Residential Broadband An Insider's Guide to the Battle For the Last Mile

Integrated analysis of the technologies, markets, and business of Residential Broadband In thirty years, the worldwide market for high-speed information services to the home will reach SI trillion. This book explains how and why. Beginning with tutorials and a few touches of history to position resi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Maxwell, Kim (Author)
Format: Manuscript Book
Language:English
Published: New York Wiley Computer Publishing 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:Click Here to View Status and Holdings.
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245 1 0 |a Residential Broadband  |b An Insider's Guide to the Battle For the Last Mile  |c Kim Maxwell 
264 # 1 |a New York  |b Wiley Computer Publishing  |c 1999 
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300 # # |a ix, 390 pages  |b illustrations  |c 24 cm 
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504 # # |a Includes bibliographical references (p. 376-378) and index. 
520 # # |a Integrated analysis of the technologies, markets, and business of Residential Broadband In thirty years, the worldwide market for high-speed information services to the home will reach SI trillion. This book explains how and why. Beginning with tutorials and a few touches of history to position residential broadband today, this essential guide examines how competing technologies will struggle for supremacy in a chaotic market. It stakes out the battles between ADSL and cable modems, IP and ATM, telephone companies and CATV companies, televisions and personal computers, and professional applications and consumer applications. It does so with reverence for none-some will win and some will lose as the market emerges over the next decade or so. Our guide is kim Maxwell, an entrepreneur and executive who has spent twenty-five years inventing ways to make communications technologies and markets fit together. His analysis takes some surprising turns: * The Internet will not be the dominant network for residential broadband. * Despite its current power, IP may over time give way to ATM for residential broadband. * Cable modems have the early lead, but the DSL tortoise will catch up. * Fiber to the Home and the Information Superhighway are at least fifteen years away and depend upon HDTV. * Despite regulatory intentions, residential networking will return to a monopoly within thirty years. * Computers and televisions will not converge. * Ethernet will dominate home networking. * Video-on-demand will not be a viable market for at least five years. * In the long run. Consumer applications such as shopping and entertainment will dominate the more near-term applications for Internet access and telecommuting. * But, the market can only begin with the personal computer and its natural applications-Internet access and telecommuting. 
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