the intelligent network was designed to do and much, much more at a fraction of the cost (could that be their problem?)

[Lafayetteprofiber.com] Lafayette Pro Fiber Blog: March 2006: More importantly, in 60% of the country, there are simply no new networks on the horizon, and the existing infrastructure from the telcos -- DSL running at speeds of just 1.5Mbs or so -- simply won't be adequate to be considered "broadband" in five years or so.There are ways around this, and the comments do a good job of pointing out what they are.

Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, ,