Fiber-to-the-Home Internet, TV, Phone in One Box
Brian Stretch writes "This looks like a really neat toy. Internet (PPPoE), CATV, DBS, telephone over one fiber optic cable to the converter box that breaks it down into 10BaseT Ethernet, coax, coax, and three POTS lines. I'd prefer more Internet bandwidth, and DBS and HDTV (from over-the-air broadcast) instead of DBS and CATV... but hey, these things could whack both
Ameritech and Comcast in one shot. Is anyone familiar with these or any competing devices?"
Talk about one hell of a monopoly if this ever rolls out in the mainstream..
Can anyone say multimedia?!?
I stole this Sig
in Australia, I'll be a grandfather, at the speed of Australia's uptake in anything network technology related, well one day someone will truely oust the Telstra monopoly in Australia.
[PPPoE, CATV, DBS, POTS, DBS, HDTV, DBS and CATV.]
As Dilbert would say, Bingo!
El Karma: excelente(principalmente la suma de moderación hecha a los comentarios de los usuarios)
when are most of us going to see fiber to home? 201x?
.... this is the technology, but well, where is the service provider? And how much they are going to charge? Honestly, if this really gives you satelite+cable TV, 3 phone lines and 10BaseT, I'm willing to pay up to $300 a month for it.
Of course, if I get the 10BaseT dedicated up to some reasonable backbone *inno*
Well, way to go...
If programs would be read like poetry, most programmers would be Vogons.
Now we just need someone to foot the bill to run 100 million last mile fiber connections to everyone's houses at 1 million dollars a mile.
100,000,000,000,000
Yours now for only a Hundred Trillion Dollars!
Go Ahead and laugh. There are 100 million phone lines in the US and to quote a sig, "Information may want to be free, but fiber want's to be a million dollars a mile."
If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.
Doesn't it still mandate that telcom's must invest in expensive fiber optic rollouts, where they currently only have analog lines? Last mile may be ONLY a mile, but multiply that by 1000 communities and you have 1000 miles of short-path, difficult to maintain fiber in the field. Currently, fiber while being more versatile is still more expensive than rigid or semi-rigid coax that typically populates last-mile carrier networks.
It took my cable company years and $$$$$$ to replace the splitters to go up to 1000 MHz so they could offer digital TV and internet access. And that was *just* the splitters in the outdoor enclosures. Imagine digging up or laying down new cable...(and it would be fiber so labour would be higher and cable would be more expensive).
This seems like a very good idea for fiber to the door, but without investors willing to inject money into telcoms so they can build their networks, this just doesn't seem in the near future. The specs also don't look too promising --current cable modems can already do 30 Mbps downstream and 10 Mbps upstream, but are capped.
The technology is there, the money just isn't.
"I'll just chip in a bit for RedHat: I actually have that installed on my university machine." - Linus, '95
I heard *lots* of good things about Sprint's ION service (which has been shut down). Unfortunately, their timing launching it was off. This sounds similar, though not quite as cool. Interesting.
SSL Certificate
http://www.acc.umu.se/~tfytbk/mattgrand has a description of our real 100 Mbps Internet connected network (access also at 100 Mbps!)...
I have 1 Gbps Internet access@home
...but my box gives me 100Mbit Ethernet, 270Mbit SDI & 220Mbit ASI.
All you need is a 622Mbit DTM network connection.
...which none of us do.
If it looks like every house is going to get at least one fiber connection, there are any number of integrated multimedia delivery systems. The problem isn't how to use fiber; the problem is how to use the copper we already have. Or, how to get fiber to 150,000,000 endpoints in the US alone.
Cheers
-b
In parts of Japan appearently you can already get a 100Mbit connection through fibre cables to your house. (Those who cannot read japanese, see the image . Not informative, but you can imagine your house in place and have nice dreams.) The price: JPY6000/month. (about EUR 52, resp. USD 45)
I was wondering for some time if it was just a joke. Well, afaik fibre cables are about the same price as CAT5 cables. One big advantage is that a full duplex fibre segment over a really big distance seems to be less a problem. (A switch every 45km sounds easy)
Too sad that i live in a country that is currently struggling to have ADSL for a fair price.
