republican-creole
Search:  

 
 
   All ForumsHot TopicsGallery






how-to block ads


 
Forums » Why Run FTTH When You Can Pretend You Do? » Consumer confusion
Search Topic:
Share Topic:
RSS topic:
toggle:
flat / full
normal / watch
Post a:
Post a:
wow uninformed »
« Is this the right way to go?  
AuthorAll Replies
-

NormanS
Premium,MVM
join:2001-02-14
San Jose, CA
·Pacific Bell - SBC

reply to keyboard5684
Re: Consumer confusion

said by keyboard5684 See Profile :

Yes, but a fiber-coax hybrid is fiber to probably your block or at least close.
Sounds like Uverse!
--
Norman
~Oh Lord, why have you come
~To Konnyu, with the Lion and the Drum

EPS

join:2008-02-13
Hingham, MA
reply to Smith6612
I don't get this argument that technology type=speed, really, you could offer a 56kbps network on a FTTH connection if you really wanted too...


Smith6612
Premium
join:2008-02-01
united state
reply to koolkid1563
Naw dial-up is too slow to even be called fiber It's called "anywhere'net"

keyboard5684

join:2001-08-01
Youngsville, PA
·Teliax VOIP
·WestPAnet Inc.
·WestPAnet Inc. CA..

reply to EPS
Yes, but a fiber-coax hybrid is fiber to probably your block or at least close. Fiber at the COs is a lot farther away than the fiber from the cable company.

In addition, that coax carries a lot more bandwidth than a pair of wires.

I agree with the poster, fiber is right out there, the cable companies can do what they want in the future. For example, if they wanted to launch full fiber deployment they could probably do a small city in 6 months because the major work is done, the fiber run to the neighborhood.

Run fiber to the home and cable from the same place a mile away. What will make the difference is what is beyond that mile. All the talk about fiber to the home is just great, but really it is not needed yet by cable companies.

koolkid1563
Premium,MVM
join:2005-11-06
Powell, WY
clubs:
reply to EPS
Might as well call dial-up fiber too since once on the backbone it too uses fiber

EPS

join:2008-02-13
Hingham, MA

reply to DaneJasper
Indeed- you might as well call DSL fiber-optic internet too, since the COs are fed by fiber. By this definition "fiber-optic internet" rapidly becomes meaningless, since all internet traffic uses fiber-optics SOMEWHERE (Fiber-optic Satellite Internet!)
Forums » Why Run FTTH When You Can Pretend You Do?wow uninformed »
« Is this the right way to go?  


Saturday, 05-Dec 01:23:13 Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Hosting by www.nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo | feedback | contact
over 10 years online! © 1999-2009 dslreports.com.republican-creole
page compression OFF
Most commented news this week
· [163] Comcast Releasing Promised Usage Meter
· [145] Avast Antivirus Has Gone Mad
· [126] Comcast Makes NBC Universal Acquisition Official
· [104] Graduate Student Unveils Sprint's GPS Sharing With Feds
· [101] Google Invades ISP, OpenDNS Turf With Google Public DNS
· [83] FCC Ponders Moving From PSTN To IP Voice
· [81] Latest Consumer Reports Survey Not Kind To AT&T
· [80] The Bandwidth Hog Does Not Exist
· [74] Sprint Defuses GPS Privacy Media Bomb
· [70] Baltimore To Ban Lazy Cable Installs
Most people now reading
· False positive in Avast! or is it real? [Security]
· Windows 7 boot manager editing questions [Microsoft Help]
· ZR1 VS The USN Blue Angels! [56k Lookout (Broadband Heavy)]
· 3.x Feral Druid - Bear Tanking Guide [World of Warcraft]
· DNS options, what are YOU using? [TekSavvy]
· Farewell [Bell Canada]
· Google takes aim at browser redirection [Security]
· Evading throttling with uTP / uTorrent 1.9a [TekSavvy]
· ToC 4th boss - Preliminary Strategy for Twin Valkyr [World of Warcraft]
· Connecting to Google Voice Via SIP [VOIP Tech Chat]