PeDaSp wrote on Mar 15
th, 2006 at 6:04pm:
What's important is that there is massive competition - which there is. Just look long at the long list of broadband suppliers in the UK.
Competition and choice seem to be trumpeted as the be all and end all!
Look at the competition of providers of non-geographical phone numbers (0845, 0870 etc). Who's paying for that 'choice'; us, the consumer! By keeping calls at the fixed (almost pre-competition rates) there is enough revenue for these companies to offer their services for free to the NGN service providers.
jrawle wrote on Mar 18
th, 2006 at 3:21pm:
There may be a long list, but most of them are virtual ISPs. And the lot of them, virtual or not, tend to all offer the same products with the same features, fixed at roughly the same price.
Which means that at the end of the day,
virtual telcos are just a branding and marketing exercise which
we are paying extra for!
jrawle wrote on Mar 18
th, 2006 at 3:21pm:
There is not true competition because, how many cables are connected to your house? Answer: one, owned by BT. (Some people may have a second option in the form of cable, but a particular cable company has a monopoly in an area but the newly merged NTL/Telewest has a monopoly there too.
Exactly. And how many different cable companies did there used to be in different areas of the country and how many are there now? They have been swallowed up by Telewest and NTL and now these two are one.
What's more, the virtual ones are now experiencing the same fate. TalkTalk has bought Onetel and Tele2 and 're-branded' them TalkTalk. Just what has this got to do with operating a 'better' telecommunications service?
jrawle wrote on Mar 18
th, 2006 at 3:21pm:
What the consumer wants?! How many consumers want to be charged by the KB for internet? Virtually none, but they will have no choice because that's all that will be offered. The majority of people won't know the difference, won't understand what's going on, and will just be ripped off by the ISPs in the same way they are by the telecoms companies.
And the few who are savvy enough to understand; well they're in the minority, so it doesn't matter.