A Domain Registrar Is Starting a Fiber ISP To Compete With Comcast 65
Jason Koebler writes: Tucows Inc., an internet company that's been around since the early 90s — it's generally known for being in the shareware business and for registering and selling premium domain names — announced that it's becoming an internet service provider. Tucows will offer fiber internet to customers in Charlottesville, Virginia — which is served by Comcast and CenturyLink — in early 2015 and eventually wants to expand to other markets all over the country. "Everyone who has built a well-run gigabit network has had demand exceeding their expectations," Elliot Noss, Tucows' CEO said. "We think there's space in the market for businesses like us and smaller."
Yeah, sure, any day now... (Score:2)
Comcast is a behemoth that Google can barely take on. Tucows will not succeed in doing much, but over time, the efforts of Google and others like Tucows might compel Comcast to yup their game. At least in my dream. Certainly Verizon and their fios didn't have the balls...
Re:Yeah, sure, any day now... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
(Or worse, regulated more than it is now.)
Yeah, because regulation hurts them and protects consumers and doesn't increase the barriers to entry in the market or anything, and of course every time regulation is on the table it's not like they spend millions lobbying for it to end up protecting themselves rather than their customers. /s
Re:Yeah, sure, any day now... (Score:5, Insightful)
And Comcast has to be careful how it fights them or it can lad itself in trouble in ALL of it's other markets.
There is one simple way Comcast can fight them.... deliver a better service with better support at lower cost to the consumer, and do it in a way that makes the customers happier and more excited about their service than Tucows.
It does mean Comcast has to probably offer the 1 Gigabit or better service at a lower price than what Tucows is rolling out.
If Comcast uses any other method to fight them, then Comcast deserves to be more tightly regulated.
Of course if Comcast actually gets competitive and causes Tucows to fail fair and square, then once there is no effective competition once again, Comcast could raise their prices or take other new actions as a result of becoming a monopoly ---- in that case, I would expect the regulators to tighten their reigns heavily and create a cap on Comcasts' revenue and requirements similar to the Telco regulations requiring the phone companies to build-out and service all customers (no cherrypicking high-revenue customers; no excluding the "Top or Bottom 2% of users" who have been deemed unprofitable customers).
Re: (Score:2)
comcast needs to have better TV as well.
Re:Yeah, sure, any day now... (Score:4, Insightful)
I.e. if Comcast uses excess profits from everywhere else to provide ridiculously low priced service (aka walmart breaking into a new market until the competition goes out of business).. then Tucows can't win.
I think the lines need to be built by and maintained by one company or by the municipality and the service provided by competition.
There are good and bad points to excluding customers. It's ridiculous to run a 20 mile fiber to one person's house or even a group of five or six houses and charge them the same as everyone else. If they want cable- they should live with the rest of civilization.
OTH, left to their own devices providers will cut "less" profitable customers over "highly profitable" customers. Which doesn't work with something that is basically a public utility.
Re: (Score:2)
I.e. if Comcast uses excess profits from everywhere else to provide ridiculously low priced service (aka walmart breaking into a new market until the competition goes out of business).. then Tucows can't win.
You mean dumping? http://www.heritage.org/resear... [heritage.org] Getting bit by this has to be Comcasts bigest fear. If it can lower price in only this market to drive tucows out of the business, it is totally screwed.
Re: (Score:3)
I think the lines need to be built by and maintained by one company or by the municipality and the service provided by competition.
I totally agree with you. Of course, that means that we start to treat broadband like a utility and not a private business, which is fine by me.
There are good and bad points to excluding customers. It's ridiculous to run a 20 mile fiber to one person's house or even a group of five or six houses and charge them the same as everyone else. If they want cable- they should live with the rest of civilization.
I think you need to think that thru a little more. Going by that logic, you're saying that farmers (who grow your food) and others who just like small town life don't deserve high-speed internet. I'm not sure what word I want to apply to that, but you don't come out looking so nice there.
Now, if you want to say that those who live further out will need to pay a bi
Re: (Score:2)
I think you would agree that if a farmer is 20 miles from any other connection point that no company or municipality should be legally required to run that farmer a line and charge the same price as they do for a line in an urban neighborhood.
If we decide that we want to provide that as the federal government- cool. Tho it would be pretty damn irritating to find we are running subsidized internet out to some wealthy lady's wilderness estate because she put in 10 acres of hay.
There are alternative solutions
Re:Yeah, sure, any day now... (Score:5, Insightful)
If comcast provides better quality for lower price in Charlottesville, they're basically admitting that they sell overpriced, low-quality in the rest of the nation, which provides legal ammo to those opposed to them.
Ofcourse, all of this would be good for consumers, competitors and pretty much everybody... except Comcast themselves.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: Yeah, sure, any day now... (Score:1)
I for one accept our new cow overloads. Any competition against Comcast is a good thing!
Re: (Score:2)
the blurb reads like they would just resell comcast/centurylink?
they're building their own network or no?
(repacking crap would be right up tucows biz model)
High throughput spamvertising! (Score:2)
Re:High throughput spamvertising! (Score:4, Insightful)
One cow to rule them all! (Score:5, Funny)
Tucows to bind them
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Comcast as Lucifer? The Prince of Darkness? Source of all Evil?
That's really insulting to Satan.
Re: (Score:2)
Comcast as Lucifer? The Prince of Darkness? Source of all Evil?
Not the source... Just a common carrier...
Hmm... Charlottesville wouldn't be a bad place... (Score:2)
...except for all those Wahoos.
