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Revision as of 19:08, 6 February 2007 by Bill Clark (talk | contribs) (LEAVING WIKIPEDIA)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)GCI Communication Corp. (GCI) is a telecommunications corporation (NASDAQ: GNCMA) operating in Alaska. Through its own facilities and agreements with other providers, GCI provides cable television service, Internet access, and wireline and cellular telephone service.
Products
Television
GCI provides cable television service to approximately three-quarters of Alaska residents. GCI has upgraded most of its network to support digital cable broadcasts and provides high-definition broadcasts in some of the state's largest cities. . GCI leases an array of analog and digital cable boxes, including HD and DVR digital cable boxes, to its customers.
GCI also provides content to the state-operated Alaska Rural Communications Service satellite system, which in turn provides free over-the-air broadcasts of commercial and public television programs to 235 rural Alaskan communities.
Internet
GCI provides access to the Internet via multiple means. As of January 2007, GCI provides cable modem services in major cities in Alaska with download speeds up to 10 megabits per second. In the rural cities of Nome, Cordova, Bethel, and Barrow, GCI provides high-speed cable modem services but uses a satellite for the backhaul connection, as the cost to lay cable to these remote areas is prohibitively expensive. In some rural communities where GCI does not have a cable TV infrastructure, it provides lower-bandwidth (56-512 kbps) wireless Internet access over a satellite backhaul.
Through its own facilities and agreements with other providers, primarily Alaska Communications Systems, GCI provides data network and Internet connections via DSL, PRI leased lines (such as a T1), and other high-bandwidth business-class products. These services are aimed at the business market. The state government is a major customer of GCI, using GCI's infrastructure to provide the backbone for the state's wide area network.
GCI maintains local access numbers throughout the state for analog dial-up service.
GCI also owns Alaska United fiber optic cable system, which connects Anchorage and Fairbanks with Internet points of presence in Seattle and Portland. GCI leases capacity on their system to other Internet providers in Alaska, including Clearwire wireless broadband.
Wireline Telephone
GCI offers local telephone service in many Alaskan markets as well as intrastate and interstate long-distance. As the competitive local exchange carrier, GCI primarily contracts with the incumbent local exchange carrier, Alaska Communications Systems, to provide the local loop from GCI's switches to customers. (This practice is known as UNE-loop.)
GCI is currently deploying digital cable telephony based on PacketCable technology in Anchorage as a replacement for the analog copper last mile and plans to expand the service to Fairbanks and Juneau . In GCI's implementation, the connection between the GCI head end and the subscriber's EMTA uses IP packets but is interconnected with GCI's more traditional circuit-switched infrastructure and backbone.
GCI also provides legacy as well as Cisco VoIP telephony for many customers, including the state government.
Wireless Telephone
Through an agreement with Dobson Communications Systems, which provides TDMA and GSM cellular service under the Cellular One brand, GCI sells GSM cellular service under its own name.
See also
References
- Balancing Responsibilities and Rights: A Regulatory Model for Facilities-Based VoIP Competition, National Cable and Telecommunications Association, February 2004. Accessed via http://ncta.com/DocumentBinary.aspx?id=318.
External links
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