
100Mbps Internet Access For $1000 Per Month 207
A reader writes "Cogent, a startup ISP that has just recently completed their fiber optic network across the US, is now offering 100Mbps internet access for $1000 a month in some major metropolitan areas." A few caveats of course - I'm not sure how close to actually connecting people they are - but it does sound like a nice deal.
Re:Here's an idea... (Score:2)
The Broadcom CMTS chip usually comes in a 8:1 flavour (8 upload channels for 1 download channels).
With existing cable infrastructure, it can be a challenge to find all the available upload bandwidth within 8 frequency slices, while the download channel is usually much higher up in the list, and it not a problem at all. Hence the single channel allowed to it for up to 27Mbps.
--
Let's not all suck at the same time please
Re:Sweet. (Score:5)
Re:Feeling strangely familar.... (Score:1)
CIR (Score:2)
Re:Question: (Score:1)
That's Nothing Great (Score:1)
Bah! I connect at 150MB/s, and I only pay $40 per month. Ok,ok, so it's a cable modem, but I really do see that much bandwidth as a rule, so who cares?
Re:That's Nothing Great (Score:1)
Uhg...too early...must have caffeine. Upon a second read I realize that a) that bits is with a lower-case b and b) I connect at 1.5Mb/s, not 100Mb/s. :-(
Re:Email in a broadband world (Score:1)
Re:Question: (Score:1)
Vapor? (Score:1)
My mom says there's a lot of Penguins in Antarctica. The Linux Pimp [thelinuxpimp.com]
Omaha fiber optics (Score:1)
I've not seen the docmentation myself, but I do notice that when I visit the connection is significantly faster than what I get in Berkeley.
Also, unlike in Berkeley, he does not seem to be affected by the time of day. In the SFBA most of the people I know with @Home find a significant lag increase during prime time 5pm and 11pm.
Re:How to get 100Mbps for $175/mo (Score:1)
--Maarken
How about 1Gbit to the home..... (Score:1)
1000base ethernet down that fibre......
www.worldwidepackets.com
If there are girls at the lan party... (Score:1)
If there are girls at the lan party either you've been slipped some acid or one of your friends has had an operation.
-Zane
Re:College? (Score:2)
--
100Mbps business (Score:1)
NEVER GET SLASHDOTTED AGAIN! (Score:2)
Re:Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:1)
Re:College? (Score:1)
Those were the days. Of course, my connection at work isn't so bad, so I can't complain.
"It is well that war is so terrible, lest we grow too fond of it."
Re:For those who don't know (Score:1)
my cable is
because i frequently d/l 50MB in just a few seconds
not bad for $AU75/month
T1: 190KB/s
56kbps: ~6KB/s
therefore T1 is only 30 times faster than dial-up??
Can someone point me in the right direction where i can read something that explaines what i have got wrong here?
Thanks
-Chris
cjconlan@optushome.com.au
Cable company ISPs Re:Here's an idea... (Score:3)
Yeah, here in Austin I have connectivity through Time-Warner (same network as @Home? not sure). Reading their terms of service ("no servers, you naughty little linux hacker") and looking at their bandwidth profile (15Kbps up, capped) leaves one with the distinct impression that they really aren't interested in being a 2-way IP(internet protocol)-carrier but rather a 1-way content provider.
I expect that this is common to other ISPs operated by cable companies, becuase their entire business mindset (up until recently) has been focused on being the sole source of information to passively absorbing masses of people (TV). Not too suprising that they'd approach the new medium of the Internet (new to them) with the same thought patterns of the old.
On an Austin-TW side-minirant, the main reason they give against home serving and for the bandwidth cap is that "they don't have enough bandwidth". Oh, I see, you have enough bandwidth for 60+ digital cable channels but not enough to let people upload files to work at more than a snail's pace? :-/ The other rational they give is that people only want to use servers for piracy (mp3, warez). How like a content company to assume all their customers are IP (int. prop.) criminals... :-(
(Side note: I'm not trying to be condescending by defining IP twice, I just didn't want their to be confusion about which expansion of IP I was refering to.--
Re:Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:1)
Re:Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:1)
Re:For those who don't know (Score:1)
therefore T1 is only 30 times faster than dial-up.
Yes, about. Though 56k downloads are restricted to 53k, at least in the US, and that is only for downloads, uploads are still at 33.6. A T1 is up and down ~190k. Cable is even faster than that, but again, the upload is usually severly limited.
