100Mbps Home Internet Service Next Year in Finland
Listen Up writes "According to an article on CNN, broadband Internet access via cable modems in Finland will be able to hit 100 Mbps as early as 2006. That would be 50 times faster than the average broadband speeds now offered to cable TV homes in Finland. Do you think this technology has the possibility of reaching U.S. shores? Or do you think the already deeply entrenched U.S. politics are going to keep this technology from ever reaching us? There are already thousands and thousands of miles of 'dark fiber' underground around the U.S."
What's the upload speed?
So I assume that these speeds would be possible if Moto partners with a cable company in the states.
I wish I lived there..And if the fibre doesn't have Caps, That would sweeten the deal.
From my "observations," pirateers usually come from Europe and a handful come from Finland. What security measures will allow these citizens from not using it for illegal matters?
"To be is to do." -Socrates
"To do is to be." -Jean-Paul Sartre
"Do-be-do-be-do." -Frank Sinatra
100Mbps fiber to door was available in Japan since like two years ago; about a year ago in metropolitan areas they even rolled out 1Gbps service. Finland makes the news because...?
I already get 4Mbps downstream from Time Warner of San Diego and it is plenty!
I don't think any cat5e can reach that long.
Dark Fiber as nothing to do with home broadband. if it were between your house and the ISP, you might have something, but its not. The trick is getting high speed connections where Fiber doesn't exist.
My other car is a Popemobile
I think its unfair to compare these kind of rollouts to the US on a general scale. The US is practically the size of europe, and due to the state demarkations has almost the scaling problems that deploying across europe would incur (although the same core infrastructure providers would help somewhat). This isn't to say some providers aren't trying, there's definitely been a push towards fiber services as the next generation by some US providers. As for me, I'm just hoping that the UK gets its act together and starts rolling 8mb+ services out around the country, instead of the current spotty availablity in metro areas.
Business Voyeur
It's not a matter of the "technology reaching U.S. shores"..becuase everyone knows we already have the technology for this. Existing fibre optic lines have the capacity for ALOT more than what we're currently utilizing. It's got more to do with the cost than anything..
Thank you Timothy for, once again, inserting your personal bias in the fucking article on slashdot. You need to pull your head out of your ass for one second from now on before posting ok? We're smart and form our own opinions. You acting the ass hat just makes us think of you as Michael's Succesor to the title of "Greatest Asshat on the Internet".
"Based on our research, 30 megabits per second is the absolute minimum in future homes" I wonder what kind of tests they used to determine that figure.
Take the Dragon Survey
There are already thousands and thousands of miles of 'dark fiber' underground around the U.S.
So that's where all the dark matter is.
The coolest voice ever.
Finland, Finland, Finland
The country where I want to be
If it doesn't, time to move to where they have it or impeach anyone who does not allow it.
With those speeds
- my pr0n will stream faster than ever
- game pings will be -12
- TV over IP (sweet)
Not to mention in that country I can get some meet some l33t hackers.
-- Brought to you by Carl's JR
What is the theroretical limit of cable modems
Every time there's a Slashdot article about bandwidth, I can't help but want to be the first with the Porn joke.. I mean.. who doesn't think 'Wow.. that's a lot of porn per second (pps) throughput!' when 100mbs bandwidth is going to be offered..
But, then every time I get moderated as troll by those that probby look at porn the most but put on the most professional Slashdot face.
Us nerds need to realize the potential in sex..
--- We need more Ron Paul!
Having 100Mbps would be great, but it's not as if you're going to be able to pull files off of some Web server at the full speed. Many busy servers only have 100Mbps connectivity in total themselves.
You might suggest that 100Mbps would be great for BitTorrent and the like, but the flaw is that ISP's backbones and peering arrangements are measured in gigabits, not terabits. Even an OC-48 can only take 24 customers maxing out their bandwidth on this system. A big European ISP like Demon only has 2Gbps going into the LINX.. enough for, wow, 20 customers to max out their bandwidth.
The ratio of guaranteed bandwidth to advertised bandwidth on this offering is crazy. Backbones just aren't there yet.
Anyone know what Finland has actually has for pipes into the country? 100Mbps is nice, but if you want international content, it might not be such a big deal
-- Who is the bigger fool? The fool or the fool who follows him? --
"Do you think this technology has the possibility of reaching U.S. shores?"
