USD 600 per MB on KDN's Fiber Network ??$%^^&*&*

Just saw this ad in the Daily Nation.. Well from what my maths teacher said ..like 20 years ago if *USD 600 = 1000kb* then *256kb = USD 153.6 = KSH 10752* Is this not too expensive ... How and when is the price of Internet connections going to come down? The last thing i want is a Super Fast connection i cant afford!! Maina Muraguri.

Bamboozled!! The way i was already restructuring my hardware and upgrading my software.......guess Suleiman of Afsat was right! Any word from Wananchi and Access? Josiah? On 6/15/09, Martin Muraguri <martinmur87@gmail.com> wrote:
Just saw this ad in the Daily Nation.. Well from what my maths teacher said ..like 20 years ago if *USD 600 = 1000kb* then *256kb = USD 153.6 = KSH 10752*
Is this not too expensive ... How and when is the price of Internet connections going to come down?
The last thing i want is a Super Fast connection i cant afford!!
Maina Muraguri.
-- People should know when they are conquered.

If you are a corporate on Africaonline's wimax paying 50k for a 256..Then its not that bad a deal.

I would like to add some 2 cents...literally. I know the whole undersea fibre thing has really been adopted by the technical community as our baby. However, this baby is not born into vacuum. There are still many aspects, especially business related ones, that will ultimately shape the price curve of the bandwidth commodity. The good people in business simply want an assurance that they will recoup their invested money. While this is clear in our minds as techies, it is just another commodity to the investor. Thus, while the country is preparing itself to change gears to start utilizing the cable, the businessman charges higher prices to the few people using his investment. This brings in more businessmen and more users (coz the high price is still lower than current prices). With more users and more businessmen (competition), the cost per unit bw sold comes down plus the selling price by any businessman is lowered to remain competitive. These twin forces bring down the price in the classic battle of horizontal vs vertical expansion...horizontal wins (less profit per user but many users). Vertical expansion will simply relocate to newly created opportunities in IT... but that's another story. -- Davis Waithaka <daviswaithaka@gmail.com> Systems Kenya Solutions

Hi Martin, Martin Muraguri wrote:
Just saw this ad in the Daily Nation.. Well from what my maths teacher said ..like 20 years ago if *USD 600 = 1000kb* then *256kb = USD 153.6 = KSH 10752*
This is what you would pay for a non-contended link. Some ISPs my offer that service but in normal practice that every 1MB is sold to an average ratio of 1:5 or higher. In such a case then you can divide the 600 by a value between 5 - 10 and see what it will cost on a contended circuit which is what most end users will buy. Some demanding Corporates will request for the non-contended links. Therefore; 600/5 = USD 120 = 9,360/pm 600/10 = USD 60 = 4,680/pm PS: I dont speak for KDN but speculating based on current ISP practice. Regards, Mich.
Is this not too expensive ... How and when is the price of Internet connections going to come down?
The last thing i want is a Super Fast connection i cant afford!!
Maina Muraguri.
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participants (5)
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Davis Waithaka
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john maina
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Martin Muraguri
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Michuki Mwangi
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nyarotho kennedy