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Citywide Fiber Project Challenges and Goals
Posted by
Zonk
on Fri May 27, 2005 05:34 PM
from the we-control-the-horizontal dept.
from the we-control-the-horizontal dept.
aLAW writes "Who wants to receive fiber at their home? Vermont's queen city, Burlington, is planning on running fiber to each household in the city. 'It hardly seems possible, but by the end of 2007, all Burlington residents will be able to pay just one bill each month for their home phone service, broadband Internet connection and cable television channels. And they won't be making the check out to Verizon, or Adelphia.'"
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No fair!! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:No fair!! (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
What's the major improvement? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What's the major improvement? (Score:3, Funny)
It's always nice to see government compete (Score:2, Insightful)
Soon in Norway! (Score:2)
The new Ipv6 ready xiando Corp 100mbit European network is expected to be ready March 2010.
Re:Soon in Norway! (Score:3, Funny)
WiMax please, even if slower... (Score:2)
Re:WiMax please, even if slower... (Score:2)
Still Planning? (Score:4, Insightful)
So they're in the planning stage now, but they expect to have it out to every home by 2007? That's less than a year and a half away.
I predict this one will be off schedule.
Re:Still Planning? (Score:5, Funny)
Obviously you've never seen an episode of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. Carson will be about there whipping those cable layers into shape in no time, and they'll be done in an afternoon.
Parent
Might seem like a good idea, but... (Score:4, Interesting)
...having that many of your bills served by a single provider makes for a single point of failure, and that's not good. If the company falls on hard times, then all of your utilities they handle will get hiked.
A good example is Time Warner. They're serving cable and cablemodems to my area, and soon to add phone. And every few months, they jack their prices up a few bucks. Without fail. And that's why I won't fall for their "$39 a month (or whatever the price is) to call anyone unlimited!" deal. Based on past performance, I know it's bogus.
Remember that competition [wikipedia.org] usually works to keep prices down.
Re:Might seem like a good idea, but... (Score:2)
Inevitable? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Inevitable? (Score:2)
Emm, here in the UK the digital cable services have been around for five years and they are over IP. The same wire goes into a Y-splitter off to the cable modem for access, but some folk have ethernet ports on the back of the cable TV box that they use for internet. The digi box itself is fully capable of two way communications, but the UI is a bit slow at times, old tech I guess, m
Small-town midwest US (Score:3, Insightful)
For a while now all new homes even have fiber run to the premesis... difficult to believe we're "ahead of the times" back here in Iowa but it seems to be true
This makes sense. (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course there is a risk that this could keep competing private enterprises out.
TFA says: "The city is offering open access to its network -- anyone who wants to sell cable TV, Internet connectivity, or other information products will be able to use it, for a fee."
So competitors are allowed access to this net. The only problem could be the size of this fee that competitors have to pay to use the net. The fee could be too high, and thus effectively blocking access for competitors.
In Denmark where I live market-dominant enterprises (private or public) have to give competitors access to their nets for fees that cannot be higher than what is determined reasonable by a government office created to ensure fair competition in the telecom sector. This seems to work well: The market-dominant enterprises earn well by giving competitors access, but cannot set the fees high enough to keep the competition out.
This Should be the Future (Score:5, Insightful)
Capital Cities (Score:2)
From a local (Score:3, Interesting)
The site is down (small newspaper hosted by a small local ISP) but I do have knowledge of this project. I am local resident and have been watching this since its inception. This project has had its share of problem like any government project some budget overruns, Verizon trying to stop it in its tracks, public saying this should not happen, etc. The most interesting objection I heard was that this (including telephone service) should be done from wireless. I would love to hear the screams when a thunderstorm disrupts 911 service. The initial budget was in the low 6 figures Burlington is a relatively small under 40k people.
So far the project is already getting some use. The city and schools are now connected together by a Gig connection (many were not doing much better than dialup). The company where I am the IT person is also their first (and only?) customer. We are getting a 1.5 Mbit through a local ISP. So far no one is making money but the ISP, http://www.sover.net/ [sover.net] is now able to sell to other in town businesses for cheap. I pay Burlington Telecom $200/month for as much bandwidth as the ISP will give me.
This in a city where Adelphia (soon to be Comcast) has a monopoly for many parts of the city this is a very good idea. Some may say that city government should stay out of this area but I disagree. The deregulation of utilities let them do whatever they want but also assumed that the market would help with prices and quality. How many choices do you have for cable TV?
Anyone from Richmond, VA? (Score:3, Interesting)
Check out my dumbest idea ever [24.125.77.17] (Cable modem)
Or here [66.173.232.178].
Re:Huzzaaaa (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Huzzaaaa (Score:3, Insightful)
As opposed to a private company. Either way, someone is in control of your access to the Internet. Sounds like a good reason to get interested in politics then...
Having said that, they're planning to lease out the line to others to provide services so it must be fairly open, you could probably VPN to pretty much anywhere and everything you send over the local fiber would be encrypted.