This sig is a true statement, but I cannot prove it.
i can still download porn and talk to miss cleo at the same time right...
16, 17, 18, 19, 20... lame filter, you are so lame.
MARIJUANA, SHROOMS, X: ONLINE?! - E
It's a great idea. It combines all of your communincation services into a single package. It consolidates the cost of running all the lines, as well as the maintenance expense. It also has the potential to dynamically divide your bandwidth - if no one is using the phone you may be able to allocate it as extra broadband. If someone invents a new service, just re-allocate for it.
One big question though...
Can anyone find anything resembling a price tag? I Looked over the website and the only refference to money that I could find was an "Investors" link, LOL!
I really hope they succeed, but I wouldn't invest. Too likely to be vaporware.
-
- - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
Winfirst is a California based company that is offering last mile fiber internet connections to houses with a 10 meg up/down cap for $100 for install and $50 a month for internet service. They are also soon in line for the dot-death list but it can be done.
Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
I'm sure the cable/phone companies will try to kill this thing before it sees the light of day.
Don't mod me, bro'!!!!
I think US$2k plus $10/month for services is a bargain for a connection that is about 100x faster than my US$30/mo ADSL here in Canada. You definitely have some advantages in terms of the design of your community (lots of straight-line trenches in soft earth helps a lot), but I'm sure the same approach could work in small towns around here.
You should be very proud (your community collectively and you personally) of this project. Now, perhaps I might visit sometime for a LAN party some time?...
I've got a bad attitude and karma to burn. Go ahead. Mod me down.
Any phone system provider is federally mandated to make sure the system is up 99.999% of the time. In fact, they face hefty fines for even ONE minute of downtime of a service area.
It's to their advantage to build redundancy into their distribution system or face the consequences later.
In the case of fiber-based distribution systems, they use a redundant ring (where a signal has a guaranteed redundant path) around their service area to accomplish this. When someone digs a trench and knocks out the service to a single home, it's still possible to run to a neighbor's house and use their phone in an emergency, so the federal regulations don't require complete redundancy on that "last mile".
Therefore, fiber-based telco services are inherently more robust than telco over copper. Not to mention the advantage fiber has in its resistance to electrical/radio interference lightning.
my cable company in orange county offered similar service, phone/tv/internet for $130 per month... in 1999. this is news?
www.tranact.com.au
The electricity utility is rolling out the fibre, since they already own the power poles. A copper pair is run from the pole to the house.
Here in Southern Europe (5 cities in Italy, plus some others in Europe - 10 to 15 cities total I believe) there's a company called e.Biscom (plus its subsidiaries Metroweb and Fastweb) which is engaged in a massive fiber roll-out. What do they sell? Phone (VoIP), pay-per-view TV, and 10 MBps flat-rate Internet Access (NATted), for 50 euros/month plus taxes (phone bills and TV shows not included of course).
They've been doing it for at least 2 years, and they've always used one integrated device with fiber in and 10BaseT/phone/tv out. The models have varied in time, but this is definitely NOT news.
I'm somewhat disgusted by the people who scream about cable providers who wouldn't share their lines yet they think this is "cool".
:: Of course the simple answer is that there is a provider who wants to collect on all the services. It's greed stupid! ::
Think about it. Sure, one service created to serve them all - but hell, one service to rule them all as well.
Are we asking for it when we say we want POTS and all the rest rolled into one? For example: I love my Time Warner cable. I wouldn't use a dish if it was free. If this service is rolled out will it kill my options [or limit them]?
Let's keep in mind that optical internet is awsome. Let's also remember that adding in TV, Phone and Cable could cause so many collisions that the internet aspect wouldn't be worth it.
IMHO we should keep these services seperate for now. Having our options open for 'net access is ideal. Telephone lines are fsck'n fine [I CAN call anywhere now can't I?]. Cable and Satellite is out there.
So why do we need this? Sure, I want fiber to my house. But why should I share the bandwidth with my phone and the rest?
