In-Home Fiber Connections, Out West 104
BillyZ writes: "A Denver billionaire has started laying fiber and setting up the infrastructure to deliver fiber optic connections to residences in the southwest. Wired has the story. They hope to be offering the services to the public by the middle of next year. Now if only someone would be doing the same thing in the northeast." Tell me again why I moved out of Austin?
Re:ADSL????? (Score:1)
Re:This will succeed. but so what? (Score:1)
Re:Northeast Fiber (Score:1)
There might be an alternative in the UK soon (Score:3)
The register had an article [theregister.co.uk] a while back about Psion are bringing out a Digital Radio which will have the potential for fast internet access
Allegly the BBC here in the UK, according to this article [theregister.co.uk] in the register [theregister.co.uk] will be doing just that in the not too distant future, hook the radio to your PC via its USB port and forget phone lines becuase in theory you could recieve data at up to 1.5 Meg per second.
Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:2)
Already here in the Northeast (Score:1)
Well, enough rambling for now, but I thought that this might possibly have been relevant in some small way.
yes, this is flame bait but... (Score:1)
"Now you see that evil will always triumph because good is dumb."
Re:wireless ethernet (Score:1)
"Leave the gun, take the canoli."
My experience in Milano, Italy (Score:3)
With the recent liberalization in the phone network (it used to be a state-controlled monopoly), many new companies sprung up offering phone services.
One in particular, named e.Biscom and mostly owned by Milano's most popular power and gas utility company, a couple of years begun aggressively cabling in optics the whole city.
Now the first offerings using this extensive optic network are beginning to spring up. A company called FastWeb has recently begun marketing a residential offer for 10 MB/s Internet access, plus phone (free to all other Fastweb subscribers, some discounts for local and long-distance calls), and Video-on-demand. The cost is less than the equivalent of US$ 50/month flat, including taxes. They'll bring the fiber up to the doorstep free of charge, and the 10 MB/s limitation is handled by the splitter device (Notice: the whole network backbone is over IP, including phone and video).
Re:Upstream bandwidth, p2p apps, and fat pipes (Score:1)
Re:Or so he thinks... (Score:2)
- JoeShmoe
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Does Broadband Doom Long Distance Carriers? (Score:2)
Re:Mr. Gates (Score:1)
Uh I hate to tell you this but the whole reason for tax breaks and inheritance taxes is to encourage the rich to have there little charities. Lets face it the rich are greedy, thats how they get rich in the first place.
Re:Wait. (Score:1)
Um, no... (Score:1)
Re:Wait. (Score:1)
--
Wow, it's true... (Score:1)
I'm heartened, to say the least--our cable provider can't handle TV and ISP functions on its existing infrastructure, and the phone company is so backed up on DSL installations that people aren't getting them the month they place the order. It's a long way off, but relief is apparently in sight.
Fiber is coming (it's not expensive) (Score:2)
Fiber to the home really doesn't cost much more than doing new copper lines to a home. The cost of the cable when you buy it in multi-mile spools is about the same for fiber or copper. With fiber you do not have to put amplifiers or other electronics in the field - just at the side of the house and in the central office. This saves the provider money. The big cost of deploying any telecom infrastructure is the people leaning on the shovels burying the cable, and paying the city for the right-of-way to bury this cable. (or paying to put in aerial cable right-of-way).
SO - for those service providers who are putting in new infrastructure anyway - it makes a lot of sense to put in fiber. The cost is the same, and we know the bandwidth limitations of the copper. The bandwidth limitations of fiber are 1000 times higer.
Disclaimer - I work for a company that delivers Fiber-to-the-Home systems providing, Voice, Video, and Data over the same fiber. We are currently shipping systems to customers.
WINfirst on WINfirst (Score:2)
1. Yes, we are terminating fiber on the sides of people's homes. If you are a WINfirst customer, you will have fiber all the way to your house.