Re:Make sure that it isn't PPPoE. (Score:2)
Re:Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:2)
Two words: Counter. Strike.
-
OK, folks (Score:2)
$1000/month for 100 Mbps is good. Can you find anywhere that offers 67 T1 connections for the same price?
Just to further clarify, this service is decidedly aimed at business applications. Again, businesses; not individual residential subscribers. If you, your friend, your housemates, or anyone else you know is even remotely considering purchasing one of these for home use, there is a Big Blue Room that they should really consider visiting once and a while.
$ man reality
Re:Related to Cogent.net? (Score:1)
Anm
Talk about redundant... (Score:1)
I swear this repetition is becoming more common on /. Is it simply the number of articles being submitted that precludes doing verification of the uniqueness of a topic? Is real news hard to come by? Do the people in control not read the site?
I'm baffled since a simple search for "cogent" turned up the old article for me...
Re:Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:1)
That would be almost like having lots of browsers open, wouldn't it?
Each one getting full external bandwidth concurrently, side by side down the ISP's fat pipe to your machine.
Re:Make sure that it isn't PPPoE. (Score:1)
My suggestion is to NEVER go with the telco for your internet service... they usually screw it up pretty well. There are a ton of other providers out there who want your business, and are willing to give you static IP's and such.
Re:That's nice (Score:1)
Re:Question: (Score:1)
Limited reachability? (Score:1)
Re:Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:1)
I'm not even sure that you can get OC-48 internet access without serious money and very special arrangements with a provider and I'm pretty sure it would be worse than having a half-dozen OC-3s to multiple providers.
Skip the middleman, go straight to MFNX (Score:1)
Metromedia Fiber Networks, and then charging you
for just a piece of that bandwidth. However,
you can lease a strand from MFNX, have them light
it and off you go at an extremely low price.
Of course, this is *not* for the individual.
You can check them out here [mmfn.com]
managed SONET, MetroGig-E and WaveChannel Optical Nets
We just met with Cogent.. (Score:1)
They mentioned something about building their own fibre network along with new technology that allows you to cram multiple waves over a single fibre. I really have no idea what this means, and they were sales guys, but their offer seemed worth listening to.
We're interested in their connection because it would allow us multiple internet uplinks (ie, redundancy) since Verizon has proven itself less than friendly/competent.
There was a catch though, and one that my boss was upset about. I haven't been given all of the details since I'm not in that office anymore.
Re:Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:1)
well doesn't it make sense to add more backbones and try to get people connected to them?
Re:Wow. (Score:1)
There is a post further down (with a reply by someone who works for one of these providers) which briefly discusses the business side of this.
Re:For those who don't know (Score:1)
Thats when everything is bogged down at 1:00pm.
At night it goes up to 140kbps when its not being used
by anyone else. Its great to run a q3 server off of one
of their machines, and then go home, and admin it.
Just a note. Bellsouth blows. period.
Re:Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:1)
Re:Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:1)
hehe, who needs big cities?
-since when did 'MTV' stand for Real World Television instead of MUSIC television?
That's nice (Score:1)
Re:What about the $45/month 45Gbps connections? (Score:1)
Re:OK, folks (Score:3)
You've obviously never been part of a condo association or even thought beyond your immediate roommates.
I looked into getting cogent for my condo association. With 20 lofts in the building the cost would have translated to $50/month for shared 100Mbit -- a worse case scenerio of 10Mbit, or 10 times the DSL bandwidth I get now for that price. However, with so few people I would be getting close to 100Mbit for that price, or 100 times the bandwidth for what I'm paying.
Unfortunately, cogent is not available in my building and is not in any way targeting residential customers, and they need 7+ subscribers (@ $1000/each) for each set of equipment to be profitable, so I need to find six other building willing to subscribe who are close enough to use the same Pop -- not impossible, but not trivial either.
For business its great -- we're getting lit up in January. However, for those of us lusting after such things at home we'll have to wait a couple of years, not for the price to drop (although that is always nice), but simply for the service to be available at all, at any price.
Re:competative? (Score:1)
This isn't necessarily true. Case in point, our local university used to have quite a dialup system running off a miniswitch on campus tied to the CO downtown. One day the Prez of the university picked up his phone and had to wait 10 seconds for dial tone.