Get your Unix fortune now!
OK, yes it's cool.
Yes I'd buy one.
Do I need one? No. Is there a sufficient market for this device outside of a few select metro areas? Probably not (yet).. I can see this as a very nice add on for a home/small business. I can see this as a great thing for the geek that needs all his toys. But I can't see this selling enough units to really make a profit. I know only time will tell but the whole last mile fiber problem (coupled with the retrofit installation nightmare in many of the prime locations for this to be installing in older businesses) and cost/benifit I really don't see it happening. OK, one last thing. Did anyone else bother to look over their investor press release? Very interesting things when you compare them to the official documents the company is required to release to the stock exchange.
Find out about my new childrens book: SS Death Camp Criminal Batallion Go To Monte Carlo For The Massacre
This site: http://www.eluminant.com/atm0.htm provides an overview of a last mile fiber product being offered by an NEC venture, eluminant.
I do believe capping cable modems is more because you have quite limited bandwith beyond the cable company's local net. Yes, it's sweet to be able to download at 400kB/s, but providing that sort of service costs arm + leg.
Information may want to be free, bandwith doesn't. Now, I have no problem seeing cablecos offering TV broadcasts via cable modems in future. With multicasting, you end up *saving* cable bandwith. Only, again, the problem isn't the cable bandwith, it's the cost of the bandwith for *you* to download britney spears nekkid pics..
Personally i think that this kind of setup is the future. Here in the UK one company HomeChoice&l t;/a> is already offering STBs that do VoD using the BT ADSL technologies. The STBs also have a serial port providing net access (albeit at a rather limited speed).
There are already many VoIP technologies in place and some standards, the VoIP revolution is progressing quickly.
Of course the cost of supply individual houses with fiber would be very high, using ADSL or other DSL technologies over plain copper with only fiber at the exchange would be a much cheaper solution.
How much bandwidth would an MPEG2 stream use? Unbundling of the local loop and the increase in competition with provision of ADSL services needs to improve to be able to provide complete solutions but the technology is available.
Rob 'robster' Bradford
Debian Planet Guy
We are the apt. You will be packaged. Resistance is futile.
Let's see... prices would be (including taxes...)
- $30 for the first phone line
- $40 for the additional lines ($20 each)
- $60 for premium cable
That leaves $170 to pay for the 'net access. It'll certainly get you a nice connection... but it'll be a while before that buys you 10-Mbit.Total: $130
My ISP charges $1200/month for 7.1-Mbit (down) & 768-Kbit (up), unmetered transfer DSL. Those speeds are only offered to 'business' class service, and thus include the right to run servers & host a couple domains. What it doesn't include is what our local ILEC (Verizon) will charge you for the circuit. Still, we can probably not consider that, as the cable company owns the 'circuit' anyway. Quite an eye-opening bandwidth bill.
Take a look at the Cisco uBR 925. It includes two RJ-11 POTS ports. Okay, so it's not three but I don't have teenagers. This device is capable of 10 Mbit/sec (limited because they installed 10-base instead of 100-base). Why aren't more of them installed? Why aren't we getting phone service over cable?
(I'm not going to address pay-TV service, since you're already plugging this thing into it!)
Ya got me. I'd say it's because the cable companies are in bed with the phone companies, and they both are milking things for all their worth. Just because something is available, possible, (both physically and financially!), and desirable doesn't mean it's going to happen.
Heck, look what happened to the XFL -- and they had Jesse "The Mind" Ventura!
But I'm cynical. I've pointed that out before. And it probably clouds my judgement.
"...America's great minds of today, teaching America's great minds of tomorrow. Poor bastards." -- A Beautiful Min
This hardware is in use for the Palo Alto municipal utility's fiber-to-the-home trial. They work very well. See http://www.wbsmith.com/fiber.html.
I have a cable modem. Whenever there is a problem with the cable line, not only the tv does not work but also the internet connection.
In this case, if the line goes down, not only internet and tv won't work but the phone also?
I would rather not get into this for obvious reasons.