2. We're providing voice, video, and data. You can get about 300 channels of cable tv, 10/100/Gigabit ethernet connections to the net, and phone service.
3. Our prices for phone, cable and Internet on a standalone basis will be comparable with the competition but offer more features. Examples include Video on Demand for cable service and included long distance minutes with the local phone service as well as awe-inspiring speeds internet connection.
4. Price for the internet service will be in the same range as other residential services (DSL, cablemodem), but it will be low-latency, it won't be shared bandwidth, etc. etc. etc. It's the real thing. All prices are discounted when you bundle service.
5. When Wired talked about installation costing $2000, they were talking about WINfirst's cost, not the customers.
6. I'll be working on all kinds of cool applications to take advantage of our speed.
7. These are my words, not my company's. I could be wrong about details of the above. Please don't sue me.
Re:ADSL????? (Score:1)
Re:Wireless... (Score:1)
First, wireless needs the use of the EM spectrum which we all share. Fibre is a waveguide, so you can run what you want over it without interfering with others. So you want to run 2.5Gbps over wireless. Fine, no one else in the neighbourhood can tho.
As for satelite, they are a bloody long way up and they see lots of people. So latency is VERY bad and the bandwidth per person sucks. That and to talk to satelites you need big antenna.
Or maybe you were thinking or iriduim (or similar ideas?). Same bandwidth sharing problem.
Just remember, bandwidth is only infinite if you have a fibre. IF you want to run through the air, you have to compete with everyone else.
Re:Upstream bandwidth, p2p apps, and fat pipes (Score:2)
Re:Northeast Fiber (Score:1)
We did a fiber to the home trial and I have the results in front of me right now. I'll let you know what our next steps are as soon as I can - although with the new SEC rules I can't let anyone know much of anything until we issue a press release.
Yes it will (Score:1)
wireless ethernet (Score:1)
wish
Re:Oh good, I can save money (Score:1)
So my guess is that in the near future, even US companies will lower their prices considerably, both installation and montly rates.
BTW, for those interested, I live in Stockholm, Sweden, so my ISP is not really available to most of you
Or so he thinks... (Score:2)
this article [msnbc.com] on MSNBC?
- JoeShmoe
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Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:1)
Why are Europeans so slow to pick up on these things? Or rather, why are the established financial institutions, so slow to back such enterprises?
O well, I guess that's one reason to move to the US!
Re:For suburban homes it would be steep... (Score:1)
Ashland, OR has had this for a while.. (Score:1)
Fiber, copper, coax... (Score:1)
Television (coax) uses 40Mhz-800Mhz, so I would say coax would have enough bandwidth to go from the customers house to the CO at the end of the street, from which cable companies have enough fiber already.
What is the advantage of making that last couple of meters also fiber?
Re:Slightly OT, but still important... (Score:1)
Re:Why you moved out of Austin? (Score:1)
Ah, but it's worth every drop of summer sweat when you wake up on Christmas morning and it's 73 degrees.
Ooh look... (Score:1)
Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:1)
Re:Let's see how dedicated this guy is (Score:1)
Justin
Re:Fiber, copper, coax... (Score:2)
Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:1)
Simply put, this is why the British Pound isn't worth as much as it used to be, and the Euro is now worth only 80% of what it was just a year ago.
The British and Europeans need some revolutions before they'll be competitive again, in 50 years.
It's also possible that the former USSR states and even Eastern Europe will get it together sooner... despite the fact that they're kleptocracies now.
What's the difference between a country run by in-office criminals and a country run by freelance criminals? This exercise for your discussion....
Re:Wait. (Score:1)
Re:Oh good, I can save money (Score:2)
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Jeremy in Las Vegas, willing to don a hard-hat and help the construction workers get the fiber laid.
Upstream bandwidth, p2p apps, and fat pipes (Score:3)
The questions are:
1. Why do cable and DSL providers limit bandwidth and restrict servers?
2. Might there be some advanatge to not throttling last-mile bandwidth, such as a positive effect on peering economics for the ISP?
