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Fiber to the Home is Now Cheap Enough for AT&T to Expand It to Dallas, Other Cities

Phillip Dampier March 10, 2014 AT&T, Broadband Speed, Competition, Consumer News Comments Off on Fiber to the Home is Now Cheap Enough for AT&T to Expand It to Dallas, Other Cities

att gigapowerAT&T says it plans to adopt fiber to the home service in cities around the United States as part of an expansion of its U-verse GigaPower service.

CEO Randall Stephenson told investors at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Telecom, and Media Conference the “cost dynamics” of fiber optics have become “really encouraging” in its targeted fiber deployment in Austin, Tex.

“In fact I would tell you we are so encouraged that we want to begin taking this to other communities [where] we can get the terms and conditions like we have in Austin,” Stephenson said, referring to Austin’s red-tape cutting and clearing the way for fiber upgrades with eased permit requirements and pole attachment policies. “We are redirecting investment to fiber to the home deployment, and in fact we are going to launch the service in Dallas this summer.”

Stephenson added that where U-verse faces significant competition from a “new competitor,” AT&T will be “a little more aggressive and assertive in deploying that technology around the country.”

That most likely means AT&T will choose fiber to the home service in areas facing imminent competition from Google Fiber or another similar provider.

Aereo Coming to Austin March 3; Residents Can Pre-Register Now

Phillip Dampier February 24, 2014 Competition, Consumer News, Online Video 1 Comment
Aereo's over the air antenna is about the size of a dime.

Aereo’s over the air antenna is about the size of a dime.

Aereo is coming to Austin in March.

Already available in four other Texas cities, Aereo will allow Austin residents to watch local over-the-air television stations on mobile devices, tablets or home computers through live video streaming.

Aereo will accept customers for its Austin service from these counties: Bastrop, Blanco, Burnet, Caldwell, Fayette, Gillespie, Hays, Lee, Llano, Mason, Travis and Williamson.

Customers are invited to sign up early for the waiting list on their website to get the service first when it launches March 3. Aereo Austin subscribers will be able to record and watch 19 over-the-air channels, at rates starting at $8 a month.

AT&T’s Gigabit Fiber: Spying on Your Browsing History for Targeted Ads and Discounts

who is watching

AT&T has got your number.

AT&T wants to know what you are doing on the Internet.

If you agree to share your browsing history and view targeted contextual advertising from AT&T and its partners, the company will give you a monthly discount off the price of its new GigaPower gigabit fiber network.

Now launching in Austin, AT&T GigaPower charges $99 a month for 300Mbps standard service (speeds will be raised to 1,000Mbps in 2014 at no extra cost — equipment, installation and activation fees are extra). But customers can knock $30 off the monthly price and skip the new customer fees by enrolling in AT&T’s new “Premier” package, which runs $70 a month.

GigaOm discovered some interesting language in AT&T’s fine print about its Premier service: “[The discount] is available with your agreement to participate in AT&T Internet Preferences. AT&T may use your Web browsing information, like the search terms you enter and the Web pages you visit, to provide you relevant offers and ads tailored to your interests.”

Exactly how AT&T intends to implement its contextual advertising program remains largely a mystery. Google includes contextual ads in its Gmail service, its search engine results, and in online advertising from participants in Google’s AdWords program. AT&T lacks an advertising platform as large as Google or Microsoft’s Bing, so questions are being raised about how exactly AT&T will be able to find enough places to present online ads.

GigaOm suspects AT&T might use deep packet inspection to monitor customers’ web traffic to collect browsing information for contextual ads. Others suspect AT&T will replace certain existing third-party ads found on independent websites with its own advertising. Either is likely to bring the company scrutiny, both from Internet Privacy advocates and website owners that find their advertising replaced by ads from AT&T and its partners.

AT&T’s response to GigaOm left a number of questions unanswered:

We use various methods to collect web browsing information, and we are currently reviewing the methods we may use for the Internet Preferences program. Whichever method is used, we will not collect information from secure (https) or otherwise encrypted sites, such as online banking or when a credit card is used to buy something online on a secure site. And we won’t sell your personal information to anyone, for any reason.