Alcatel has products in this market too. Take a look at the
Alcatel 7340 Home Optical Network Terminal for details. It also has POTS, CATV, DBS, and 10BaseT.
I sure hope that the phone companies do a better job of rolling out FTTU than they have ADSL.
Hey, COX Cable already does that, and has for a while....coming up to your house is fiber, and then from there is phone, net, and cable tv...
This is the Marconi's big brother--- Gigabit fiber uplink, 8 10/100 ethernet and 2 telephone jacks. Anybody drooling now?
Last I heard in IEEE journal a year ago, this kind of 1-fiber line to your house is more of what Ameritech and Comcast are going to use to thwack the telephone companies, and not vice versa.
After all, it's the cable companies that are already laying digital fiber lines to houses. They probably have some regulatory hurdles to overcome to offer POTS through the lines instead of having to go through the phone monopolies' networks, but with the backing of TW/AOL/etc. this no longer seems insurmountable.
The phone monopolies have limited deployment of digital lines to some prototype high-income (like, millionaire) communities, but even then, I don't think those lines carry TV signals. So the cable companies should be much closer to making this a reality.
I for one wouldn't mind cable taking over my communications, but I'm pretty sure that's just because I had good experiences with TWCNY's Road Runner service and pretty goddamn awful experiences with Verizon.
Who cares if it is a monopoly as long as fair rates and fair service are provided, that is what the public services are.
hard to see why they wouldn't put 100baseT in the box -- they can always soft-limit folks to 10mbit/s or 1 mbit/s but keep the option of selling bigger pipes to those who have the ca$h..
someone's pinching pennies and that will hurt them in the long run.
Here's Alcatel's answer to this technology...
. jh tml?_DARGS=%2Fcommon%2Fopg%2Fproducts%2Finclude%2F productbrief.jhtml_A&_DAV=%2Fx%2Fopgproduct%2Fa734 0holt.jhtml
http://www6.alcatel.com/products/productsummary
Bristol Virginia Utilities Board is doing this for businesses now and should roll it out for home users in a few months. http://www.bvub.com/rp_internet.asp has some info but not much. They're the local power company and have been stringing fiber for years. Now they're about ready to start offering to consumers internet, phone and cable TV over it. They've been sued by the state of Virginia and won. It's in appeal now. The judge said they can compete in any telecommunications arena they wanted to basically. Charter is in about half their service area and Comcast in the rest. Charter has pipeline service but Comcast here has nothing yet. Interesting to see how this one unfolds...
What does that mean?
Well if you live in a major city, you can sign up for B Flet, NTT's fiber service.
If you can read Japanese, check out NTT east's site at:
http://www.ntt-east.co.jp/flets/index_f.html
OR the NTT west site at:
http://www.ntt-west.co.jp/ipnet/ip/bflets/
On the west site, you can clearly see what is offered, with 100 Mbps big and bold! Of course, while this is the advertised speed, the actual performance is going to be between 20 and 50 Mbps.
They have 3 plans:
Business plan: 100Mbps for 40,000 yen ($300) a month
Basic plan: 100Mbps for 9,000 yen ($69) a month
Family plan: 10Mbps for 5,000 yen ($38) a month.
While the price is good, the installation and hardware costs are high. It costs 29,000 yen to hook up the basic plan ($223).
I'm living in the boonies of Nagoya now, but I look forward to moving closer to Nagoya to take advantage of this!
Alex
If you're an ATT digital cable customer you get to have this huge switching box which is supplied by coax from the street and breaks off into phone, TV , and cable internet. I have 'never' seen a phone outage for what it's worth.
Peter
www.alphalinux.org
Palo Alto: http://www.cpau.com/fth/
Somewhere in Virginia: http://newscenter.verizon.com/proactive/newsroom/r elease.vtml?id=69074
Theres always good info on this sort of technology here:
http://www.convergedigest.com/DSL/ftth.asp
I just went through the process of having fiber installed to my office by the local cable monopoly in order to get a T3. That's not a cable modem, by the way, and they beat the crap out of the local telephone monopoly when it came to quality and price (cleaner line at a third of the price). Anyway, I watched as they did it.