3. Could Napster and other P2P applications affect service provider economics - for better or worse?
Re:Northeast Fiber (Score:1)
BillyZ
Re:Northeast Fiber (Score:1)
Why oh why hasn't a certain large software company whose headquarters are located in Washington state figured this out yet?
*sigh* The brilliance of slashdoters...
-the wunderhorn
-the wunderhorn
#define OH_YES_INDEED 1
Southwest? (Score:1)
What about the other fiber lay'n guy (Score:1)
Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:1)
Re:Ashland, OR has had this for a while.. (Score:1)
Already done in San Jose (Score:1)
Re:Wait. (Score:1)
This is the big issue, I think. With the extremely high bandwidths optical fibre can offer, this is gonna be a lot more; you'd need insanely strong backbone connections when people start to do things like downloading entire pirated movies or Linux distros habitually.
Wait. (Score:1)
Re:Fiber... (Score:1)
Re:Old Equipment (Score:1)
But when you live on top of a mountain, pretty much everything between you and the next mountain is LOS.
wish
Northeast Fiber (Score:2)
"Princeton, New Jersey's RCN has been building a network concentrated in Northeastern United States that offers a combination of phone, Internet and cable service."
The companies aren't hyping their activity for one very important reason: they don't want expectations to be too high for a technology they are not positive will take off. A silent flop is less painful than a loud one caught on camera and displayed on the 11 o'clock news.
Re:Fiber... (Score:1)
Austin (Score:2)
Well, I hope it wasn't to get away from Taco Cabana, HEB, and BBQ. :)
Anyhow, I've been checking where the test neighborhoods in Austin are, and they're all down southwest around the Mopac/360/290 triangle.
One group is in an area bordered by Town Lake, Barton Creek, 360, and the south edge of West Lake Hills, in the Barton Creek Mall area.
The other area is bordered by Mopac, Slaughter lane, Brodie Lane, and William Cannon, with a small extra area northeast of Brodie and William Cannon.
All areas are apparently within the Austin city limits. This makes sense, as they only got approval with the city of Austin.
Anyone who is planning to move down there to get in on the trial run had better either have a southside/360 job or plan for a fun-filled Mopac commute twice a day!
Re:Fiber... (Score:1)
Re:Oh good, I can save money (Score:1)
The name of the fiber operator?
Is it a trial, or a large-scale deployment?
What services do you get over that fiber?
Are you commited for a long period?
screw the northeast (Score:1)
Re:Fiber... (Score:1)
Re:Ooh look... (Score:1)
This is awful. (Score:1)
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Re:wireless ethernet (Score:1)
Well, with a network cost of $1000 per home... (Score:1)
..and another $1000 out of the company's pocket to hook each home up that signs up, I bet ya one thing:
They probably won't pull an @HOME on their customers!
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63,000 bugs in the code, 63,000 bugs,
ya get 1 whacked with a service pack,
Re:For suburban homes it would be steep... (Score:1)
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Re:Slightly OT, but still important... (Score:1)
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Ok (Score:1)
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Re:Upstream bandwidth, p2p apps, and fat pipes (Score:3)
>1. Why do cable and DSL providers limit bandwidth and restrict servers?
Because they pay for bandwidth, in one form or other. They can either charge for it or restrict it, but don't expect them to do both.
As for restricting servers, that doesn't work quite the same way - most providers have spare "outgoing" bandwidth because their users do a lot more downloading than serving. The main reason in this case is commercial - by allowing any old user on a cheap connection to host servers at decent speeds (and most non-multimedia servers don't use much bandwidth at all) they would be devaluing their own web-hosting, managed server and co-location products.
It'll happen eventually, of course, because it only takes a couple of companies doing it to bring the whole thing crashing down...
>2. Might there be some advanatge to not throttling last-mile bandwidth,
>such as a positive effect on peering economics for the ISP?
