C&W Bails Out 220
norskode writes "Not much to go on yet, but it seems that Cable & Wireless is bailing out of their US operations. This is a big provider of IP pipes, and they run the data centers they bought from the failed Exodus folks. There are a LOT of sites that live in their data centers, but no word yet on the disposition of those facilities."
OOPS... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:OOPS... (Score:2)
by xanadu-xtroot.com (450073) [slashdot.org] o xanadu@@@inorbit...com [mailto] on Thursday June 05, @10:14AM (#6124015 [slashdot.org])
(http://slashdot.org/ [slashdot.org])
Another glitch in /. This is a subcriber posting...
--
--
irc.drirc.net #pranknet
Need a CS Server for dirt cheap?
[ Reply to This [slashdot.org] ]
SO basically we're seeing a fairly good discussion on slashdot and more importantly on the inner workings of the slashcode
More like.. (Score:2)
It's more so that you get to check out the articles/sites in the post before most others (read: you aren't affected by the
Not a whole lot left... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not a whole lot left... (Score:5, Informative)
BBN getting sucked up by GTE...
Keep up, will you?
BBN got sucked up by GTE (after briefly instantiating as BBNPlanet); GTEI then got acquired by Bell Atlantic, which then devolved into Verizon and Genuity. Genuity has now been acquired by Level 3.
Next week, Ramirez, long thought dead, will turn up and lay his claim to L3's heart!
Re:Not a whole lot left... (Score:2)
Re:Not a whole lot left... (Score:2)
For the dot com/telecom stupidity to have never happened? There never was a 'new economy' - just a bunch of shiteheads yacking about something they knew nothing about...
Re:Not a whole lot left... (Score:2)
The real laugh is they once said "why would you want to go to a little player like peer1?" Were a big billion dollar international telco and aren't going anywhere and they are just a little player that can dissappear at any time."
Now peer1 is left standing and GT is almost gone.
right off the top of my list... (Score:5, Informative)
This could be bad...
Re:right off the top of my list... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:right off the top of my list... (Score:2)
CNW migrations suck suck suck (Score:2)
Their move to primus left us without inbound 800 service, and the people at Primus were less than helpful/clueful -- CNW totally dropped the ball,a nd Primus could not even find it to pick it up.
We've been a CNW ISP client since last year, not migrated to newedge, and our rep is still pitching bandwidth as CNW today
Bizarre to say the least
Re:right off the top of my list... (Score:2)
And how about Slashdot?
Re:right off the top of my list... (Score:2)
Paid-for bandwidth is actually cheaper at this point than peering bandwidth, when consumed in high quantities, at this point, because so many vendors are willing to sell bandwidth below their cost.
The latter is bound to change once certain vendors exit the market *coughCogentcough*.
Re:right off the top of my list... (Score:2)
Looks like were going to see co-location prices brought up to market value soon.
Re:right off the top of my list... (Score:2)
Infrastructure (Score:5, Insightful)
As a general rule of thumb, I find that ... (Score:5, Funny)
Nothing to see here. Just move along. Ignore the smell of burning monkeys. Flood? What flood? Keep moving, you looky-loos.
Re:Infrastructure (Score:5, Interesting)
That's what I thought when my last place of empoyment went out of business - somebody would buy us and merge our network with theirs, or they'd just buy our 160,000 residential broadband customers, transition them to their network, and then dump us. Neither happened; the customers got screwed.
Re:Infrastructure (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Infrastructure (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Infrastructure (Score:2)
Seems to me like it wouldn't be hard to make money off a broadband company. If the business was losing money they were doing something wrong.
Of course this "price" would have to factor in all the debt, including any mandatory payments to all the employees I would immediately fire. But even if all I could salvage past that was the customer list, that alone would be worth something.
Re:Infrastructure (Score:2)
Re:Infrastructure (Score:2)
C&W were losing $1m a day running those networks... the article
Re:Infrastructure (Score:2)
So who is it all being sold to? (Score:2)
Please be precise: the correct name is (Score:3, Funny)
And news reports show that media deregulation is nothing to be feared.
Re:Please be precise: the correct name is (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Please be precise: the correct name is (Score:2)
Re:Bah! Too Much for Consumers to Remember (Score:2)
This really doesn't make sense.... (Score:5, Interesting)
The reason Ellen and her gang couldn't keep this running seemed to be they kept building new data centers. Capital costs were HUGE.
But C&W bought exodus. After the fallout. For very very cheap.
How could they not make a profit off this? Is maintaince costs still so high even with no expansion? They were CLOSING data centers not buiding them.
