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But his new venture, under the banner of his New Jersey-based CTR Group, is far more ambitious. Expected to cost $10 billion by the time the project is completed, Oxygen is slated to link 78 points around the world with more than 168,000 kilometers of fiber optic cable. If completed as planned, the project will link locales as disparate as San Francisco, Qatar, Lebanon, Peru, India and Djibouti. In a year of public statements, Tagare has painted his project in Promethean terms, saying that the lines will give the underdeveloped countries in the world the same access to broadband information flows enjoyed by the developed world. This is critical if the world is to avoid widening chasms between the technological haves and have nots, he says.
But if successful as planned, the project also could spark a turnaround in the way bandwidth is bought and sold internationally, analysts say, Today, most international lines are owned by big telecommunications companies, who lease capacity on a point to point basis, If a company wants to send traffic from the U.S, to Europe, it must contact one of these companies and lock itself into a lease on that route--often for a period of time as long as 25 years, Project Oxygen will work more like the flat-rate iphone 2 cases for sale fee model familiar to Internet users, Companies will be able to lease a certain amount of capacity, and send it anywhere on the Oxygen network at any time..
"Because this is a network, not a pipe, this is different," Chaki said. "If it succeeds, it is going to fundamentally change the nature of the bandwidth market.". Too much oxygen, not enough breathing? But while Tagare and his team scramble for funding, a host of competitors already are building out fiber project across the northern Atlantic andPacific oceans, where the greatest amount of international demand will liein the near future. Qwest announced a $700 million joint venture with Dutch firm KPN to roll out a European fiber network linked to Qwest's U.S. facilities. AT&T and BT are collaborating to send traffic over the Atlantic, and a host of European telcos and smaller startups are rolling out data networks on that continent.
The sharp growth iphone 2 cases for sale in bandwidth has some analysts worried about a glut in capacity--even in the high-demand markets, In the worst case, this could sharply undermine Oxygen's ambitious plans, "In one place you've got oversupply pushing the price down, because you're going to have to compete on price," said David Eiswert, a telecommunications analyst with the Strategis Group, "Meanwhile you're taking out a big sunk cost by laying fiber in places like India that just don't have the customer base." That cost equation could be dangerous, analysts say..
But the wild card is the amount of demand for international bandwidth--and even conservative analysts say it is unwise to lowball this figure. "Data traffic is becoming such a key part of the relationship between companies, and even between countries," Eiswert said. Even in regions like Latin America, which is far behind the U.S. and Europe in its use of Internet technologies, demand is outstripping capacity, he added. "They can't build these networks fast enough.". "The lesson to be learned from the Internet is that [the growth] is more than you imagine," Eiswert added. "A lot of investors are thinking about it that way, and have decided to go ahead and just build these things.".
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