It would be a negative effect - more peering infrastructure (and quite likely transit costs) without more revenue - see above. Economies of scale only kick in when you're getting
>3. Could Napster and other P2P applications affect service provider economics
>- for better or worse?
More bandwidth use is always going to cost the provider - although it costs them less per Mbps each year - unless the user is paying for that bandwidth. Bear in mind that providers usually base their own bandwidth requirement estimates on a certain contention ratio (it's different for different services), so greater usage due to Napster and such will either force them to alter the ratio or leave them with an over-subscribed network. Ouch.
Re:ADSL????? (Score:1)
There should be some sort of limit that stops people from having bandwidth that exceeds their IQ in Kbps.
Wireless... (Score:1)
Joshua
Re:Upstream bandwidth, p2p apps, and fat pipes (Score:1)
I think it also said that after things are established, they might be allowing people to pay for running fiber directly to the home.
WinFirst is supposed to be working in my neighborhood soon, the went around and stuck flyers on everybodys doors.
Re:ADSL????? (Score:2)
Rather than relying on line cards in the CO, my local ISP has started deploying remote DSLAMs. These are in neighbourhood boxes (like the current small green wiring boxes already out there) which operate in the same way as the line cards in the CO. Thus they can extend xDSL far beyond the CO.
Re:Or so he thinks... (Score:1)
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McLeodUSA has been laying Fiber for over a year (Score:1)
I have the service in Cedar Rapids and it is great. If you get all the services, you get a 15% bundle discount. The Company ran a Fiber optic line back behind the house. There is some sort of transformer that transfers the connection to a twisted pair and a co-ax cable line to goes to the house. From there, the line connects into your house just like the old telephone service and cable service. And they dropped in a Cisco cable modem. I previously had AT&T's @Home cable service and I think that McLeods is faster.
Bry
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Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:1)
Whoa! That's a bold statement!
Re:Fiber... (Score:1)
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Another lame and misleading Wired story (Score:3)
Last mile connectivity is the biggest difficulty in getting high-speed connectivity to residential consumers. The cost to switch and deliver fiber to the home is *extremely* expensive and revenue will likely never cover the expense.
However, a hybrid system of fiber to local access points combined with some existing form of "last mile" connectivity can provide all of the benefits at a remarkable reduction in cost. This is certainly not a new idea. In fact, this is the scheme implemented by the cable modems that have been in operation for three years now.
For those unaware, the bandwidth used by cable modems takes up just one channel of the 500 channels that can be encoded on coax. And that one channel provides 30 Mbps for the user on that segment. This, combined with the ability to move the fiber closer and closer to the user provides an incredibly amount of flexability with remarkably little up-front costs.
Love or hate your local cable company or cable modem ISP, the scheme is sheer brilliance on the technical side. If your service sucks, there is no *technical* reason for this. That is to say that even if you had fiber to your door, your service could suck just as hard.
I really, really wish that someone would start whacking Wired authors with the clue stick...
-p.
Re:Wait. (Score:1)
Revenues:
1. The cost of a working installation is $2000, which means that with current capital of $450,000,000, 225,000 homes can be wired. Figure in extra expenses, screw-ups, etc., and that number might drop to 200,000.
2. People are currently willing to pay around $30/month for cable access. Additional channels/features made possible with fiber might bring this up to $40.
3. The current average cost for a phone line and local service is around $25/month.
4. I don't know for sure, but $20/month seems reasonable for an average long distance bill.
5. It can be assumed that fiber internet service is going to be _fast_. $50/month seems reasonable, and would be the best deal in town by far.
Total = $135/month = $1,620/year
200,000 users @ $1,620/year = $324,000,000
2 years = $648,000,000, which is $198,000,000 before expenses.
Expenses:
1. Cable service (basic programming) might cost anywhere between $100-200 per user per year.
2. Local telephone service might cost anywhere between $125-150, including taxes.
3. Long distance would be about half profit. ($120).
4. Running the ISP (help here, folks!) ~$50-100?
Net Revenues after 2 years at the low expense estimates are $40,000,000, and $285,000,000 after 3 years. At the high level, they're -$30,000,000 and $180,000,000, respectively. At the high end of expenses, it still amounts to a 40% return on investment after 3 years.