Needless to say, that problem was promptly resolved by moving most of the dialup system to the CO itself, then to a CLEC.
Which then brings us to your second point, interswitch capacity. The CLEC had only turned up one DS3 to the local ILEC tandem, and when all the students came back to school from summer break suddenly no one could call the dialup, and business customers of the CLEC couldn't call anywhere other than inside the switch. Guess that's what happens when you've got capacity on one side for about 2000 dialup users, and the 40,000 users on the other, and only 670 or so channels inbetween.
Email in a broadband world (Score:1)
Universal broadband will totally change the face of what we do online, when, where and with whom.
Re:Make sure that it isn't PPPoE. (Score:1)
You've heard of web servers, perhaps? (Score:2)
This is actually potentially a really great deal for people who are paying through the nose for a T1 (typically $2000/month, or 12 times more expensive) or a DS-3 (even more exorbitant, $5000/mo not unheard of). If you're in a metro area, you're hosting your own web servers, and especially if you're stuck with a static market defined mainly by one Baby Bell, you're gonna love this.
----
It is aimed at buildings/shared access (Score:4)
Cogent has many distinct market advantages to enhance your real estate investment... from
this page. [cogentco.com]
This is being marketed as something to install in the apartment building you own, not really as a personal connection to the internet.
On the other hand, considering building managment, do you really want the building super to also be your sysadmin?
This is a good thing (Score:1)
Not the point of the service... (Score:2)
As I said in another post, this is meant solely for business use. There are two reasons that spring to mind that a business would get this installed:
The network as described fits both of those needs very well. Now if for some reason you were the sole utilizer of the line and you wanted to just act like a surfer (wishing to get 100Mbps to, say, some pr0n site), yeah, you'd be screwed.
--
No Guarentee (Score:1)
They do not guarentee this bandwidth anywhere I can see. I am running into a problem with my current ISP related to this: bandwidth sucks, and they keep telling me there's nothing they can do...nothing was contractually guarenteed. So needless to say, I'm searching for a new ISP...
Yawn (Score:2)
You've been able to get 100 Mbps [citylink.co.nz] in Wellington, New Zealand for years now. Costs around NZ$600/month, IIRC (about US$250).
Glad to see the US is catching up with New Zealand...
Re:OK, folks (Score:1)
Re:Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:1)
Re:Cheap Bandwidth (Score:1)
The Real Story. (Score:1)
Same connectivity as my apartment (Score:1)
Re:I AM A NYC REP FOR COGENT COMMUNICATIONS (Score:1)
That's nothing. . . . (Score:1)
Re:I AM A NYC REP FOR COGENT COMMUNICATIONS (Score:1)
Re:Question: (Score:1)
I'm just inquiring about your services because i'll be moving back to boston soon, and i know there would be a LOT of residents that would be interested in your services. The only other options for broadband are Media One Cable and DSL (provided by Verizon). From what i hear, both those services are piss poor. So if you guys start wiring up apartment complexes, i sure as hell would like to know about it.
Re:Cable company ISPs Re:Here's an idea... (Score:2)
Well, there's a world of difference between what they choose to send down pipes that they own and what they are going to send up the pipes that they lease. Typical pricing arrangements for ISP bandwidth involve some calculation of peak bandwidth and total data sent. So it probably costs them money when you're running a server on their network. Therefore they do what they can to discourage this behavior, namely they make your server really slow.
In addition, you have to remember who most of their customers are. Most people buy internet access so that they can buy beanie babies on e-bay. Most people who use the internet aren't /. readers. Most of them don't want and wouldn't know how to run servers from their home. As long as they can buy and sell beanie babies on e-bay they're happy. Asymetric cable internet service makes this possible and speedy.
_____________
Re:Here's an idea... (Score:1)
They're not the only ones (Score:3)
--Tom
Several companies are doing the same thing (Score:2)
Re:Make sure that it isn't PPPoE. (Score:3)
All ISPs are not created equal, pal. Personally, I work my ass off.
-Omarius
Re:Talk about redundant... (Score:2)
The first
Re:competative? (I'm waiting for hookup) (Score:3)
The way they are costing out there service isn't too hard to follow. They buy dark fiber in pre-wired buildings, in cities that they already have drops to their fiber ring. Everyone here is missing something about Cogent - They are NOT reselling to home users. In fact, they don't allow colocation either! If you do not have a POP in a building they are lighting, you are out.