Yes, but it won't have the same effect. Not trolling, but Finland is the world leader in wireless cell technology, has more phones per capita than any other country on the planet, and like the rest of Europe is way ahead of the US in countrywide technology rollout - mainly because of the dense population spread over here.
So while I can see the US getting 100Mb connections somewhere, Finland and the rest of Europe will always be in a position to roll this stuff out to everyone much, much faster. I can get a 1Mb connection anywhere in the UK at the moment, and a mobile signal over 100% of the country and up to 3 miles out to sea, the US has a long way to go until it can do this countrywide, and to be honest I have (still) find my visits to the US frustrating because my tri-band phone only seems to work in downtown New York or LA...
I have this FTH service in japan since last month and is very nice ... my only complain is that is very hard to get high transmition rates with the service... only if you are using things in japan . The cost is about 80 dollars a month and television services can be used on demand ( for a fee of course ). A link in english
to my provider .
"We all know Linux is great...it does infinite loops in 5 seconds." -- Linus
....becuase we're talking about people who wear clogs getting more internet sex than US!
"Do you think this technology has the possibility of reaching U.S. shores? Or do you think the already deeply entrenched U.S. politics are going to keep this technology from ever reaching us? There are already thousands and thousands of miles of 'dark fiber' underground around the U.S.""
I was going to do a funny remark, but instead I'll ask you the obvious. Who's going to pay whomever takes the risks? YOU and a bunch of your closes friends? You all want the good stuff in life. e.g. movies, music, games, books, and now high-speed broadband. But you all either want someone else to pay for it. e.g. taxpayers, paying customers or you expect some kind of magical fairy to deliver it to you. Either way you don't want the pain and suffering that earning money entails. Nor the pain of seperation when someone says "you have to give me money if you want what I have".
having such a fat pipe in finland but slower speeds elsewhere is quite meaningless IMHO. It basically makes the whole country a big LAN. Also it will be interesting to see how they price this service given that internet access is now a commodity and pricing is so aggressive.
There are already thousands and thousands of miles of 'dark fiber' underground around the U.S.
So what? The problem is not bandwidth in total, it is making the connection to the home to the nearest big fiber point. DSL and cable are popular with ISPs because the cables already go to the customer. Running broadband over a phone line or cable costs next to nothing. The big cost was digging up the street to put in the wire. After that, the operating costs are minimal.
If you go to a big US colocation facility, you will find that a lot of bandwidth is really cheap, because the fiber is already there. If you want a fiber connection to your home, you will have to pay an arm and a leg to put the fiber in the ground.
Wireless ISPs have a big potential advantage since they can avoid the last mile problem.
The country where I quite want to be...
"I have great faith in fools: Self confidence my friends call it." ~Edgar Allan Poe
100 MBit Internet access (both ways) is offered to apartment owners in a number of Swedish towns. This costs about 76 USD a month.
As I said before, I'm too cheap to pay for that, so I'm paying for a throttled version (10 MBit/s) of the same service putting me back about 40 USD a month.
The service has been offered for quite a few years by a company called Bredbandsbolaget. (The site is in a strange foreign language though. Be warned.)
I have 100Mbit full duplex here and i have had it for over a year now. The Swedish ISP Bredbandsbolaget has over 300.000 customers that has access to this service, fiber is common here, its the only way to go in the long run. We have it all over fiber, TV, Telephone and Inernet access.
1. Article says 100 Mbps is 50 times faster than what they have now. Thus, they have 2 Mbps cable.
2. I have 6 Mbps cable. I know people within 20-30 miles of me with 8 or 10 Mbps cable. SBC delivers 3 Mbps dsl, and delivered 6 Mbps to a select few quick enough to jump on the deal.
Does anyone else find it hard to believe that they will leapfrog technologies like that? Or, that even once those companies start selling the equipment (the article, after all, quotes an equipment manufacturer, *not* an ISP) that deployment will be instant?
VDSL, VDSL2, and a whole bunch of alphabet soup DSL types exist *right* now, but we don't see them all over the U.S.
Similarly, many American cable companies have switched much of their equipment to DOCSIS 2.0 stuff, but haven't ramped up the speeds yet (not enough backhaul).
