On 2019-02-11 04:57 CET, Mark Tinka wrote: > On 10/Feb/19 17:46, Baldur Norddahl wrote: [...] >> In any case, we are now building out our own fiber to cover the gaps >> left by TDC. Here the end user has to pay DKK 12,000 (USD 1,824 / EUR >> 1,608) one time fee and with that he gets everything including 5 years >> of free internet. This works out at DKK 200 / month including 25% VAT >> tax (USD 30 / EUR 27).
> Very interesting - don't you feel that an initial outlay like that could > put some potential customers off? Then again, per capita income in > Denmark, I'd imagine, could allow most to think about this. If all that > buys me Internet access for 5 years before I have to shell out anymore > wedge, I'd do it. I assume this is targeted towards single-family detached houses, where the family owns the house themselves. Then they likely will view that as an investment in the house. If you want to sell your house a couple of years later, and it doesn't have a fiber connection, buyers will be less attracted to the house, and want to pay less. It might also be more expensive to connect after the initial buildout of an area. I believe that's how the commercial companies in Sweden that build FTTH work. I can also note that where I live (Linköping, Sweden), the municipal fiber company charges ~2400 EUR to connect a single-family home to their network. That does *not* include the laying of fiber on your property, from the street to your house. And on top of that, you need to buy Internet connectivity from a normal commercial ISP at a monthly cost; the municipal fiber company only provides layer 2 connectivity between the home and the ISPs (currently 19 different ISPs). /Bellman
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