On Thu, 10 Nov 2005, Christian Kuhtz wrote:
On Nov 10, 2005, at 11:08 PM, Christopher L. Morrow wrote:
On Thu, 10 Nov 2005, Christian Kuhtz wrote:
So, there was a time when everyone said 'good grief, what would anyone do with 1.5mbps', and where in turn engineered bitrates ended up being several orders of magnitude lower. In fact, we all were worried what would happen to our POPs and backbone when 1.5mbps consumers showed up in volume back in the '98 timeframe.
oops ;) my point wasn't that bandwidth wasn't necessary over X speed, it was that the main motivator for consumer purchase was no long bandwidth but price alone.
Sorry for the confusion.
It's ok. We're all cornfused.
But, seriously, if all that emerged and mattered today is 'value brand', isn't it just indicative of the fact that consumers just haven't found the next cool bw annihilating thing yet? I doubt this
most likely... and video-on-demand sorts of things seem like the next problem child for bandwidth on the local link. (atleast in the short term)
is part of a general trend, unless this industry has reached a mature plateau. (which would be very sad, imho).
just wait for ipv6 and toasters with webservers! :) Actually, as more things get a network stack I imagine more interconnection will occur requiring more bandwidth and taxing the infrastructure even more :)