Of course, this assumes that everyone being wired opts for the service, and that everyone opts for the full slate of products. I don't know how many 'dead pipes' Winfirst will install (@ $1,000 apiece), or how many people will opt for only the broadband service. But it could work, especially if the services are an improvement over their current counterparts.
Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:2)
Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:1)
Re:Upstream bandwidth, p2p apps, and fat pipes (Score:1)
_____________
Oh good, I can save money (Score:2)
This is good news, as I'm really not in the mood to pay $1000 installation and $1000 a month for bandwidth, when my DSL is serving me just fine.
I do think, however, that within a few years we'll be reminicing about the good ole days when we connected to the net via standard phone lines (hell, I still joke about the days of 300 baud modem surfing... of course, that was til I got an MPE 1000c on my Atari 800. That sucker went to a whopping 450 baud!!!)
The question is, would this type of technology have a price decrease rapidly, or would it remain pretty high for years to come? Businesses would be fine with $1000 a month, for some high speed connections, but that's pretty damn ridiculous for residential, no?
Slightly OT, but still important... (Score:1)
This will succeed. but so what? (Score:1)
But what good is this to the rest of us? They won't let us run a server? Why? Because big business is willing to pay a lot more for it. If they can charge more for exactly the same service then they will. Then they'll start cracking down on everybody who happens to be running a "welcome to apache" screen on their Linux box if they actually permit all us strange "unsupported" OS users to connect at all (Well, its our proprietry software that requires Windows 2000, ME or 95 but not 98)
So have fun. Enjoyt watchin TV on your (Windows) PC. Thats all they'll let you do.
Re:ADSL????? (Score:1)
Re:ADSL????? (Score:1)
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Re:Ummmm (Score:1)
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Re:Or so he thinks... (Score:1)
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Re:Wait. (Score:1)
And besides, the "high bandwidth" services I know (cable and DSL) all suffer from oversaturated backbones, bad design, too much growth and bad costumer service. They'd better fix these things up before we can think of fiber in the house.
Re:Oh good, I can save money (Score:1)
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'fiber plants'.. (Score:1)
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What about that other fiber deal? (Score:1)
Re:ADSL????? (Score:1)
Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:1)
when in the northeast? (Score:2)
"'...Now if only someone would be doing the same thing in the northeast.' Tell me again why I moved out of Austin?"
Neither the person who sent it in, nor the person who approved it apparantly read the article.
From that article I quote:
"At the same time, American Broadband -- based in Burlington, Massachusetts, and founded in October 1999 -- is planning a similar service starting in Rhode Island, and eventually crossing 2 to 3 million homes in the Eastern United States. "
"Winfirst is not without direct competitors. Princeton, New Jersey's RCN has been building a network concentrated in Northeastern United States that offers a combination of phone, Internet and cable service. The company also plans to build a competing cable network in San Diego. "
Another fine example of Slashdot's journalistic abilities.
*sigh*
yacko
Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:1)
Your immediate assertion that I'm some kind of Euro xenephobe is baseless and insolent!
Have the decency to apologise!
Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:1)
Re:my personal take on this list (Score:1)
Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:1)
Re:Fibre in UK/Europe? (Score:1)
ADSL????? (Score:2)
I have a friend in my country's national telephone company who I recently persuaded to arrange a lecture for me and a few others about a technology they have been testing: ADSL.
It's supposed to be able to connect your PC directly with the telco's ATM network. It uses normal copper lines for the last 1000m to your home and optical fiber for the rest of the ride (which is the existing infrastructure in most PSTN networks these days). It gives bandwidths between 640 Kbps and 8 Mbps, depending on how much you pay.
Does anyone know how does this compare with in-home fiber connections?