This worries me, because if after the initial build up is done, you still can't make money off a colo then that means prices are WAY too low and for the 2 or 3 colo's left, we are going to see prices sky-rocket to come up to meet expenses.
Sad day.
From the article... (Score:3, Insightful)
They are competing against a big company that is already bankrupt and in protection in court.
Re:This really doesn't make sense.... (Score:5, Interesting)
When they bought the data centers, they also bought all the contracts for leasing, etc., which probably run for several more years.
Ask companies like Verio about the bloodbath when they shut most of their new data centers down, but were left with 5 or 10 year contracts for those spaces, sometimes in extremely expensive locations. A lot of the equipment, like the big chillers and the fire suppression systems, probably still hasn't been paid for, either.
C&W is looking at with its data centers, I'm sure. Not to mention that they probably have a lot of fiber sitting dark (unused) right now, and lots more under contracts for less than the fixed costs. The salesmen for most of these carriers, by 1999, 2000 and 2001, undercut each other to the point where they were writing money-losing contracts, just to meet their quotas and get their commissions. And quite often, the contracts went to companies that then cancelled or went out of business when the bubble burst.
this would be true if... (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem with this idea is that there is no significant barrier to entry in the low-end colo or hosting market, other than running fiber to a
Re:This really doesn't make sense.... (Score:3, Interesting)
*foom*
First hand experience (Score:2, Informative)
no customers == no money (Score:4, Interesting)
I've walked around a bunch of the old Exodus datacenters in New York City: even the "older" ones (ie the former GlobalCenter colo on 8th avenue, and the original NJ1 at Exchange Place)) were like ghost towns: row after row after row of empty racks.
The colocation "boom" of the 1990s was a pyramid scheme: VC-financed colo companies selling space at completely fictional rates to VC-financed startups. As soon as the venture money dried up, the small customer vanished...and then the big customers vanished...and then the behemoths themselves began to die off.
No matter how much you cut your costs, you can't make a profit if you have no customers.
My completely off-the-cuff guess is that even if C&W mothballed 90% of their colo facilities in the US, and all of their competitors (UUNet, AT&T, Globix, Level3) did likewise, there would still not be enough customers to keep them afloat. Colo is expensive, and there just aren't that many companies who actually need six-sigma uptimes. (Not that any of the colo providers ever came anywhere near their promised reliability numbers in practice, but that's a whole different rant.)
Re:no customers == no money (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This really doesn't make sense.... (Score:2)
than a 4 RU server of just 2 years ago. Many companies have been able to reduce their footprint while increasing their processing power. Add to this the costs to air-condition and power this denser-than-planned expansion, and the data centers are having a tough time.
Re:This really doesn't make sense.... (Score:3, Interesting)
I can easily see C&W losing a million bucks a day.
It's kinda funny. Folks have been saying for -years- that my previous emp
Alabanza sucks ass. (Score:2)
Re:This really doesn't make sense.... (Score:2)
I can easily see C&W losing a million bucks a day.
The data center at which I work has fewer than 20 employees, we're at about 20% of capacity, and have a few OC3 connections and a couple dozen individual DS1 connections, though we have something like another 14Gbps of dark fiber, which we light up onl
They've been working on this for a while now (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:They've been working on this for a while now (Score:4, Informative)
C&W cancled the remaining three years of our contracts on our lines (Which they also stated they could do with no repercussions), and told us to either find a new provider or sign a contract with New Edge Networks.
Everyone in our company throught C&W was going to get sued for the contract thing. I wonder if any other companies have thought about it.
They didn't leave us much time to get new lines in. I'm really grateful for the work AT&T pulled for us. Based on all estimates, we were going to have our new Ts in only days (2 at most) before C&W pulled our old lines. Not much time to might 9 Class C's of DSL customers, dial-up users, and dedicated T customers.
I am now left with a very bad taste on how NewEdge treated us ("No, you *have* to sign at least a 1 year contract, we can't give you any less, because that's the deal we have with C&W" -- Each T1 from NewEdge was over 1100$ a month..Not a good deal), and how C&W treated us. Given the choice, I'll never do business with either one of them again.
No! (Score:5, Funny)
(all the porn that will be lost in those defunct datacenters)
We must establish a plan of action, and organize to save the porn.
Re:No! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:No! (Score:2)
My god, will someone please think about the porn!?!
Someone already did [sourceforge.net].
Don't you get it? (Score:2, Funny)
Quick... (Score:5, Funny)
Okay... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Okay... (Score:5, Funny)
C&W (Score:5, Insightful)
It is an interesting problem that faces IT. The hospital I work at uses a mainframe on another site. We are planning to return it to on-site because we had downtime because the company moved their mainframe 'just because' from one side of Atlanta to another.