Someone a little farther on caught on to the main point of using the Cogent service - creating an incredibly fast VPN nationwide (US). Chicago is to have one of the first buildings lit, then NY, and last I heard building 3 is in San Fran. Nothing as of yet.
Ha! My new technology will rule the world! (Score:3)
Re:Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:2)
What Cogent seems to be doing (or, at least, what I would be doing in their case) isn't simply about providing a link to the Internet. It's about creating a "new" Internet. Well, a new network, anyway. That network will then have a link (well, links, hopefully) to the Internet to use occasionally. But if things work out for them, I think a lot of the traffic will stay on their network. Think of it as sort of a big LAN connected via a slow-ass WAN link to another network (the Internet).
After all, the company I work for doesn't need a 100Mbps for us employees to read /. But, it would be nice to use it for our branch offices in San Fran and Atlanta (domain replication, video conferencing, file sharing, transparent WAN links...)
Less than $50/mo in UT (Score:2)
A company in Utah has been deploying a fiber network for the past several years. Airswitch who just changed their name to Switchpoint is offering 100mb/s to residential customers for less than $50 per month.
Their web site ( www.airswitch.com [airswitch.com]) is in transition, and doesn't have very much info on it right now. I remember in the past seeing that they are currently deployed in Springville and American Fork with Pleasant Grove and Orem coming online soon.
I also noticed that they just inked a deal with a company in Denver Colorado to offer service there.
People are chomping at the bit for this service. I wonder why more parts of the country aren't working faster on this.
Re:For those who don't know (Score:2)
A T1 is 1.544 megabit raw data. To get bytes, divide by 8. 1,544,000 / 8 = 193000. Not all can be used for data, as packets must be created. This does not rule out compression, which can get you more data, once uncompressed. But the actual flow is around 190k.
To get a 50 meg file in two minutes, if uncompressed, would require 25 meg a minute, or .4 meg a second.
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
Re:Yawn (Score:2)
...j
For once... (Score:2)
Re:For those who don't know (Score:2)
Cyndi Lauper. Unfortunately, I can't run a q3
server off of my collage, and when I tried, I got
glue all up in my NIC.
how much do your parents pay?
unreal (Score:3)
Cogent uses (or, more precisely, plans to use) deep wave division multiplexing which does indeed lend credibility to their claims of 100 Mbps on the MAN. However, their claims of "non oversubcribed bandwidth" are patently silly. Even on a 2 gbps peering point they could only serve 20 customers and the number of gigabit peers (or Internet backbones) is still pretty small. Also, the wholesale price of bandwidth for non tier-1 ISPs (they aren't a tier 1) is between $200 and $500 per meg depending on volume. They are not sending you $20,000 - $50,000 in bandwidth for $1000 a month. Sorry. World doesn't work like that.
Also, they are an in-buidling provider of the same type as Allied Riser (ticker: ARCC) and Cypress Communications (ticker: CYCO). Both of those companies have had 10 mbps Ethernet (10bFX, 10bT, or 10b2 believe it or not -- and you thought coax was dead...) offerings for over a year now and, if you look at the charts, can't make ends meet even with oversubscription. Cogent's proposal is even more silly.
The Cogent plan is great if your offices are all on the same MAN and most of your traffic is bound for those offices. Otherwise, you can send 100 megabits out to some peering point where it will be dropped in the congestion.
Also, I invite anyone to call Cogent and ask for a customer list. The last write up I saw of them or Yipes! had one guy with a T1 saying he'd like to buy a line from them when the service is available. It isn't.
Sorry. Didn't mean to rant, but people with claims like this discredit providers with real services (and business plans) and do a lot to confuse the public.
Re:competative? (Score:3)
Network Operationc Center (NO2032-ORG) noc@COGENTCO.COM
Cogent Communications
1015 31st Street, NW Suite 330
Washington , DC 20007
US
+1 877 7COGENT Fax- +1 202 295 4217
....
