The good blogs

Mark Evans writes that Technorati is now tracking 50 million blogs and that the number of blogs continues to double every 5-7 months. The cynic in me gets concerned about such numbers and using such trends for foecasting purposes – we’ve seen this kind of forecasting before: remember MCI’s similar forecasts for the growth of the internet – those often reproduced numbers drove Wall Street lemmings over the cliff.

Whatever the right number and whatever the rate of growth may be, there is a shift in the dynamic of reporting and distributing news and commentary. 50 million blogs.

Much has already been written about the challenge of filtering through the enormous numbers of content suppliers to find the material you want to read. There are a variety of sites that are now trying to index blogs, but each has its own shortcomings.

Canadian entrant ‘The Good Blogs‘ aims to offer a circle of moderated and unmoderated referrals. We’re trying it out (see the sidebar). How to rank and rate blogs is a real challenge. There is a difference between popular and good quality.

One of the promises of the emergence of user-created content is the broad diversity of viewpoints that can be economically distributed. How do we ensure that such voices from the edge are able to be found and heard? What is the right way to rank them?

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Protect customers

We wrote earlier about the possible need for improved reporting of service outages.

One of our friendly (but shy) readers has pointed out that the current reporting regime looks at service interruption to competitors, not to consumers. In 2005, the CRTC simplified the reporting requirements.

Before then, the Commission required that ILECs file reports on all service outages that affect competitors and that exceed 15 minutes in duration. Those reports were changed to annual reports by last year’s circular.

We think that consumers would be well served if all Canadian service providers, wireline and wireless, were required to report service outages affecting a broad base of subscribers for more than 15 minutes.

We would include broadband internet access service providers in that reporting as well, given the migration of some voice services to ride over broadband. Reliable connectivity for consumers will become a competitive supplier issue as access independent services take hold.

In an environment of government organizations looking at emergency preparedness, we may need to have an independent audit of how carriers are engineering their networks in a competitive environment. Are margins getting to be too thin to provide the kinds of reliability that national security may require?

If customers aren’t willing to pay the cost for higher network availability, how do we fund the shortfall?

Better bundles, part deux

Videotron launched its quadruple play this morning, adding mobile wireless services with some pretty aggressive pricing: 4 services for $94.95 – all in (no annoying additional network charges, etc.). The wireless services are being offered over the Rogers Wireless network acting as a Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO), with Videotron handling all aspects of customer service, technical support, billing, etc.

The $95 price, while appearing very aggressive, is intended to get the customers’ attention. It includes 300 anytime minutes, basic wireline service, the ‘lite’ internet service and basic TV. Videotron’s hope is that most customers will be attracted by the bundle and will buy additional services.

As we reported on Tuesday, Videotron’s experience has been that their wireline voice service has attracted a new complement of cable subscribers.

Keep in mind that Quebec has historically had the lowest cable penetration rates of any province in Canada. As a result, Videotron’s added services (internet, phone and wireless) help to bring more basic customers onto their TV network, which already passes the homes. Better capital efficiency.

Beep, beep

Faster DownloadsAccording to a story in CARTT, the folks at Cable Labs are pushing the speed envelop even faster. This week, it issued its DOCSIS 3.0 specifications, that will, when deployed, enable operators to offer downstream data rates of 160 Mbps and upstream data rates of 120 Mbps.

The bit rate race we are seeing between the telcos and cablecos is just beginning.

Beep, beep.

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Prepare to forbear

The CRTC‘s rules on local forbearance set a threshold of 25% market share loss for the incumbent in a census or economic region.

While a lot of folks have focussed on Eastlink’s success in residential services versus Aliant, it appears that Western Canada has substantial evidence of business services competition in its 3 biggest markets.

The CRTC monitoring report indicates that, as of year end 2005, Edmonton, Calgary and Vancouver have lost 24.5%, 23.4% and 22.5% respectively.

The applications for forbearance should be getting prepared already. It makes one wonder why TELUS has not asked for the business services winback restrictions to be lifted in those markets, unless it is failing on the competitor services quality metrics.

We note that Toronto (416) and Barrie are in a similar position for business services.

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