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Re: NYT on Thing.net

  • From: J.F. Noonan
  • Date: Mon Jan 13 21:41:49 2003

This is only marginally on topic, but I know Ted Byfield (quoted
as a Thing.net board member in the NYT) from elsewhere so I
forwarded Adam's post to him for comment.  Followups to
nanog-offtopic please, I won't continue the thread here.

Ted's reply is below.


-- 

Joseph F. Noonan
Rigaku/MSC Inc.
[email protected]


----- Forwarded

//Date: Sat, 11 Jan 2003 10:43:44 -0500
//From: t byfield <[email protected]>
//To: [email protected]
//Subject: Re: NYT on Thing.net (fwd)

hi, nanogers --

adam, yeah, as a matter of fact, you are off-base. for starters, you seem
to assume that getting alternate connectivity and talking with journalists
(or 'complaining to the media,' as you so generously put it) are mutually
exclusive. they aren't, of course. and, once upon a time, 601 w 26th may
have been split evenly between carriers and offices, but that's hardly the
case now: there are rooms half the size of a football field littered with
racks and channel ditched by carriers that went bust. they were banging on
thing.net's door with all kinds of kewl offers; luckily, thing.net said no.

there are a lot of issues bearing on how thing.net is handling this issue
which i'm not at liberty to speak about in public. suffice it to say that
the people who run thing.net aren't stupid or thoughtless, so chances are
that cursory readings of newspaper articles probably aren't the best basis
for estimating what thing.net is or isn't doing or why.

cheers,
t
-
(on thing.net's board)


> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> Date: Fri, 10 Jan 2003 14:01:38 -0500
> From: Adam Rothschild <[email protected]>
> To: batz <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: NYT on Thing.net
 <...>
> thing.net is located at 601 West 26th Street in New York City, a
> building split about evenly between carrier facilities and commercial
> office space.
>
> Around the time their squabbles with Verio took place, they were
> approached by building neighbors aware of their struggles, offering
> backup connectivity on favorable terms.
>
> In reading this and other articles, it seems to me they're more
> interested in complaining to the media about so-called impiety on
> Verio's part, than acquiring alternate connectivity and retaining
> their subscriber base.
>
> Of course, I could be off-base, in which case I encourage others privy
> to more details of the situation to speak up.
>
> Regards,
> -a

----- Backwarded