On Wed, 7 Dec 2005 11:44:36 +0000, Michael.Dillon@btradianz.com wrote:
Geographical aggregation does not REQUIRE free transit. It is up to the ISPs to decide how to leverage geographical aggregation, how to recover transit costs and how to construct and change their business models.
A Management Consultant would say: "Our solution, your problem"
Nevertheless, the Rhine river still exists.
http://www.spiegel.de/politik/deutschland/0,1518,388814,00.html ( In English: Kehl and Strassbourg want to work jointly together to form a single Eurodistrict / city with e.g. a single phone network. ) The Rhine is no border at all for bits and bytes, use a STM-1 directional radio link.
The Alps still exist.
... and offer great opportunities for radio links, too. Again: A STM-1 between Frankfurt and London will be typically less expensive than between Frankfurt and Wiesbaden.
In fact, once the RIRs have decided how many addresses to reserve for each city greater than 100,000 population, and how to cluster cities in to larger groupings, there is no need for anyone to think about the geographical issues again.
And then every ISP puts in a prefix for his part of the geopolitical address range of every city in which it shows presence, thus giving us an enormous growth in the number of routing table prefixes. Great idea, obviously suitable for the "big prize" of the association of memory chip makers ... Best Regards Oliver Bartels Oliver Bartels F+E + Bartels System GmbH + 85435 Erding, Germany oliver@bartels.de + http://www.bartels.de + Tel. +49-8122-9729-0