Japan’s J:Com Racks Up DOCSIS 3.0 Subs
Internet users in Japan are going ga-ga over DOCSIS 3.0, according to Liberty Global chief technology officer Balan Nair.
Jupiter Communications, Japan’s largest MSO with 3.2 million video subscribers, launched 160 Megabit-per-second download service at the end of 2007. Since then, it has signed up 100,000 customers for the DOCSIS 3.0-delivered service, with 28% of new subscribers opting for it, Nair said.
“It’s been very popular,” Nair said. Overall, J:Com counts about 1.5 million high-speed Internet customers.
For Japanese consumers, having the absolute fastest service is as much a status symbol as anything else, he added. “We haven’t seen a huge spike in usage, it’s not like people are downloading five times as much video from YouTube.”
John Malone’s Liberty Global owns about 38% of J:Com, and has interests in cable operators in Australia, Europe and South America.
The J:Com service, which offers 10-Mbps uploads, is priced at about $65. The service is intended to counter NTT’s fiber-to-the-home service, which tops out at 120 Mbps. “DOCSIS 3.0 has given us pricing power back,” Nair said.
About one-third of J:Com’s new DOCSIS 3.0 subscribers are former NTT customers, Nair estimates. The MSO uses DOCSIS 3.0 equipment supplied by Motorola and Arris.
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Nair, who is based in Denver, oversees global network and technology operations spanning four continents and more than 30 million homes.