I don't think the logic is purely economic. By integrating the national routing table you get lower $/Mbps but also importantly lower latency and often less risk of packet loss. The big question of course is how do you value a 100ms advantage - which would bring this back to the question as you've framed it.


jamie


On 8 October 2013 09:08, Jonathan Brewer <jon.brewer@gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Oct 8, 2013 at 7:16 AM, Shane Hanson <shanson@istar.net.nz> wrote:

�I�m working for a service provider (Mothership) and we�re trying to differentiate between national and international traffic. Any pointers?

If we're to believe media reports*, bandwidth is so cheap these days that small providers like Orcon (at 5% of market share) are purchasing upwards of 400kbps/subscriber on SCC.

At what point does the overhead involved in differentiation and differential shaping/billing exceed the cost of just buying more capacity?

-JB


"Orcon have upgraded capacity. They had around 8Gbit/s of capacity, now they�ve upgraded that to 23Gbit/s," Mr Dotocm replied (Orcon later confirmed this Southern Cross Cable capacity upgrade. Asked about shaping or throttling, spokesman Quentin Reade told NBR, "We have a fair use policy � but to date, since we launched almost a year ago, we haven't kicked anyone off, or changed any service levels for people. People regularly use more than 1TB a month; some use much more.")�


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