Speakeasy (ISP)

Speakeasy, Inc. was a broadband internet service provider and voice over IP carrier based in Seattle, Washington, United States. Their terms of service described liberal usage policies for home users allowing subscribers to run any number of servers[1] and allowing them to resell their connectivity to others through a service called "NetShare".[2] They received press coverage for their support of Linux and BSD-derivative operating systems, and were reportedly the first provider to offer a customized version of Mozilla Firefox to customers, in January 2005.[3] The company is now part of MegaPath Corporation.

Speakeasy, Inc.
IndustryInternet & Communications
SuccessorMegaPath
FoundedSeattle, Washington, United States (1996)
HeadquartersSeattle, Washington, United States
Key people
Michael Apgar, Founder
Bruce A. Chatterley, President & CEO
ProductsISP, VoIP
ParentMegaPath Corporation
Websitespeakeasy.net

History

In 1994, Gretchen Apgar and husband Mike opened a cybercafe in Seattle's Belltown neighborhood with Mike's brother Tyler. They started out with offering connectivity and email services in the area. Customers at the cafe expressed a wish to have the ability to check their email from other locations than just the cafe and a series of terminal stations were set up at various bars around town. These terminals were marketed under the label, "Rainmail." As computing power expanded and the cost of computers diminished, customers began to express the further wish to access their email from home. Speakeasy put together a bank of modems and offered a dial up service. As of 2008, dialup through Speakeasy is still available for $19 a month. The move toward DSL took place in 1998.

In late 1999, the company expanded to a national level, offering DSL services throughout the United States. The Speakeasy backbone consisted of a dedicated fiber ring that circled the continental United States with major points of presence (i.e. POPs) in Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Dallas, Atlanta, Washington D.C., New York, and Chicago. From the POP to the customers premises a third party vendor was contracted to provide data layer connectivity. This is known in networking as the 'last mile'. In the case of Speakeasy, the data-link protocol used was ATM rather than PPPoE or Frame Relay in case of T1's.

In 2001, in the face of the collapse of many ISPs as a possible result of the dot-com bust, Speakeasy had marketed a program to allow for simple transfer of accounts, starting with the announcement of the failure of Flashcom, a former DSL internet provider. That same year, the cybercafe burned down in an electrical fire, forcing the company to focus on the internet business.[4]

In September 2003, Bruce Chatterley was made CEO of the company.

In summer of 2004, the company announced simultaneously their entry into VOIP, and their Onelink package, which allowed a DSL subscriber to maintain an ADSL line without the requirement of a telco line.

In spring of 2006 Mike Apgar stepped down as chairman and moved on to a startup company Ookla that he created while at Speakeasy.

On March 27, 2007 press releases by both companies announced the acquisition of Speakeasy by Best Buy, a Fortune 100 retail chain operating in the US, Canada and China. Best Buy planned to offer Speakeasy broadband and VOIP services to small businesses through their Best Buy for Business unit.[5]

On June 10, 2010 Best Buy announced it was reducing its stake in Speakeasy, which would be merging with Covad Communications and MegaPath Corporation to form a new joint company.[6] On September 1, 2010, MegaPath, Covad, and Speakeasy announced regulatory approval and the completion of their merger. [7] The new combined company took the name MegaPath Corporation.

On December 31, 2014, MegaPath Corporation sold certain of its network assets and direct internet access customers to GC Pivotal LLC dba Global Capacity, in order to raise cash to invest in its wholesale and managed services business.[8]

gollark: `bee you, apioids`
gollark: I dislike how it inherits the thing where I have to specify a maximum size for the data to receive, even though python can dynamically allocate buffers.
gollark: `ed`, the standard editor.
gollark: GTech™, of course, perfectly simulates the oracle in order to predict what *it* will do, then does the optimal thing for that.
gollark: There are two boxes in front of you, A and B. B has 10,000 dollars in it, and A contains either 1,000,000 or 0 dollars.You may choose to take either only box A, or take both boxes.A perfect oracle has predicted your choice beforehand, and filled box A with the money if and only if it was predicted that you would take only box A.

See also

References

  1. Speakeasy, Inc. "Terms of Service - Moderations of Use". Retrieved September 10, 2006.
  2. Speakeasy, Inc. "WiFi NetShare Service". Retrieved September 10, 2006.
  3. SeattleTimes.com (2005-01-26). "Speakeasy to offer Firefox browser". Retrieved 2015-04-27.
  4. Kamb, Lewis (2001-05-22). "Speakeasy Café fire wipes out a Belltown cultural hub". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved 2006-09-10.
  5. "Best Buy Acquires Speakeasy". Business Wire. 2007-03-27. Retrieved 2007-03-27.
  6. "Best Buy steps back from Speakeasy". Speakeasy. 2010-06-11. Retrieved 2014-04-27.
  7. "MegaPath, Covad, Speakeasy Merger Closes". 2010-09-01. Retrieved 2010-09-01.
  8. "MegaPath's Global Capacity sale poses new managed service opportunities, challenges". FierceTelecom.com. 2014-09-11. Retrieved 2015-04-27.
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