GATEKEEPER.COGENTCO.COM 206.64.112.115
MONET.TITANIA.NET 209.207.60.17
.....
cogentco.com name server hydrogen.cogentco.com
cogentco.com name server gatekeeper.cogentco.com
cogentco.com name server monet.titania.net
cogentco.com name server sesamestreet.cogentco.com
sesamestreet.cogentco.com has address 10.0.6.1
lithium.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.170
carbon.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.173
helium.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.169
hydrogen.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.168
sodium.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.178
almandine.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.9
allemontite.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.8
beryllium.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.171
oracle.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.193
aluminite.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.11
nitrogen.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.174
gatekeeper.cogentco.com has address 206.64.112.115
vjklein.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.129
oxygen.cogentco.com has address 192.168.168.175
.......
Hooray for the Network Operationc Center!
Hooray for Highly skilled network chemists!
Hooray for non-routable RFC 1918 address space!
Top notch operation. I'm investing, and retiring at 25.
Cable Infrastructure (Score:3)
However, the problem came when we tried to access any resource outside @Home's wires. In Connecticut, they hadn't installed enough connectivity to serve the number of users that they'd signed up. Another fellow started the CT@Home Users' Group, and we squeaked until the grease came in the form of another T3.
The upload cap isn't to preserve capacity. It's to make it unusable for commercial purposes. @Home techs told me many times that people were using the service to host their little website business or ISP. So, instead of kicking them off and losing their revenue, they just put a cap in place. The people who weren't "abusing" it weren't supposed to notice. (Too bad if they did.)
There is so much bandwidth available in a modern cable plant it's not funny. My current provider (Comcast in South Carolina) would absolutely love to make paying use of all their capacity, but there's these damn people that insist on not signing up for this wonderful digital-cable thing. The cretins. That means they have to double up on a lot of TV channels, when each channel is actually capable of over 60 MBit/second.
Yes, cheap cablemodems will likely have issues. A good device (like a Cisco) will handle it just fine, you get what you pay for. I just want @Home to actually deliver the service they teased us with -- @Home Pro:
Re:Make sure that it isn't PPPoE. (Score:2)
Re:That's nice (Score:2)
The pics are faster than the eye (Score:2)
100Mbps... wow! Can you even look at pr0n that fast?
Re:That's nice (Score:2)
Too bad the Internet is not that fast (Score:2)
Re:College? (Score:2)
Bastard moderators jealous of my karma! MOD THIS DOWN THEN YOU FLABBY GEEK!!!!
Re:It is aimed at buildings/shared access (Score:3)
It would be pretty damn good for my office building. We currently have a partial T1 here, even though we have over 100 users in house. I work in the bloomingdale's building in chicago, and there are ~30 floors of offices. Spreading 100mbit/s over all the companies would work wonderfully. Besides, your landlord wouldn't be your sysadmin. Basically, everyone in the building would plug into a jack in their wall and be hooked directly up to either the company lan (more likely) or the building lan (less likely).
My impression is also that they are very picky about who they sell to, since they don't oversubscribe.
They'll only sell 24 of these for each 2.4Gbit/s OC48 MAN. That's not much money, and I'm worried that they won't be able to make money if they're only making 24k/month but splitting up OC48s.
I dunno, maybe they have a better business model in hiding.
Re:Make sure that it isn't PPPoE. (Score:3)
Like RASPPPOE? It's free. It's small. It integrates nicely with Windows.
Roaring Penguin is the best PPPoE client I've used, and it's a UNIX (Linux, *BSD, etc) client. The author subscribes to the same ISP as me
Personally, I bought myself a Netgear RT314 router. I don't worry about PPPoE anymore.
Re:It is aimed at buildings/shared access (Score:2)
I suspect that in the next 2 years, "net-ready" apartments are going to be in high demand, just as adding cat5 wiring to a new house, even if you don't plan to use it, is a huge added benefit.
Feeling strangely familar.... (Score:4)
Here's an idea... (Score:2)
Okay, I know there are better uses for bandwidth like this, but there are times when @Home really gets on my nerves -- like last night!
With all the incredible potential of the internet, using @Home is like trying to have a conversation with duct tape over your mouth... the only thing they want you to do is listen. God forbid you might actually have something to say.
(For the curious, @Home's webspace runs off Apache, and what feels like a 33.6 modem! That's what has me ticked.)
College? (Score:5)
Re:competative? (Score:2)
Besides, a fiber connection doesn't cost much in itself. The nnn Mbps figure is probably only the bandwidth to the ISP:s own network. What connection(s) that network has to the rest of the Internet is an unknown (and keeping those connections scaled to give adequate performance for all customers at once is the expensive part).