There is also the fun of who really owns your data? If the site just gets shutdown, how will you get data? (I know they should give it to you in tapes, but then you must find something they will work on.)
Re:C&W (Score:4, Interesting)
Something wrong with the numbers (Score:3, Insightful)
Either there is something wrong with those numbers, or the happy days of the internet boom are back!
Re:Something wrong with the numbers (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Something wrong with the numbers (Score:2)
Oh, I didn't say it wasn't a big deal - I just pointed out that it wasn't real cash that they'd lost.
I know only too well what the last couple of years has done to their share price. At the end of 2000, it was up around £15 a share. At its lowest point a few months ago, it was about 30p. Last time I checked (this morning), it was a little over £1.
One thing worth remembering, though, is that C&W didn't b
This could get ugly (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:This could get ugly (Score:2)
This should not impact their service level in any way. I have 2 C & W T1s. In the last 7 months I have experienced 9 outages 2 were planned and 7 (over four months) were attributed to a guy in Ok with a back hoe. Additionally when C&W put in those T1s it took them 8 months to get the service up and running. SLAs are just a means to trap their victims it does not impact what they need to
Re:This could get ugly (Score:2)
I think that you missed my point. In the whole span of 2 years that I have had these T1s C7W has never met their SLA, not once. Every outage (and their were several) lasted days. This is why I am
Another Blow to Internet Stocks (Score:2, Interesting)
C&W disappears? (Score:5, Funny)
Pulling out completely? (Score:4, Informative)
Another thing: will some operations be sold to other companies (and their customers transferred without loss of service), or will everything be turned off and each piece of equipment sold to the highest bidder?
I doubt anyone has the answers, but these are my questions.
Do I remember that Slashdot is/was hosted by Exodus? I'm too lazy to investigate.
Re:Pulling out completely? (Score:3, Informative)
Looks like Slashdot will be moving... (Score:5, Informative)
Netcraft Confirms: Slashdot is Moving! (Score:3, Funny)
I can't wait for the day (Score:2)
On a similar note, a Trivial Pursuit question the other night said that some crown prince of Brunei spent $16 billion in one year. Had to get a gold plated toilet brush, among other things.
Which is a better waste of money? Just curious.
Re:I can't wait for the day (Score:2)
Re:I can't wait for the day (Score:2)
They're just bailing out of the states if I read this correctly.
I used to have a T1 with them in the carribeans, and although I had shitty service, no QoS, no support outside business hours, and no reliability (which were all in my contract... But then again, who are you going to sue ?) they still managed to charge us 25K US$ a month for a T1... So I said, I
Mae-East (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Mae-East (Score:5, Informative)
I remember seeing it when it was a small room in an underground parking garage. Net techs left their cans of Mountain Dew in the corner.
Today MAE EAST ATM service is avalable in Vienna, Reston, and Ashburn. It has ceased to really be one room, one floor, or even just in one building.
Near the original MAE EAST is also a major AboveNet (now MFN) collocation facility. That is where Geeks in Space: Slashdot Radio [thesync.com] used to be served from.
Growing broke (Score:3, Insightful)
Sustainable here means that you're collecting enough revenue (cash is good) to pay for all the inventory you're building. The first sign of trouble is a cashflow shortage.
Unmanaged growth is a temptation that's caught so many telecoms. Maybe they were thinking of achieving economies of scale or putting too much weight in the "grow or die" paradigm. Or maybe their CEO's were making pride-based decisions.
It's human to be overly optimistic about a venture that you're starting. Business plans quite often anticipate large profits in the future to pay for current excess spending and growth.
There's a Burmese saying "Big tiger, big paws", the analogy being that a large entity needs a lot to keep it upright - has big expenses and maintenance needs. This is even more significant when it's growing.
c & w balls out (Score:2)
my impression (Score:5, Insightful)
Is that Exodus and other hosting centers are having trouble because they're players in a shrinking middle market for the business of hosters that are:
The price/capability ratio of dedicated hosts (probably Linux/BSD on x86 hardware with really fat pipes) is falling. The difference in total cost between hosting something at Exodus and just building a good server room somewhere on a corporate campus or two is falling. (Initial build-out is expensive, but property is a pretty safe place to sink money these days, plus you can expense it and keep expensing the depreciation.)