Fiber is hard to work with. You have to run it all the way back to a powered node... Its not good enough to run it back to a simple splitter. You generally have to fusion-splice it for these applications. Fusion splicing requires special training, expensive equiment and expertise that simple coax does not. No more installation contractors whose "in" was ownership of a van and a $250 course.
You could conceivably run cable from the powered location out to subpanels and then run fiber from the home to the subpanels with jacks rather than splices. By sending out the installers with preterminated lengths in 50' increments and instructing them to coil the excess at the home, it could be done. But if the connectors get dirty, its toast, pulling preterminated fiber is significantly more difficult than pulling unterminated wire, and either way its several times as expensive as coax.
Coax has plenty of bandwidth. Do you have any idea how much bandwidth is available in 60 analog television channels? Any idea how little bandwidth it takes to make a phone call? With a rational combination of the various multiplexing techniques (FDM, TDM, CDM) and an upper bound around 100 for the number of customers served on a particular coax segment, you could easily accomodate enough bandwidth to play one DVD movie, multiple phone calls and high speed internet all at once in each home.
Add a second coaxial cable and you can triple the number served on a segment by moving the head-end transmissions to one cable and the subscriber transmissions to the other. But best of all: Joe in a truck can still install the service in a subscriber's home without costing the company a fortune.
Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
I worked for Optical Solutions, Inc. for two years. FTTH is awesome, but the RBOCs aren't quick to try and roll it out. They have too much copper in place. The providers that are making the investment to lay fiber are the rural and independent telcos. I'm not really allowed to say too much about Optical Solutions, so maybe one of the people still there, who I know read /., will post some more information. Dan, you there?
Justin
look up http://www.wwp.com/
- WorldWidePackets. They have a higher speed version
that is already in trials in rural Washington state. They also have the 'head-end' for providers.
right now i get all of these services (save pppoe) through cable. it's not all in one box just yet but two isn't bad especially since my phone is no where near my computer and neither is the tv.
I live in a condo complex. There are a few other large condo complexes surrounding us. We could install the gear (one-time charge), carry the entire Dish Network datastream (maybe they'd subsidize us?), maybe figure out how to retransmit the HDTV over-the-air datastreams (20Mb/sec each), have our Internet access plugged into a fractional DS3 feed, and if one of the local telecom companies wants to make use of the POTS ports to provide us with a competitor to Ameritech, that works too. If Earthlink or some other ISP wants to handle the Internet feed and customer support, groovy.
Of course, it'd be simpler to just do pure Ethernet, but it might be an easier sell to the community if we could do DBS TV too. Just plug in your satellite receiver, call Dish Network with your credit card number, and vegitate to your heart's content. Maintenance shouldn't be too big a deal.
Being fiber, extending the network to neighboring communities shouldn't be too big a deal, if this grand delusion works in the first place.
Does it bother anyone but me that the electronics appears to be powered off a wall transformer? So that when commercial power fails, the phone service goes out as well? Providing network-based power for this type of device on a large scale that could allow phone service to continue when commercial power fails is EXPENSIVE! Not to mention that you would have to run copper of some sort in parallel with the fiber in order to carry that power.
..I posted a link to www.winfirst.com. I wired their data center here in Dallas where they're running contracts to get fiber to downtown and some north dallas (along I75) locations. They used to have walkout maps showing where they were researching and potential neighborhood maps, after a redesign of their site they're gone. Anyway hit that site and get educated, these people will be a real competitor once their network is in place.
But i don't know if the people will approve.
The government could install such a network to all the people(if possible it would be best to start such a task when unemployment rates are high).
If every person could get a 10(or 40) gbps then the gov. could lease parts of that signal to telcom, tv, and other providers.
The government could also assure reasonable prices.
And why not the government?
Look at it this way, a large fiber network is as much infrastructure as a large road or rail network.