Avaliability of equipment != deployment. Rather than idolizing some vaporware Finish deployment, we should be looking at places like S. Korea and Japan, where they've managed 2 and 3 digit broadband speeds (in Mbps) *now*, not some-time-in-the-oh-so-near-future.
I can pull up 100s of articles from SBC's Project Lightspeed, or Verizon's FIOS. Some of them talk about deploying this stuff nationwide in 2003-2004.
But do I have 100 Mbps internet yet? No.
This is a non-article. A fluff piece by an equipment manufacturer. I want to hear more about actual deployments (and they do exist), not about some companies wishful thinking.
WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
Obviously the demand for broadband porn is a lot higher in Finland than it is in the US...
in cell phone technology/prolification and sauna's. Now internet access. /has visited Finland 3 times in my life... parents were both born there
Meh.
Well i have a 100Mbit connection, with full duplex mind you. It's great i can transfer stuff from my friends with about 10 Mb per second, a DVD wont take long hehe. I have had it for two years now and it works like a charm, so we in Sweden were first to roll out 100 Mbit fullscale in the network and did I say that my ISP Bredbands bolaget ROCKS!!!
(http://www.bredbandsbolaget.se/
first in producing top-quality free OS (via Linus but anyways)
Meh.
I work for Time Warner Cable and we already offer direct access fiber (100+Mbit/sec) and dedicated access coax (40Mbit/sec). Sure we have the technology but your gonna pay for it. Why would a company offer you 100Mbit for $49.99/mon when they can charge you $2500/mon for it? I don't see it happening anytime soon.
There's no way this going to be widespread in one year, it's at least 3 years out if anyone decides to really adopt it. It would require completly abandoning existing CMTS systems (Cable modem termination system) and adopting and entirely different technology. Docsis 3.0 is the future of cable, this could possibly get some use as a secondary system for businesses where a fiber build isn't possible but not as a replacement to current cable modems. Hell the support contracts alone will likely take several years to expire for current MSOs. IACNE (I am a cable network engineer).
http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,1558,1839128 ,00.asp?kc=ETRSS02129TX1K0000532
LOL link plz.
Here in Sweden one of the biggest ISP's (called Bredbandsbolaget or "The Broadband Company" in English) have been offering 100mbits Internet for the better part of a year now.
Admittedly it's only to their fiber/LAN-customers (which I am a part of) and with a traffic cap at 300GB/month as well as a rather hefty pricetag of approx US$113/month.
But it's available to the crazies who want it.
I enjoy large posteriors and I cannot prevaricate.
Go to news.google.com and look under the first image, it says 365gay! LOL. Yeah, I just HAD to point that out to someone hahah.
300 baud?
With all due respect, it is VERY fair to compare these kinds of rollouts with the U.S.
If this type of rollout can be done on a small scale like Finland, we ought to be able to do similar things here in the U.S.. The problem is our beauracracy and political structure. The FCC is actively hindering broadband with their approach. So are the State regulatory agencies.
Or, in short, we just aren't structured to work on a small scale. We could certainly do this if we were.
If broadband is indeed so important to the economy, as many are hyping now, then perhaps it is time to think of new approaches. And Finland is certainly serving as an excellent one.
But personally, I think this Gordian knot of Politics, Beauracracy and Corporate Bribery could all be undone VERY easily if consumers had the right to order dry copper (or fiber) and do with it as they please. We'd see a repeat of the spread of internet connectivity as took place with modems during the early 1990's, but at far higher speeds.
This gentleman speaks the truth! Mod up.
I'm curious as to the mass market appeal this technology possesses. I mean one need have around 5 or 6 Mbps to get an ultra low (>20) ping in game servers reasonably close to home. Also, one can get songs off of iTunes often in under a minute with just a 2 Mbps connection.
Then again, regardless of the blistering speeds this technology (if it ever arrives on Oceanic shores) it will be marketed like crazy. When broadband became seriously commercial in about 2000 the prices were high. Now however, you can get a 1/2 Mbp connection for a fractional amount above your standard 56k connection.