I'm not saying there's nobody that needs Exodus-type services, but it's mostly folks that don't fit into one of these other (growing) categories.
cw.net was last updated in the 70th... (Score:4, Funny)
The footer at the bottom says:
© Cable & Wireless, 2003
Updated January 1, 1970 GMT
IE Webmaster: webmaster@cw.net
Talk about staying on top of things...
no shit (Score:2)
Then I noticed that the last time they updated that section was June 11 2000.
Clueless (Score:3, Interesting)
I read the dead-tree version) cited the
basic problem in the telco industry as being
overcapacity, but then goes on to quote
the C&W prez as saying that they're going
to try to resell excess capacity to make
up losses.
The're also going to try to "hang on to
existing revenue streams" while exiting
the US Market (so, exactly what valuable
assets are you selling, and who, exactly
is buying ?)
Also says that the blulk of their revenue
comes from web hosting...there's a winning
1998 market (I just left a large recently
renamed telco doing securtiy for web hosting).
It's corporate "leadership" without a clue.
---eludom
Good riddance, Clueless & Witless... (Score:4, Insightful)
no surprise (Score:2, Interesting)
They even had boxed it all up nicely for us. You'd think they would want to hol
Legally... (Score:2)
Legally, they were required to let you come in there and remove your equipment. They cannot hold your equipment without authorization (criminal) because of a billing dispute (civil). A former client of mine was threatened in this manner once, and he simply said he would be down at the data center with the sheriffs deputies within a few hours. When he got
No Suprise Here (Score:5, Informative)
I have to say there really isn't any suprise to this. While its hard for any business to make a profit off of low-margin web-hosting, C&W was an ill-suited company to try and do so.
During the past ~2 years since it acquired both Digital Island and Exodus, C&W business model has been to lay-off people who knew what they were doing, and promote those who didn't (usually to the VP level).
The whole business is run by a very top-heavy management structure who have no interest whatsoever in doing what is good for the company. Instead upper management have only been concerned with building their own empires, even if duplicate functions existed elsewhere in the company.
There is only so long a company can exist with such an attitude, and C&W has hit the end of the road.
Re:No Suprise Here (Score:2)
This is argument #1 for increasing stock dividends. By reducing the capital available for personal empire building by management (and instead allowing stockholders to do that), this sort of stuff is a lot more difficult.
GREAT! (Score:2)
Michael
Worst company ever (Score:2, Interesting)
Question ... (Score:2)
I suspect this has more to do with shitty management and "expand at any cost" business practices than a failure of the actual market.
University of California (Score:2, Informative)
Poor C&W (Score:2, Interesting)
Yet another reason that it should have been Bernie Ebbers and John "The Internet Doubles Every 90 Days" Sidgemore in handcuffs ye
It's easy to lose money ... (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to work for a customer of Exodus/Cable Wireless, and saw the exodus from Exodus. I remember the boom years when I only went in on Sunday because that was the only day I could get a parking spot and not have to park across the street. I remember when you could see Dell and Compaq and Gateway and Sun systems in every cage, wall to wall. When you could sit in your cage and have conversations with two or three other customers and learn some really neat stuff. Where the soda and chips were only 25 cents. Where security walked you to your cage and unlocked it for you.
The last few years saw the datacenter become a ghost town. Granted, it was a 62 degree ghost town, but still a ghost town. Where every cage around ours became empty, and we even went from a full cage to a half cage thanks to faster and smaller equipment. The parking lots are never full, soda and chips are now priced the same as everywhere, and no one to talk with. And now security gives you the key to your cage and you walk past rows of empty plastic-coated wire mesh cages.
How do you lose money?? Because you have to run a gazillion foot data center, with all of it's associated infrastructure needs, and you don't have any customers in it. Compare it to the cost of running an apartment building if it is only half occupied. There are still maintenance costs, but now you only have half the tenants to cover it. You still have to heat and cool the empty apartments, although not the same as the rest, and you have no one to pay for it.
Don't get me wrong though. I loved the facility. It was clean and well maintained. I could get away from the home office and work without being interrupted. I didn't have to worry about AC and power and network outside of our cage. If C&W was still a viable company, there would be no hesitation about using them for a data center.
But the 90's are over
A classic case of mismanagement (Score:5, Interesting)
New offerings were brought up and provisioning and billing systems were rushing into place(sometimes). Often a new product would have to be provisioned manually and there was no way to tell if a customer wasn't paying their bill for well over a year after they first started selling the product.
Then to top it all off the mothership(PLC) decided they were going to become a global organization and they ended up picking up the biggest inept blowhards in CWUSA to help create the global organization. While all this was going on they were still having their yearly layoffs, which they did even when they were making a billion a year. Management would lay off the workers and keep the management around. It was not uncommon to know of managers and directors with no people.