Seriously, it's a cool town, in a beautiful setting. We've been happy as clams with our Ting (also from Tucows) mobile service, and we've wanted for a long time to move back to the Virginia hills. Hmm...
ABC (Anyone But Comcast) (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Ah Tucows... (Score:4, Insightful)
Ah...Tucows...
Download anything from them and it will be loaded with extra adware with a very tricky sequence of clicks to not install any of it. Yes, this even means not agreeing what looks like a license agreement, but is actually an offer to install crap.
I'd probably take even Comcast over them.
Re: (Score:2)
I dont know, my roommates are on Ting mobile (run by Tucows), and they find it pretty good. I wouldnt be surprised if their fiber ISP falls is run under their Ting subsidiary too.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
That wasn't your room mates, that was a tucows spam bot pretending to be your room mates who love their new Ting mobile service and their LOW LOW PRICES!
Re: (Score:3)
Windows Update (Score:2)
What does it matter what they put in IE. If you never use IE, you never see the toolbar.
Back in the day, IE was the only way to get to Windows Update.
Re: (Score:1)
Back in the day, Microsoft's homepage [microsoft.com] had a gopher link.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
That is extremely incorrect.
This is going to be run by the people that run the Sprint MVNO Ting (which is owned by Tucows). Ting is *awesome*. They pretty much define what customer service and user experience should look like. I've been with them for over a year now, and they are one of a small handful of companies I go out of my way to proselytize to people.
I would switch to this in an *instant* if I could, and if their rates are reasonable, which I expect they will be, given that it will be run by Ting.
I
tucows midi song (Score:1)
on a long shot, im going to ask if anyone knows where to find the midi song that tucows used as an example in a tutorial for how to embed music in html. this is going way back to circa 2001, i tried searching for it a few years ago but no luck. that midi song was iconic to me in my youth when i was learning html and i really wish i could find it again for nastalgia sake. thank you to anyone who knows what im talking about :)
Tucows start (Score:1)
Tucows Inc., an internet company that's been around since the early 90s â" it's generally known for being in the shareware business and for registering and selling premium domain names ...
In 1997, Tucows was starting to get attention at ISPCON. Network Solutions _WAS_ the only registrar since General Atomics and ??? abandoned the domain registration game. Kim was at the top. Then the fees went from $100 to $70 and there was limited competition. Tucows was a competitor, but not a good one. I remember, because I did not choose them for my domain registrations. For those interested in Kim, she went on to ICANN and was a force to deal with when getting a /19. Those who don't know what a /19 is
Re: (Score:3)
General Atomics and the original AT&T were the other parts of InterNIC, but only Network Solutions provided registration services (rs.internic.net). IIRC, AT&T's role was to supply Directory services and General Atomics were to supply some services that they failed miserably at, which got them booted out of the contract.
Wasn't the original head of Tucows (The Ultimate Collection of Winsock Software I believe it stood for) a guy named Scott? Is he still there?
Amazingly, no. (Score:2)
Yes, I know; the joke about SV having shit service, but...Colleges are well wired, the towns around them are often not. Virginia Tech - the "electronic village" - that was supposed to get 10bT to every home over a decade ago - STILL has ISP-by-address. If you're lucky you get Verizon 7/768 AND Comcast, but many places have a single provider. And there is basically no fiber. The only competition I've seen is from a rural telecom who stopped by one day while running new service to a select few, and they could
Re: (Score:2)
I live in a small college town. The college I work for has two 1GB lines going to it (I'm not sure what the other couple colleges have). The town itself is served by AT&T (I can get a whopping 3Mbit at my house!), CableONE (which is what I use - 50/3), and a fixed wireless provider.
It'd be awesome if someone would come in and offer a Google Fiber-like service (and by 'like', I mean 1GB for roughly $70 a month)...
Holy Crap (Score:3)
Tucows is still around??? I remember downloading crap from them in 1995. A quick google shows that not much has changed in the intervening 19 years.
Does their fiber service come with the signature bloatware as well?
(Side note, it's interesting to see internet companies that ostensibly have no reason to exist, yet are still alive and .. sorta-kinda-maybe-kicking today. Lycos for example. I'm frankly gobsmacked that they might wind up outliving their labby mascot. Or askjeeves, no quasi-witty joke needed.)
Re:Holy Crap (Score:5, Informative)
They're around in some indirect sense, but the current company named "Tucows" is mostly a different one. Tucows was a Michigan-based internet company that in 2001 was acquired by a Toronto-based company, Infonautics. Infonautics subsequently changed its own name to Tucows, because it was a better-recognized brand. So the current Tucows is largely a rebranded Infonautics, and still headquartered in Toronto. But, it does also own the former Tucows assets as well, so they persist in that sense.
Businesses that have gone through as many rounds of acquisitions and mergers as this one have are a bit Frankensteinish, so it's hard to say what is new or old or mashed up together.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Sort of like how Nokia used to be an old lumberjack and milling company, then produced rubber and car tires, then mobile phones, and finally went on to become a brothel for Microsoft executives who fetishize pale Finnish developers, developers, developers...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yay! competition. (Score:1)
They've come a long way ... (Score:2)
I wonder... (Score:1)
...when the sheeple will realize that having gigabit fiber internet won't make everything faster....
they still don't realize it's limited to the speed of the sites they visit...
heh
Tucows - good and bad (Score:2)
Tucows has Ting cell service - which if you don't mind being on Sprint's network is quite a bargain, and the staff is friendly. They also have the Hover retail registrar - which refused to support DNSSEC for domains registered there, even if you run your own DNS, unless you pay them $500 per domain for their help with it. Management at Hover is hostile to users.