 alchav
join:2002-05-17 Palm Desert, CA
·Pacific Bell - SBC
| reply to avd706 Re: why don't they?
said by avd706 :I don't understand why they don't pull Cat5e or cat6 from a switchbox in the basement (or each floor) to each apartment. FiOS is more than Data, that's all you guys think about. How about Phone and TV, do you want Verizon to run Coax too? It has to be Fiber all the way, you guys here are too narrow minded. |
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  jonnyb
join:2008-03-15 Haverhill, NH | "How about Phone and TV, do you want Verizon to run Coax too?" Of coarse they have to run Coax what do you think connects to there STB's and other equipment. Sounds like you are just as narrow minded... |
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 RadioDoc 58ef2c0 Premium,ExMod 2000-03 join:2000-05-11
·AT&T Midwest
3 edits | said by jonnyb :"How about Phone and TV, do you want Verizon to run Coax too?" Of coarse they have to run Coax what do you think connects to there STB's and other equipment. Sounds like you are just as narrow minded... Research is your friend. We'll wait until you come back with a correction to your statement.
Oh hell...I'll just do it now. They run fiber to the unit which carries all services--HSI, Phone and Video--and that's been an installation sticking point with traditional fiber. The new "bendable fiber" has alleviated some of the installation hassles. Any coax or copper phone wiring is inside the apartment. -- Toolmaster of La Grange. |
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  jonnyb
join:2008-03-15 Haverhill, NH
| What are you saying? that with this new "bendable fiber" they are going to run this to the cable boxes and modems and so on and so forth. if the answer to that question is no then you are just reiterating what i said previously. it is common knowledge that they run FTTH or to mini node in the home. |
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  blueeyesm
join:2003-09-05 Waterloo, ON | Verizon would run bendable fiber (Google about it - it does exist) to the node, but most likely leave it up to the home owner/tenant to get their equipment connected to said node.
... or charge a handsome fee to do it for them. |
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  avd706 insert annoying animated gif here Premium join:2003-02-06 Union, NJ
| reply to alchav Data is Data
What's the difference? You could use a bridge to connect fiber->cat 6 -> triple play switching box (whatever it is called)
I work in an office building in brooklyn. The WAN is Fiber and each floor has 2 or 3 fiber lines connecting to gigabit switches with runs to each cubicle. The phones are digital, but they are on a parallel system. No reason you couldn't put the phones on the same system.
Each cubicle has 2 cat 5 ports (originally token ring) a cat 3 port (abandoned) and two phone jacks. |
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 alchav
join:2002-05-17 Palm Desert, CA
·Pacific Bell - SBC
| reply to jonnyb Re: why don't they?
said by jonnyb :What are you saying? that with this new "bendable fiber" they are going to run this to the cable boxes and modems and so on and so forth. if the answer to that question is no then you are just reiterating what i said previously. it is common knowledge that they run FTTH or to mini node in the home. Heckler, you're all lost, this has to do with buildings and apartments. Avd706 said he didn't understand why Verizon doesn't pull Cat5 from the basement or each floor connection into the apartment. I guess the thinking was this would cut cost or be easier, but he was only thinking about Data and it would defeat the purpose of FTTH. Verizon runs Fiber to each apartment, then from there inside wire is used for each Product (Data, Voice, & Video.) |
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  MacLeech The one and only Premium join:2001-07-14 SoCal
4 edits | reply to avd706 Re: Data is Data
said by avd706 :What's the difference? You could use a bridge to connect fiber->cat 6 -> triple play switching box (whatever it is called) The video part of the triple play is pushing out several GIGs of data per second.... 860 Mhz of channels = 135 channels at 38 Mbps each = 5.1 Gbps of data.... using a modulated analog carrier signal. Is your GigE or 10G switch going to encode that signal for transport across ethernet?
Plus coax video distribution is well entrenched, common, and cheap. 10G over ethernet in residential applications isn't.
It's cheaper and easier to for Verizon to lay fiber for current services all the way to where they need it vs. rolling a new solution or extra transport segment that may not really perform all that well (i.e. Uverse) without extra years of testing and tweaking.
Beyond that... what's the cost of a GigE or 10G switch vs. the cost of a coax splitter or Scotchlocks... No point in adding an entire extra segment (at most a couple hundred meters long) to a working distribution method. |
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