And although i'm not an expert on economics, if there is ever a large depression as in F.D. Roosevelts day, a big infrastructural project like this might help(as Roosevelt got the US out of the depression by building roads and so)
There are several vendors building hardware in this space. For example, a bunch of my friends and former Packet Engines coworkers started World Wide Packets, which builds boxes that amount to the same thing. They're a two year old startup that is waiting for a market to appear for their hardware. Their stuff rocks, but they only make equipment and don't control the deployment.
FYI Packet Engines was acquired by Alcatel in late 1998. They managed to bungle their way through the acquisition of several companies in a short time, completely crushing out of existence some very promising technology through truly appalling corporate stupidity during what was the biggest boom time in history for ethernet and IP routing infrastructure manufacturers.
Alas, Packet Engines and nearly all of the others are now almost completely gone.
I don't mind you stalking me, but would you mind posting as a user? Helps me keep score.
PPPoE sucks ass.
Pay the fuck up!
Sprint is already testing this product in a few locations. it is called ION Integrated o****** network. I forget what the O is...
slightly OT - but IFITL - Integrated Fiber in the loop already exists here in south florida (just a few neighborhoods in Davie and Hialeah.) When your connected it says "connected at 10mbps" It costs exactly the same as Bellsouth FastAccess DSL. Difference is that with DSL you need a modem. With IFITL you only need a PPPoE client and a nic. They install an RJ-45 in your house. Next to a phone outlet usually. Heres a way cool site from one guy who is way too tech.
http://www.rayvaughan.com/bellsout.htm
and the linkscared: http://www.rayvaughan.com
Lots and lots of big big pictures. Hopefully we'll slashdot him... (teehee)
Lousy facepalm.
Passive optical networks (PON) are cool, but I think in the long run IP/Ethernet PONs are going to be more flexible than the Marconi stuff. While the standard for EPONs is still being worked out, Alloptic is shipping some gigabit PON equipment already.
we are already doing it herte in grant county washington going with fiber to the home, and it is working, i have it myself. you all are a little late
Valen@nineinchnerds.org
This is great, except that fiber to the home just ain't happening. Last mile problem, stubborn telcos, competition between cable and telcos over infrastructure.. The only way this works is if there is a new player in the market willing to spend billions on new fiber to every home, and start a completely new service. There is NO WAY cable or telco gives up on their current technology and starts with this - and that's what it would take to get fiber into the home. We already have copper and coax in every home and this is good enough for the two big players right now. Their page says low deployment cost per home, but what do they mean? $2000? $4000? Compared to less than a thousand for a cable modem or DSL (including head-end equipment)?
Marconi's stock is 20 cents, I wonder if this product will survive.
Anyway, there are may companies working on a standards-based PON. There is a group called FSAN (Full Services Access Network) with a Web site http://www.fsanet.net that describes the standards.
FSAN is working on an ATM-based PON (APON) which will compete for dominance with Ethernet-based PON (EPON). If you are interested in PON technology, you should focus on these techniques since the interoperability between equipment vendors will be based on these methods.
Check out the equipment from Quantum Bridge for active products that support a standards-based PON.
We've had a company called Knology here in the Charleston, SC area that offers phone, cable, and internet access for a few years now. They've only laid the fiber optic into some of the new developments as they're built.
We need fiber, but this is not what we need. Here are a couple of reasons why:
1. Multiple wavelengths means multiple receivers and equipment to split and combine signals. From what I understand it is the equipment on either side that makes fiber too expensive for the last mile. Must be all put on one channel to get at least closer to being cost effective.
2. The one channel must be faster and handle everything over IP. IP phones are a reality and don't use much bandwidth. Broadcasting over IP is a reality. Why not do IP phones and TV broadcasting over a 100 Mb/s channel? A 100 Mb/s fiber ethernet device costs about as much as 10 Mb/s fiber channel. Switch costs are about the same with the same density at that. Plus with IP based broadcasting traffic grows at a logarythmic scale as you go up the chain. This means that a carrier only needs to make a relatively modest investment in top level routers to push all the broadcasting bandwidth that the customers can handle on a fat (100 Mb/s) last mile pipe. Plus if you had a 100 Mb/s ethernet connection to your computer you could in theory watch TV on your computer. (This is especially nice for college boys like me.) Plus for premium content they could just release binary only drivers for various OS's and send encrypted streams.