[…] We won’t sell your personal information. Rather, AT&T may use your personal information to direct another advertiser’s ad to you, but that advertiser would never have access to your Personal Information. For example, after you browse hotels in Miami, you may be offered discounts for rental cars, but that rental company doesn’t know who you are.

AT&T is experimenting with consumer acceptance of discounting service in return for giving up some privacy. It says it is giving customers the choice to opt out by signing up for the more expensive “standard” service.

gigapower pricing

U-verse television service is also available to customers of both packages for an extra $50 a month. Telephone service adds another $30 a month.

AT&T has started rolling out its GigaPower service in the French Place, Mueller, Zilker, and Onion Creek neighborhoods and will select future places to expand based on interest registered by local residents on AT&T’s GigaPower website.

“We’ve already received great input from thousands of Austinites eager for the fastest speeds,” said Dahna Hull, general manager of Austin’s AT&T Services, Inc. “These votes are helping us identify where the need for speed and advanced TV services is the greatest and will help guide our future GigaPower expansion plans.”

[flv]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/KXAN Austin Internet speed race in Austin is on 12-11-13.mp4[/flv]

Options for super high-speed Internet are heating up in Austin as AT&T introduces AT&T U-verse with GigaPower this week. KXAN reports the service will initially launch with 300Mbps service in a handful of neighborhoods, but upgrade to 1,000Mbps speeds in more locations next year. (2:30)

Accidentally Leaked U-verse Pricing No Bargain: 45Mbps $76, 300Mbps $199

Phillip Dampier October 21, 2013 AT&T, Broadband Speed, Competition, Consumer News, Google Fiber & Wireless Comments Off on Accidentally Leaked U-verse Pricing No Bargain: 45Mbps $76, 300Mbps $199

An enterprising reader of the Broadband ReportsAT&T Forum stumbled on proposed pricing for AT&T’s faster speed services for U-verse and, presumably, their planned fiber-to-the-home rollout in Austin, Tex.:

UVerse

The prices are no bargain in comparison to the $70 a month Google charges Kansas City residents for 1,000/1,000Mbps service, but on the lower end, AT&T’s 45Mbps U-verse option is comparable to Time Warner Cable’s 50/5Mbps tier, which now sells for $65-75 a month on a one-year promotion:

twc speed

Time Warner Cable’s latest broadband offers

Time Warner Cable’s Horn Of Plenty for Austin: Free Wi-Fi for Broadband Customers

Phillip Dampier April 25, 2013 Competition, Consumer News, Data Caps, Editorial & Site News, Wireless Broadband Comments Off on Time Warner Cable’s Horn Of Plenty for Austin: Free Wi-Fi for Broadband Customers
Austin gets a horn 'o plenty with free Time Warner Cable Wi-Fi because Google is coming to town.

Austin gets a horn of plenty with free Time Warner Cable Wi-Fi because Google is coming to town.

As Time Warner Cable faces forthcoming competition from Google Fiber in Austin, the company is responding with the construction of a free Wi-Fi network for its broadband customers to protect its business.

TWC WiFi is available now from a limited number of hotspots, but hundreds more will become available across Austin in 2013 as the company builds out its wireless network.

Time Warner Cable customers with Standard Internet or above qualify for free access, as do Business Class customers. Others can trial the service for free and then buy access for $2.95 an hour.

“Increasingly, our Austin customers want to take their high-speed Internet with them out of the home and on-the-go,” said Area Vice President Kathy Brabson. “The TWC WiFi network we are building for Austin will allow our customers to greatly maximize their TWC Internet subscription at no additional charge.”

It is no coincidence Time Warner Cable has selected Austin for a Wi-Fi rollout. The Wi-Fi service was specifically intended to provide more value for Time Warner Cable customers in competitive markets to keep them from switching to a competitor.

It represents a sea change for a cable company that in 2009 targeted Austin for an Internet Overcharging scheme that would have slapped a usage limit and consumption billing on the area’s broadband customers. With the advent of strong competition from Google, Time Warner Cable is giving customers something instead of taking things away.

Austin customers can download the free TWC WiFi Finder app available in Google Play and the Apple App Store or visit www.twc.com/wificoverage to view the hotspot coverage map as the wireless network grows. Once authenticated, customers can also access Wi-Fi hotspots in other cities including New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Orlando, Tampa, Kansas City, Charlotte and more.

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