Not long after I left they decided to lay off all the techincal people and outsource the work to IBM. Many people were gone for good and many were tranferred to IBM. But the funniest thing about this grand plan was the first task of the plan-- assign a senior management team to organize the layoffs(to them management teams were the "magic pixie dust"). Those people were so management happy that they have a few building in Vienna Virginia stocked with managers, senior managers, director and AVPs that are quite adept at bullshitting, creating powerpoint documents and dodging bullets but they can't manage a damn thing. I could write for hours about the shenanigans that went on in that place but I'll just end with something an old relative who has been a businessman since WWII told me. "Anyone can make money when times are good, it's when times are tough that you find out who the real businessmen are." They were poseurs and it was only a matter of time before their hubris coupled with reality bite them in the ass. The sad thing is these same losers will end up getting nice cushy management positions at Verizon, Worldcom or AT&T and probably for more money.
C&W Leaving US Been Coming for quite some time (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.practical-tech.com/network/n04172003
Long story short, stupid business plans and lousy management equals failure. C&W's US business had both in spades. The real question, from where I sit, is will C&W continue to survive in the UK? That was unthinkable only a few years ago, but they've made so many bad moves recently and bleed out so much capital you really have to wonder.
Steven
IIRC Slashdot is hosted at Exodus (aka C&W) (Score:2)
Letter from C&W (Score:3, Informative)
---
I'd like to take this opportunity to summarize Cable & Wireless' =
announcements today. I look forward to discussing this with you in more =
detail and please either call, or let me know a good time to reach you. =
The recent speculation in the media may have been unnerving to you and =
other customers, and we're excited to deliver our message today. I want =
to assure you that our business is not going away, and there is no need =
to seek an alternative provider for your services.
The bottom line is that C&W PLC intends to withdraw from the US market. =
CWUSA is a composite of three primary, and incredibly valuable assets =
including Exodus, Digital Island, and the former MCI Internet Backbone. =
CWUSA has made excellent progress against our November 13 =
re-organization announcement, however, the internet centric business of =
CWUSA does not fit with CW PLC's new strategic focus on national telecom =
companies with strong positions in their primary markets.
C&W PLC will continue to fully fund and support CWUSA until a buyer or =
investor is found for the business. There are no new changes to US =
headcount, or data center facilities, aside from reductions that were =
outlined in our November 13 re-structure announcement. We, as well as =
you (I'm sure) hope for this to be a swift transaction.
Frankly, for myself, and my US colleagues, this presents an =
extraordinary opportunity to grow a new brand on our strengths of the =
combined legacy industry leaders, and continue to provide you, and all =
our customers with exceptional service, and a range of product offerings =
that is unparalleled in our business.
---
C&W leaving the US market? (Score:2)
C&W: My first ISP (Score:2)
From the Infoworld story:
C&W has been on the retreat in the U.S. since September 2002...
Maybe longer than that. It so happens that C&W was my first ISP, known as CWIX. About four years ago, though, they decided to get out of the ISP business and my account got sold to Prodigy. CWIX was a decent ISP, whereas Prodigy blew. The strong may survive, but it doesn't mean they provide better service.
That started this a while ago (Score:2, Informative)
Funny story tangentially involving C&W (Score:2)
I've been checking my old email address periodically just in case someone tries to contact me there. A couple weeks ago I finall
Re:Don't look up now... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:why C&W is leaveing the states (Score:2)
Funny, that was half the reason my last employer went out of business too.
(For the other half, I blame the FCC and the economy.)
Re:Open Relays (Score:3, Informative)
I worked for Inflow a few years ago as part of the team that does firewall and VPN services for their clients. They had 2 of us alternating coverage of the abuse box. It resulting in a couple extra hours a week of work for the both of us, but there was really no added cost for Inflow. Customers were made to sign a contract when they came in stating that they would not spam, run illegal web sites, etc.
Re:Open Relays (Score:2)
I have too; we had a full-time employee dedicated just to handling spam complaints, and several of the rest of us would help out as needed. It was about all we could do to stay caught up with it enough that large ISPs like AOL and RoadRunner didn't blacklist our IP blocks (which would have resulted in many of our customers being unable to send mail to customers of those ISPs) - if somebody was out sick a
Re:this is news? (Score:2)
Two months ago? Hell, our (my previous employer, actually) service was ended Dec 1, 2002. I had to move our little ISP to an entirely different place -- I never realized how much it sucked until I had to make sure 50+ domains all worked right on 1 IP, then 2 IPs at the same time, then just the other IP, never losing any traffic... bleargh