Links (Score:3)
http://www.jvp.co.il/investments/optical_port.htm
http://company.monster.co.uk/cocouk/ [monster.co.uk]
http://www.individualinvestor.com/tbd/article.asp
Metropolitan Area Networks (Score:5)
Hi!
What Cogent is doing is part of a small but growing phenomenon--commonly called "metropolitan area networking." The basic idea is to wire a densely-populated area like a campus network--connecting to the larger Internet through a few gateways just like a university or corporate network would. The benefits of doing this are reasonably obvious: wiring an entire "campus" at once represents a single construction project, rather than becoming a years-long incremental installation of line after line after line. Typically the network service is provided with an Ethernet switch rather than a router--the host "Ethernet service provider" typically will also offer network management services for network participants.
Another emerging provider of MANs is 3rd Wire [www.3rdwir...argetblank], which is presently in discussions to wire the downtown "Digital District" in Allentown, Pennsylvania. 3rd Wire is publicly indicating that they expect bandwidth costs to drop dramatically over the next 5 years--they expect to provide bandwidth within the Allentown Digital District at approximately $400/GB within a year, and their business model projects that price to drop to roughly $50/GB of bandwidth in five years.
Mind blowing? What they're doing--and they are by no means the only people doing this--is seeing that there is critical mass in providing fiber in that "last mile" to the end user. And they're being helped, in part, by communities that recognize that "urban infrastructure" in the 21st century will require bandwidth just as much as it requires paved roads and traffic signals. Those communities are actively working to bring in providers to wire their communities--reasoning (entirely correctly) that high-tech firms are going to gravitate to cities with gigabit bandwidth for sub-K bucks.
Incidentally, several posters have mentioned that this is meant "for business only"--not so. Certainly the Allentown Digital District very much wants to use the metropolitan area network to revitalize business in downtown Allentown--but we also want to encourage urban redevelopment in the surrounding neighborhoods with the offer of dramatic bandwidth for small dollars. If you can live and work a couple of blocks apart, and have gigibit Ethernet at home and at work, wouldn't that be attractive? We think it will be.
Full disclosure: I'm heavily involved with the Lehigh Valley Partnership and the Allentown Digital District.
How to get 100Mbps for $175/mo (Score:2)
The program is managed by, you guessed it, Palo Alto's public utilities department. The same department installed a fiber ring throughout the city some years ago and licenses "dark fiber" (just the banwidth, ma'am) to anyone who wants to pay the drop charges plus $2,700/FMY (fiber-mile-year).
Re:That's nice (Score:2)
Karma Whoring.. (Score:2)
The Cogent Communications Network is a facilities based, end-to-end optical system. We have metropolitan OC48 rings in 20 major cities tied together via a national backbone designed to operate at OC192 speeds implementing an IP over Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) Cisco Powered Network.
20 OC48's would keep up very nicely.
Now, my question is what kind of money do they want for the install?
Wow. (Score:2)
That's 100x (roughly) the bandwidth of a T-1 for 1/2 the price (again, roughly). Apparently you don't need some funkoid router interface either, according to the website it terminates in an rj45. To sweeten the deal, it looks like they'll even cover the cost of bringing it to your building.
On the downside of course, is that it looks like this is Businesses Only. This really only makes sense, given the cost structure they have in place (where they cover pretty much all of the "last mile" installation costs (leaving you the building owner to cover the comparatively minor in-building ehternet instaaltion cost (minor unless you have an old building anyway)) and derive their all their income from the monthly payment). Looking at their "Property Owner..." section, it looks like the $1000/mo. is on a per tenant basis (still a good deal for the tenants compared to each getting a T-1), and by running one wire to a house you'd only get $1K/mo as opposed to (n tenants)*$1k/mo for one wire to an office complex.
This would potentially be a very good deal for local ISPs in cities they offer service in. Anything that helps the "little guys" blossom is good, because I fear the day that AOL-TW and the Baby Bells are the only ISPs left.
One last tangental point is that it seems their illustrator doesn't know Texas that well (Dallas is practically in Tyler's lap on the network map, :-) ). (Thinking of texas, why did they hit Houston and Dallas but miss Austin? Austin has a POP from pretty much every other big and medium size bandwidth provider, and given the large tech market here and whatnot I still doubt we've reached any saturation point in connectivity.)
--