Re:Huzzaaaa (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Huzzaaaa (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Huzzaaaa (Score:2)
Re:Huzzaaaa (Score:2)
Re:Huzzaaaa (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Huzzaaaa (Score:3, Interesting)
There are Bay Area cities in California that already provide many of these kinds of utilities, sometimes even for free. There's no sense in having capitalist-style competition for certain things. Basic home utilities strike me as one of those things that might be better provided by single city-based services.
I don't know about you, but I am not that keen to have my water controlled by private enterprise. I feel little differently about phone lines, etc.
BTW, if the city runs the utilities it might
Let's see... (Score:2, Insightful)
Exxon
Enron
Haliburton
and on and on...
Oh yes, you can certainly reroute that misplaced trust in the govenrment to corporations. They're SO much more trustworthy.
Re:Let's see... (Score:2, Insightful)
List your bad companies. Take your time, be sure to get a complete list.
For each company you list, I can list a hundred that are trying to help humanity by making the world a better place. Even for the ones you list, there are many good people who worked there.
So let's DO see. Do you want to choose between x number of companies, some of which may be "evil" in your eyes? Or would you rather have no choice, and take what the government give
Re:Let's see... (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't need to list a hundred, but to support your case: I work for Underwriters Laboratories, Inc. [ul.com] I get to make the world a safer place and have a cool job. How many private companies can you think of that make that big of a difference in the world? Not very many, I assure you.
Net go down? Call your representative. Can't get newsgroups on your pc? Better call the mayor. Geesh. That's JUST the ticket, sure. Next up, the politicians will be running on IT issues --"Vote for me, I promise OV-3 connectivity in every home!"
Seriously. If a traffic signal goes down, do you call the mayor? No. I guarantee you, politicians will not be campaigning their promises of 'internet connectivity' for quite a while. They are still too busy lying to us about taxes and gerrymandering.
Putting the system in charge of net connectivity would truly be the work of an idiot.
Try substituting 'net connectivity' with 'traffic signaling' or 'road maintenance'.
Putting the system in charge of traffic signaling would truly be the work of an idiot.
Putting the system in charge of road maintenance would truly be the work of an idiot.
Who sounds like an idiot now? You wanna know something? I pay over $50 a month for Comcast cable internet. Why? They want to make a profit, and they are charging me to provide media services I do not use. I don't want a friggin ISP! I don't want the 'value-adding services', I just want a gateway to the internet. Thats it. Do I have a choice? No. DSL is not offered in my neighborhood yet and Comcast is the only way to get high-speed internet(excluding Satellite, which sucks if you play games needing low latency). If my county or city goverment said 'Hey, want 10Mb up/down for $25?', me and all of my neighbors would pounce on it.
Parent
Re:Who would you rather pay? (Score:2)
Re:Who would you rather pay? (Score:2, Insightful)
Because they're taking the initiative & doing it? Qwest can't give me DSL because there are load coils on my line, even though I'm only about 5,000 feet from the CO. And I have to get about 50 neighbors to request DSL with me for them to remove the coils (which isn't easy when there are 50 people within about a square mile around me). Comcast will give me cable, but at $80/month, plus a few hundred to 'install' the cabl
Re:Who would you rather pay? (Score:2)
IF a small town in Arkansas [conwaycorp.com] can do fibre or fibre/coax hybrid, why shouldn't they? Check out their rates too.
Re:Who would you rather pay? (Score:2, Insightful)
Another question is therefore suggested: "Where's the beef?"
Re:Who would you rather pay? (Score:2, Insightful)
I see a lot of companies arguing against this type of thing and trying to get laws passed to prevent this type of competition from occuring. The thing I don't see is companies making much effort to do this.
Sure, both cable and telephone companies are offering each other's services now, but none are willing to spend the money to significantly upgrade thei
Re:Who would you rather pay? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Who would you rather pay? (Score:2)
Re:Who would you rather pay? (Score:2)
Because this is slashdot. A place were people put faith in their government due to some twisted logic that they are elite and highly educated. Thus, government is always the best choice above and beyond the public sector.
Fact is, it's this kind of illogical reasoning that starts a country toward
Re:Who would you rather pay? (Score:2)
RE: voting out govt. (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem I see here is we're basically asking govt. to perform another function normally left to private industry, under the assumption that there's no other way for it to get done efficiently and/or properly.
That pretty much sums up why we have a post office and NASA handling space travel.
But is "fiber to the door" really this type of issue, or is this more a case of people just getting impatient a
Re: voting out govt. (Score:2)
Yes. It's a natural monopoly.
Re:Tech support.... (Score:2)
Re:Tech support.... (Score:3, Informative)
As for Verizon, I recently terminated my cell phone service with them. They made it as difficult as possible. I couldn't do it on-line, even though they let you do almost everything else on-line. The local Verizon store said "We don't do that, call 611". After calling 611, and navigating through a bunch of menus, I was finally connected to some guy, probably moonlighting from his day job as a use
Re:Tech support.... (Score:2)
Now vehicle registration offices are subcontracted to businesses, often car dealers will run them as an adjunct to their business since they need to be licensed in order to do the vehicle registrations on the cars they sell anyway. Since it became possible to do vehicle registrations online
Re:Tech support.... (Score:2)
Re:Why not use plastic cups and string?? (Score:2)
Re:Two things come to mind: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Mirror? (Score:2)