Call 800-880-2001 for a Real-Time Quote


T1 Service Providers Index


One Communications

Network Innovations

UCN

Nuvox

AT&T

PNG

Paetec

Level3

Time Warner Telecom

Qwest

Newedge

Cavalier

XO

Airespring

Telepacific

Megapath

ACC

Covad

Broadsky

Telnes

T1 Price Quotes In Real-Time:

Using the world's only real-time business T1 Price quote tool, you can easily get instant t1 quotes from many of the major providers in two seconds. After you select a service plan from the results, one of our professional sales would contact you and assist you with the plan. The service is totally free and low price is guaranteed!

T1 Price Quotes:

Service Type:
Your Name:
Company:
Email:
Phone Number:
- -



CLECs Gain Ground with SMBs

Thursday October 16,2008, 03:25 pm ET


ANDOVER, Maine, Oct. 16 /Chris McMillen/ -- Business broadband, its price, and who can afford it, are changing. Every day an increasing number of business are finding the new broadband services made available to them by the "new" telecommunications companies that are emerging from the latest round of mergers and acquisitions. Overlapping networks are being consolidated into bigger and leaner footprints, lowering the cost of dynamic integrated digital signal 1 (DS1) service to the price range of about five regular phone lines. Small to medium size business can now afford services once reserved for the Fortune 1000 companies.

According to a recent study conducted by PK Communications Telecom Brokers Inc., the average cost of a POTS (plain old telephone service) line serviced by the Bells (AT&T, Verizon, and Qwest) have changed very little over the 10 year span from 1996, the year the Clinton Administration signed into law the Telecommunications Act, to 2006. The real change in the industry came in the T-carrier class of products, where customers can get up to 1.5 Mbps of bandwidth and 24 digital phone lines all in one package. Some CLECs like XO, TelePacific, Nuvox, One Communications, and even Covad are now offering rates well below the $550/month level, making the change seem like a no-brainer to thousands of customers.

There are two basic "integrated" DS-1 configurations, analog and digital. The 24-line bundle in which they come is termed a "trunk". The main difference between analog and digital trunks is their flexibility. With digital trunks, voice lines not in use can be dynamically reconfigured to carry data traffic, so they don't sit idle. Analog trunks on the other hand can not change their function once configured by the service provider. Data channels remain data channels and the same for voice channels, even if there is no voice traffic.

Hopefully the CLECs can continue to push the boundaries of innovation and economics. The only thing that can keep them from the promise land is the gatekeeper of competition: the Federal Communications Commission, and the huge Bells (AT&T and Verizon - that's you) who make it a point to spend more money lobbying in Washington DC than Exxon Mobile.Looking in the crystal ball of the future, it is clear that new an innovated services being offered by the few super-CLECs remaining will drive innovation higher and prices lower. New technology is being pressed to the forefront by lower prices that the mainstream of small businesses everywhere can comfortably afford.



Other Related Searches


t1 providers | agents | about | careers | contact | t1 | mpls | gigabit ethernet

©2008 Telarus, Inc.


telid: telarus