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jtel
join:2005-06-28 Bristol, RI
| Great Synch Though Remember its not the product you receive that counts its how it is provided. Customers really don't care about low download speeds, box reboots, pixelation and channels disappearing. Customers care that their VDSL2 hardware shows a 25 meg synch or 'significantly higher'.
"Hey Bob hows the game? Well theres no picture today but I've got a great synch here, just great, really getting my monies worth." | |
|   N3OGH Bear patrol must be working like a charm Premium join:2003-11-11 Philly burbs
·Verizon FIOS
·Verizon Online DSL
| Re: Great Synch Though AT&T is wasting so much money on this all ready obsolete technology.
Sure, FTTx is more expensive up front, but it's cheaper to maintain in the long run.
FTTx is also, in the long run less of a risk. FTTx WORKS. It's time tested proven technology, and the best, fastest way to move voice, video, and data.
Instead, AT&T tries to revive the lost art of alchemy. Trying to turn copper into gold. -- Never ask what sort of a computer a guy drives. If he's a Mac user, he'll tell you. If not, why embarrass him? -Tom Clancy | |
|  |  bogey780
join:2004-03-19 Here | Re: Great Synch Though FTTx? Don't you mean FTTP?
This isn't a bandwidth problem so why are you ranting about it? | |
|  |  |   N3OGH Bear patrol must be working like a charm Premium join:2003-11-11 Philly burbs
·Verizon FIOS
·Verizon Online DSL
| Re: Great Synch Though said by bogey780 :FTTx? Don't you mean FTTP? This isn't a bandwidth problem so why are you ranting about it? I'm using it because an earlier poster used it.
The "lowercase" x indicates the initial in the acronym is interchangeable with another letter.
Like FTTH is Fiber To The Home, and FTTP Fiber To The Premises. Some people use either term or the other. The earlier poster in this case, instead of choosing one or the other, substituted the lowercase x wherever the P or H would've been....
Some other examples are using the term Tx instead of the entire word "treatment".
I don't think it really applies to the prescription symbol "Rx" (where the x crosses the leg of the R) as I believe that's an abbreviation for the Latin word recipe / take. -- Never ask what sort of a computer a guy drives. If he's a Mac user, he'll tell you. If not, why embarrass him? -Tom Clancy | |
|  |  |  |  bogey780
join:2004-03-19 Here | Re: Great Synch Though Well there's FTTN and FTTC also. AT&T is using FTTN | |
|  |  |  nasadude
join:2001-10-05 Rockville, MD
·Comcast
| said by bogey780 :FTTx? Don't you mean FTTP? This isn't a bandwidth problem so why are you ranting about it? yet | |
|  |  Biskit
join:2003-02-07 Fenton, MO | FTTx is a time tested proven technology.
Really? Since verizon is the first one to roll this out and recently I might add, how much time are we talking? | |
|  |  |   N3OGH Bear patrol must be working like a charm Premium join:2003-11-11 Philly burbs
·Verizon FIOS
·Verizon Online DSL
| Re: Great Synch Though Well, fiber optics has been used for years around the globe under ground, under the sea, across continents, and strung on poles.
The technology itself is proven reliable. The fact that it's being strung into a house or a business doesn't change that.
It doesn't matter if Verizon decides to push voice, data, or 1000 channels of prOn over it, fiber has been proven to be the most trouble free and cost effective way to move large amounts of data.
Or, did I miss the latest massive deployment of copper trans oceanic and trans continental lines??? -- Never ask what sort of a computer a guy drives. If he's a Mac user, he'll tell you. If not, why embarrass him? -Tom Clancy | |
|  |  |  |   techjoe Premium join:2004-02-20 Schererville, IN
| Re: Great Synch Though Exactly. FTTx (heh) has been in use for years in various environments. My company has miles upon miles of fiber running to IDF's and such (FTTI?? ). Same theory, in basic principle. The govt has been using fiber for secure high-speed communications for longer, PTP mostly but still. In FTTN it's pretty much PTP and routed over copper or whatever is locally feasable to the final destination...
How much of the innaweb's larger tubes are made of copper these days anyway?
etc etc etc
Fiber has been run through its paces and is a proven technology, no doubt about it. -- www.clanc.cc | |
|  |  |   quetwo That VoIP Guy Premium join:2004-09-04 East Lansing, MI
| Verizon was not the first to deploy FTTH. Many smaller, independent telephone companies (Vernon Telephone comes to mind first) have been deploying this technology for years. Verizon is just one of the first "Big-Boys" do deploy "Fiber to the customer". | |
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