3. Nothing mentioned about firewalling. (Only restricting flow in general from what I saw.) I think that as personal bandwidth goes up and more people get on the Internet, provisions need to be made for good mandatory personal firewalling. It has been shown to me that Windows boxes, especially the typical residential box are easy hacks. A lot of the hacks, especially for older versions of Windows that most people never 'upgrade' off of or patch you only need an IP address and the toolkit does the rest for you. I mean any teenage punk that knows just enough to type in a URL has a selection of millions of home systems to break into and millions of home computers get broken into each year. Most home users that I know have been hacked and the few that don't say anything probably are either covering up or just don't realize it. This hacking stuff on home computers has been at epidemic proportions for years. Also the cheep NAT boxes out their may be enough for the average user just cruising around the Internet, but if you want to securly do work from home (IPSec with the AH protocol turned on is the best way that I can see) and/or securly connect your network to your friends and/or siblings network and/or do video conferencing and the like, you need something a little more capable. I think that their should be all in one boxes, not too unlike what these people have, but it must have at least two flavors, one with simple firewalling capabilities and one with advanced capabilities and they need to be controllable by both the carrier and the user and securly upgradable by the carrier.
I think this box takes C-cell batteries to keep the POTS active in the event of a power failure.
Check out www.sandstream.com
I agree. With all PC's sold within the last year or so capable of 100/10 auto-sensing, they should include 100baseT. Especially with video apps, 100baseT will make a huge difference. Although I doubt many people will adopt this first go at a product, so we can all just wait for revision 2. :)
'He who has to break a thing to find out what it is, has left the path of wisdom.' -- Gandalf to Saruman
Here in lovely Sacramento, we have one thing I've never seen anywhere else.. A choice.
1. AT&T offers cable modems
2. Pac Bell offers phone/DSL
3. A new company called WinFirst (now in Ch. 11, but still operating) offers FTTH.
Heres what I get for about $130/mo.
1 - Phone line with 100 minutes LD, voice mail, caller ID, etc, etc, etc.
2 - All the basic local & Cable TV + 26 HBO/Cinemax.
3 - 10 Mbps symmetrical Internet access. And if only I could find a server that could keep up! I'm limited to 30 GB per month, but you can buy more. But 30 GB goes pretty far.
4. All delivered on fiber by a company who answers the phone. The cable system is crystal clear. Has VOD services.. It's quite cool.
brekekekex, coax coax
FTTH is already available to a few communities in the Houston 'burbs. The installer is Clearworks, a subsidiary of Eagle Broadband. They have also begun installations in the Austin area.
http://www.clearworks.com/
The fiber is run to new homes already installed with ethernet networks during the construction phase.
They now advertise 10 Megabit service, but early reports from customers indicated speeds much closer to synchronous 100 Mb. Apparently, the funny part was customers trying to test the speed. It required several simultaneous downloads because of the lack of 100 Mb offerings.
They have different digital packages, but phone, internet and 200 channel "cable" was reported at about 100 bucks/month. There is significant savings with bundled services. Where can I sign up?
Transact, who are rolling out the fibre network )(this very second!!) in Canberra, Australia, would probably benifit from this..
... it's just a pity that users of the fibre network pay once just to connect to the network, and again to use anyservers (you need an ISP to do anything on the net for example).
Kutztown PA. is currently in the process of installing Fiber-to-the-Home, and should be up and running within a few months. No prices have been announced yet, but seeing is this is a very heavily college student populated town (I being one of them), and all college students are bandwidth hungry, how could the Borough say no? More information can be found here: http://www.kutztownboro.org/TelecomWeb2001.htm
these things could whack both Ameritech and Comcast in one shot.
Except that I believe Ameritech is currently testing a service that provides all this. They laid the wire in some cities over the past year, and tests are supposed to begin this summer.
A friend of mine asked a technician who was helping to lay the wire, and got this information. Further, the bandwith could come close to 50 megabit per house. No telling what would be for which service though.