Thus, our current 1/2 - 6Mbps connections could be rendered seemingly obselete by marketers, thus allowing telecommunication companys to make some good cash off of high charges for 50, 80, 100, 200 Mbp connections, a repeat of 2000-2004. It should be profitable, as Joe Sixpack isn't going to be downloading stuff from bittorrent all day long at max speeds...only your niche market geeks would partake in that.
But yeah, as the parent said, this topic is wishful thinking by some anomymous manufacturer. Its not quite hit the "flying car" speculation yet, but its almost certain 100Mbps is quite a long way off anyhow.
Cablevision also announced this. Here on long island, ny
They rob your ISP of the valuable dollars they can get charging you to use THEIR servers (or charging extra for a "business" connection, i.e., one without crippled upload speeds).
Corporate America wants us to be consumers of information, never producers.
100Mbit is common in homes. Although i am limeted by my distance from the main, I still see 80 - 90 MBit up and down using Bit Torrent.
And wow, Googles home page opens so much quicker.
I do like it as I can watch Atom films and news broadcasts nice and quick.
Feed my eyes...
*disclaimer*
I'm not an RMS fan, nor do I claim to be an expert on his ways.
That said, I do believe people defend him because he has the belief that people are good inside, and that they want to help society, or at least they should. People should contribute to society for the greater good, not personal gain, that's basically his motto from what I gather.
Not only that, he's obviously a software genious to boot.
Um no :) 300 baud is roughly equivilent to 300 bits per second (300bps).
300kbps (lower case k) is up on my cable, 300kilo bits per second (not bytes per second, that would be 300k / 8) or approximately 38Kbps, uppercase K).
good question, i would like to know the theoretical limit of ADSL (pots cable) too
Another item to consider is also the fact that it is often the other end or the network that is the limit.
If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
Or do you think the already deeply entrenched U.S. politics are going to keep this technology from ever reaching us?
Nah. There is a lot of ultrabroadband activity in progress in the US already. Cablevision is beta testing 20 Mb/s service in Metro NY, and Verizon is deploying FIOS which is offering up to 30 Mbps, with future plans for 100 Mbps. Plus the FCC has stated that their #1 goal is to increase broadband use in the US.
Right now I have 10 Mbps over cable and find it to be pretty good in terms of raw speed. I am not sure that additional throughput would make a lot of difference to me, and be worth any additional expense.
Depending on where you live. I used to live in Moses Lake, WA, which has 100Mbps residential fiber. It's so fucking SWEET! I live in Ellensburg, WA now with a shitty 3Mbps cable connection. You can tell the difference. Oh well, I put my webserver in a friend's house, and the upload is virtually 100Mbps! As long as I don't saturate the hell out of that pipe, the ISP wont cap it. I only wish I had a better server (350mhz G3 with a 8gig U2 SCSI RAID...).
I don't know the rest of the world, but Hong Kong has 1G bps home broadband , now, by using IEEE 802.3z Gigabit Ethernet, over Fiber directly to home users.
:)
Don't wait for 100Mbps, 1000Mbps is there already.
My cable modem gets exactly 6 mbit/sec down, not because of technology limitations, but because the service provider caps it there. Roadrunner does this too. And they cap the upstream bandwidth significantly lower. If they're already artificially capping the speed below the technological limitations, what's the point of a system that's capable of being faster?
--
watch funny commercials
I don't see anyone in gov't saying you can't have it..
Oh, you expected everyone to subsidize a service that only a small minority of people are interested in.
But not a spelling "genious"?
Betcha Sweden is jealous and China is scared shitless.
Just to clarify to anyone reading this, you are incorrect on terminology (not exactly the right word?). The lowercase 'k' is the SI prefix for kilo. The capital 'K' is for degrees kelvin. I tend to note bits with a little 'b' and bytes with a big 'B', as in:
:)
:P
300kbps ~= 38kBps
Usually, I replace the 'p' with a '/' when dealing with bytes, too (i.e., "38kB/s"). By no means a standard notation, but it works for me. Though it isn't widely used, I've also recently taken to using the IEC's units. For example:
300kbps ~= 38KiBps
(300 kilobits per second ~= 38 kibibytes per second)
Why? Because in a technical context, it's certainly much clearer. If I say I am transferring 1 kilobyte of data, does that mean 1,000 bytes or 1,024 bytes? It's ambiguous, and in design issues, it can be a critical difference.
