All posts under tagged ‘Charter’

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Survey Says…Cable Sucks

Source: gigaom.com

Cable providers rate poorly on both customer service and pricing, but thanks to their speedy broadband service, they have so far managed to score more customers than the phone companies, according to a survey out today from research firm CFI Group. The survey, which quizzed 1,318 households online at the end of June, measured consumer satisfaction with telecommunications providers.

The research showed that while cable providers were getting more customers for the time being, telecommunications firms have a chance to win subscribers back as they roll out faster broadband services, IPTV and even wireless bundles. The research also underlined the demise of landlines (1.6 million gone for AT&T and Verizon in the last year), and customer dissatisfaction with slower DSL offerings from telecommunications carriers (nearly 70 percent of net broadband additions went to cable in the second quarter of 2008).

The phone guys even lose out on bundled services. Of the 60 percent of users surveyed who had a bundled service plan (usually a combination of voice, video and data), only 31 percent purchased their bundles from a telecommunications firm. The remaining 69 percent bought their bundles from a cable provider, but that doesn’t mean they like it; twice as many consumers would actually prefer to bundle communications services with a phone company as with a cable company.

This could be a case of the grass being greener, but I do think IP services built on faster fiber-to-the-home networks like Verizon’s FiOS service, could beat cable. I’m less convinced that AT&T’s fiber-to-the-node strategy will be as compelling, since the speeds are more comparable to today’s cable speeds.

source: CFI Group

Thanks to Cable, VoIP in the U.S. Is Booming

Source: gigaom.com

Despite all the troubles with VoIP service providers such as SunRocket and Vonage, VoIP as a technology seems to be doing quite well in the U.S., according to data from Telegeography. As of the end of March, there were 16.3 million consumer VoIP lines, or about 13.8 percent of U.S. households, and 27 percent of households with broadband lines installed.

It’s hardly a surprise, as a lot new additions are coming from people buying triple-play services from cable companies. As of the end of the first quarter of 2008, here’s how the cable VoIP data broke down:

* Comcast: 5.1 million
* TimeWarner: 3.17 million
* Cox: 2.46 million
* Cablevision: 1.68 million
* Charter: 1.08 million

Cynthia Brumfield puts the total VoIP lines shared by the top nine cable providers at just over 14 million. The cable guys added about 1.3 million new subscribers. Most of them are refugees of phone companies who are losing customers by the day, as we have previously noted on more than one occasion.

The guys at Telegeography say that since the start of 2007, the three regional Bell Rperating Companies (RBOCs) — AT&T, Verizon and Qwest — have lost 17.3 million residential telephone lines, while VoIP service providers have gained 14.4 million new customers. Nearly 80 percent have come from cable companies.

Published on May 19th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , ,

Verizon’s VoIP Patent Game Continues

Source: gigaom.com

Verizon’s VoIP patents have become a lucrative source of income for the second-largest phone company in the U.S. After squeezing out $120 million from Vonage, the company has been filing patent infringement lawsuits against all comers — from tiny startups to cable giants like Cox. Today Verizon went after Charter Communications.

On the flip side, VoIP Inc., an Altamonte Springs, Fla.-based VoIP provider with a questionable business outlook, is almost out of gas. They owe Verizon about $8 million related to the settlement the two companies agreed to last year. As Fierce VoIP points out.

Unless Verizon believes in fairies, this money is as good as gone because the stock price is now at $0.008, creditors are already in the courts for big debts and VoIP Inc. is admitting it expects to have to write off its only real asset, its network business.

Convicted felon Steve Ivester was involved with VoIP Inc. during its early days when it was making a transition from tea company to Vonage competitor. Over the past 12 months, VoIP Inc.’s stock has tanked — from over $8 a share to less than a penny.

Published on February 11th, 2008 under , , , ,

Feb. 11, 2008; Cloudy Reception and Mobile Web

Published on February 11th, 2008 under Object id #96

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