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- Jul 22, 2003
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Shame - all these villages that are missing their idiots.CUASA spokesman Ray Webber welcomes the launch of another cost–effective product aimed at the average consumer and small business owner. He says it is the beginning of a trend. “Broadband prices are going to continue to drop,” he says.
they can top up pay-as-you-go style, at R139 for 500MB
Come now warichard - WA and the other budget high-cap users have inadvertently served telkom well. (NB I said - inadvertently)warichard said:Prices aren't dropping at all, in fact they seem to be increasing. These ISP's are bundling in more and more limited services at similar or slightly lower cost to their old packages. Sure, for low usage users (ie. those who use below 3GB) this is more affordable, but for "high" usage users (ie. those who use more than 3GB) it becomes more costly. We should be striving to offer higher caps at similar or lower costs, not lower caps at similar or lower costs. But then again, it seems to be the current trend is to price things using the argument "what we can get away with", no doubt this is why Telkom has priced their ADSL accordingly for November. They're not stupid, they've taken a look at the current market, taken a look at how much everyone else would be able to provide 30GB at, and marked their ADSL accordingly. No-one can offer 30GB at a more affordable rate without some *serious* overselling or cross-subsidisation of products.
I still cringe when I think about the way ADSL is going to turn out in November, for your average ADSL user, even though the price of 512K ADSL has come down by approx. R100, they may end up paying more than R100 extra for their usage, which means that for your *average* 512K ADSL user, ADSL has just become that much more expensive - anywhere from R100 to R1000 more expensive (and beyond).
Melikes - but - Aaaaw - comon - you're allowed one email to 1 person per day. Watch your business grow.reech said:...small business !? it would have to be a frackin' microscopic business to get by on 500mb
bwana v.3 said:Telkom's taken their strategy right out of the crack-dealer handbook. Give the customers a taste of high bandwidth availability at one price - get em hooked - then command stratospheric prices.
How dare they speak on my behalf when I've never heard of these people. As a communications user I do not agree with the misguided drivel spewing from that spokesperson.TheRoDent said:Communications User ASSociation of South Africa
I have seen that statement from Smith before, it sounds like a veiled stab at 3G services that don't allow for bandwidth rollover, well if the cellular 3G operators start offering bandwidth rollover, then that will be a plus for consumers IMO...Sentech Spokesperson said:“The problem with most of the broadband offerings in the market place is that you don't always use what you pay for,” says Winston Smith, Sentech portfolio manage for wireless products.
Hmmm IMO proof that marketting people are addicted to something - possibly the smell of their own BS or something a tad more dangerous...true that there is a market for iGo, but iGo is not broadband by any stretch of the imagination...WBS Spokesperson said:Mckechnie acknowledges that the pricing in the market is dropping, crediting competition in the market place as one of the reasons. He says that iBurst has acted as a catalyst in bringing in competitive broadband prices to SA.
Truth be told, WBS have already done it - they got customers hooked on uncapped bandwidth from November 2004 up to and including March 2005, I think Slimothy will agree with that...Slimothy?bwana v.3 said:...
Telkom's taken their strategy right out of the crack-dealer handbook. Give the customers a taste of high bandwidth availability at one price - get em hooked - then command stratospheric prices. The bandwidth junkies are going to pay whatever it takes for their fix. Sure - perhaps they'll cut down for a while but before long they'll be forking out enough money to pay a bond off.
How much longer before the others (iburst et al) also adopt the telkom model?