Also, the baud rate is the signal transition rate, not the bit rate. Maybe in modems the baud rate and bit rate were usually the same, but it isn't necessarily the case. It is possible (and common) to transmit more than one bit per transition.
Anyway... that's all.
Every upgrade around the world for broadband helps EVERYBODY who uses Bittorrent (due to increased upload speeds)...so....I root (no pun) for ANY upgrade for everybody :)
Linus moves home...
I upgraded to 3Mbps recently (and I don't seem to be getting it but that's another story), and the rep told me they're running fiber everywhere to offer 20Mbps within the next twelve months. We'll see.
I doubt we'll see 100Mbps here until there's fiber to the curb. At $250,000 or whatever it is per quarter mile, that could take a while.
Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
We have had 100 MBPS Broadband available almnost all over Tokyo and Osaka in Japan for over an year now.
I have never been at the parties, but I still know that they are not held in a stadium, but an Icehockey-arena in Helsinki. I wonder where that football stadium thing came from...
-Is the meaning of life vanity, or is vanity the meaning of life?
802.11g connection + Empty Pringles Can
Yes, it's not the K that makes a difference. :P
Whenever I see kb in a program, I always wonder if it's kilobits or if the author thinks it means kilobytes. Same with KB for that matter.
No existe.
People - Japan has been offering 100mb fiber connections to the house as of 3 yrs ago. Its now only $50 USD per month. That 100mb up and down with 5 Global IP's ADSL here is at 50mb VDSL is at 50mb Cable is at 40mb
We just got within range of broadband internet within the last year. Even if they do bring some places up to those high speeds, I think they'll need to get the current areas more saturated to the point that enough people would be willing to pay for those speeds before the companies could afford to bring those technologies to the common household.
Luke
----
Teach your Aunt Susie about technology: ChristianNerds.com
Sure you will find a lot of bandwidth that is really cheap. However, those pipes may be between Gunnison, CO and Boulder. Meanwhile the pipes moving from big metro area to big metro area are filling up/full while pushing up prices.
In regards to an episode of Charlie Rose discussing Japan's recent expansions. Link to my eventual comedtary:1 02743.html#cutid1/
http://www.livejournal.com/users/devilindupriest/
Bredbandsbolaget in Sweden has offered 100 MBit connections for some time. The price works out to about $75 USD per month.
Moto has been partnering with U.S. Cable companies for years
We have 1000Mbps plans (Chinese) here already What's the big deal about Finland getting 100Mbps?
These days, I doubt that Finland wants to bother with us. It appears that we have given up the lead to China over the last couple of years.
Thanks for the clarification, I knew there was a capital in there somewhere for bytes instead of bits. I knew someone would smack me around if I was wrong on the details.
I'm sure its been across slashdot before, but Utopia (http://www.utopianet.org/) is currently under construction in Utah cities, and you can already have service installed in some Orem neighborhoods. According to the FAQ (http://www.utopianet.org/faq/faq3.e.htm) speeds will be asyncronous 100mbps to residential, and 1gbps to businesses. I happen to live in one of the cities which is currently having fiber pulled, and have attended several of the monthly public meetings and it is definitely not "vaporware". I think that this type of metropolitan connectivity will be the norm throughout the civilized world, when other cities see what it will do for them, as far as bringing business and strengthening the local economy.
Why bother with 100 Mbit when 1 Gbit service is already being offered.
stupid fucking slashdot, who gives a fuck. and especially, who cares what you think about it.
God, if you're gonna be a nit-picking schmuck, do it right. It's the B that differs in capitalization. The K is always uppercase.
Karma: Incomprehensible (Mostly affected by posting at +5, reading at -1, and metamoderating everything unfair.)
The last time I looked at the pipes going between Finland and Europe, there was only a 3Gb/s line in place. Is the Finland-only bandwidth?
if the us ever does have infrastructure able to sustain 100 megabit speeds blogs will be a thing of the past. everything will go to full screen streamin video blogs and thats what internet 2 will be...fiber speed
My cable provider, Cablevision, has already started rolling this out. Here's the press release. http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/050627/nym155.html?.v= 11
A conservative is a man with two perfectly good legs who, however, has never learned to walk forward. -- FDR
I know that. I was making a joke.
