limitations.
"I just didn't want to get stagnant," Gustin concludes. "Besides, it's getting to be easier to be a national provider than to do it locally. You don't have to deal with the local phone companies, you don't have to go out and troubleshoot the network yourself, and you don't have to educate the end user about why they need the Internet. Besides," he laughs, "there's probably less competition."