Have you read my journal today?
there are communities deploying FTTH and providing voice/video/data over the fiber....one is daniel island in sc.....
I stumbled upon this internet company in my city. They offer this fiber optic service but they have a limited service area. Not sure how much installation is but I heard service was $50 a month, not bad ;) I did hear they filed for chapter 11 though....check it here www.winfirst.com
Sprint tried this, and failed...it's called ION.
WAAAAAAy back (ok, '98? 99?) A Telco in Edmonton was doing some technology trials in Edmonton and Calgary that didn't quite run fibre to the home, but it ran fibre past the curb, and Cat-5 into the home.
Over this came telephone, xDSL, Digital cable, movies-on-demand and sundry. then 1 or two years later the whole thing was buttoned up and packed away. It was a pretty suite setup.
My folks live in Rapid City, SD and subscribe to a package offered by Black Hills FiberCom (www.blackhillsfiber.com). Something like $99/mo for local and long distance phone with premium features, a premium digital cable package, and broadband internet. It's a steal.
- If we aren't supposed to eat animals, then why are they made out of meat? - Steven Wright
Doesn't it still mandate that telcom's must invest in expensive fiber optic rollouts,
Fiber is only slightly more expensive at this point than copper, and telecoms are scheduled to replace about 300,000 miles of copper this year alone. Furthermore, the upkeep of passive optical networks is less than copper due to no need for amplifiers and other electrics.
It took my cable company years and $$$$$$ to replace the splitters to go up to 1000 MHz so they could offer digital TV and internet access. And that was *just* the splitters in the outdoor enclosures. Imagine digging up or laying down new cable...(and it would be fiber so labour would be higher and cable would be more expensive)
The splitter wasn't the problem. The problem was rolling the truck. That is what cable and telecoms are truly concerned about, because a $2 splitter just doesn't compare to a $40 man hour and a truck. The idea that fiber is more exspensive to work with is quickly becoming a myth, and at the present time the added installation cost is almost immediately recouped from cheaper operating expenses. Can you imagine how much it cost to provide battery backed power to a remote amplifier station every couple of miles. A PON will span 30miles with no amplification.
Can anyone find anything resembling a price tag? I Looked over the website and the only refference to money that I could find was an "Investors" link, LOL!
Alcatel has been advertising to vendors (ie, the telecoms) that they can easily provide the "triple play" for less than what people are paying now and still have a 3 to 5 year recovery period.
Last I heard in IEEE journal a year ago, this kind of 1-fiber line to your house is more of what Ameritech and Comcast are going to use to thwack the telephone companies, and not vice versa.
Don't believe everything you read in IEEE then. Telecoms are testing PONs with plans to roll them out RSN. The big hurdle is regulatory (as usual). The FCC doesn't allow telecoms to send video. Hard to deliver a triple play that way. It is true that some of the cable companies are also looking at fiber, because it is cheaper than copper and coax has some realistic bandwidth limits. Once the fiber is in the ground, it doesn't react with water and can be upgraded with end equipment for pratically infinite bandwidth.
The real kicker right now is that the telecoms are running scared of the cable guys. ADSL can't deliver TV, phone and data. It just doesn't have enough bandwidth for the video. But the cable guys are getting into the phone business. This gives them a huge advantage. Once the FCC lets the big telecom guys sell video, watch for a huge rollout of PON systems.
Fiber is hard to work with.
Things. They are a changin'.
Coax has plenty of bandwidth.
And no one needs more than 640K of memory either.
Finally. This technology won't see much play. Telecoms won't pick it up until it complies with ITU G.983.2. Those guys just don't play with things that aren't based on a written standard because of the headaches involved with swithing vendors. The only company with a 983.2 compliant PON system is Alcatel (of ADSL fame). You might want to check them out for a system that you might actually see installed at some point in the future.
Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
Wide Open West was doing a site survey near my home recently, to set up this kind of fiber-obtic infrastructure.
They have a FAQ at http://www.wideopenwest.com/00_frame_aboutus.html
Nice idea - but Marconni killed off their FTTH product line. (Website is out of date)
See this analysis of their most recent reorganization