For a fucking cable company, and when I used to be able to receive/download (send/upload always sucked) huge files.
But this is on par with dial up.
I am NOT spending $60USD/month for this. If it wasn't too late to get in touch with a human being, I'd let them know that dollar for dollar, they aren't worth it and they CAN be replaced.
MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
Not to further nit-pick, but 300 baud is 300 "symbols" per second. Using constellation diagrams 1 symbol can correspond to a variable number of bits.
In a dialup modem, 8000 baud is used at 7 databits per symbol to arrive at 56Kbps.
Mod the parent up! The original story is a puff piece, designed, I suspect, to help the company sell stock.
The cable industry has standards for cable modems, called DOCSIS. DOCSIS 1.x speeds are basically up to 30 Mbps downstream and 10 Mbps (more often less) upstream. That's common now. DOCSIS 2.0 speed goes to 40/30. That's in production now, being phased in. DOCSIS 3.0 is basically outlined but not yet final -- no products until 2006 or later -- and it combines TV channels (analog bandwidth) in order to give more (digital) bandwidth. It will go over 100 Mbps.
So it's coming to the US, but not in the form described in the original post. Standards are critical. DOCSIS compatibility means you can buy $75 cable modems and your cable company can buy its head end CMTSs from multiple vendors, interchangeably. Think "Ethernet". Proprietary technology means vendor lock-in, high prices, and obsolescence. So it's not going anywhere.
BTW, upstream speeds in the US are limited by the "low split" used in cable, where upstream is below 42 MHz in order to have Channel 2 (54-60 MHz) on the downstream. FCC rules require cable systems to carry TV broadcasters on their own channel, if they request. European TV doesn't have much VHF left at all, and European cable splits higher, so the upstream is good to about 68 MHz. That helps. But there is still enough upstream bandwidth in American cable systems, with DOCSIS 2 or later, to more than satisfy consumer demand. DOCSIS 1 gets by by having fewer subscribers share each upstream than each downstream (typically 4 upstream ports per downstream port on the CMTS).
I'm just waiting for them to take my static IP too, because surely as a Consumer I don't need it.
(Who me, bitter?)
Wrong. The SI prefix for 10^3 is kilo, with a symbol of lowercase 'k'. It's been that way for quite a long time. The letters aren't capitalized until 10^6, mega, M.
How many bits does it take to draw Sagitarius?
Well shoot. Didn't mean it to sound like I was being snobbish. :P Your point is certainly correct, though. :)
99% of Internet users here (.pk) getting 56Kbps and thinking about 100Mbps is like a dream for us hehe. However who cares google.com.pk open fast here too.
http://askaralikhan.blogspot.com/
Well, fuck a duck. That is great and all but I do not have a cable although I live in Helsinki and not even in suburbs but almost in the centre.
What I do have is a wonderful selection of channels via satrellite from Germany(5 channels or something that way), French(Tv 5 atleast) , Italy(RAI Uno, for christ sake! Okey, okey, they do have plenty of those game shows where they do have very good looking, big breasted bimbos) England(BBC of course) and Sweden(Tv 4, Hej på dig!). Not even one channel from Russia or Spain which I might be interested to watch.
It would also be nice to have some USA channels like Fox News, friend of mine used to have it in one of his previous flats, I just say it was entertaining... flying eagles morphing into a fighter... animated US flags flying on the background... god I miss it!
Perkele!
dark fiber doesn't have the right to vote.
The Raven
I have a cable modem and Im a FINN. do I need to say more :)
Never heard this before, but I quess its now gonna be in news here in Finland too. have to go checking. just woke up.
I just assume it means whatever's least convenient for the task at hand. So if it's hard disk space, 1 kb = 1000 bytes, but if it's file size, it's probably in 1 kb = 1024 bytes just to mess with your hard disk measurement. And if you're transferring a 1 mb file over 1 mbps network, expect it take 8.38 seconds (not 8) * the time for the error correcting bits and the frame bits and all the other network hoohah.
come to think of it, the only one that makes sense is the modem speed. You have a quantizeable thing: bits, and you have a rate: bits per second, to which you apply an SI prefix. s/bps/hz/ and you get the bandwidth. multiply by 10 and you get the minimum carrier frequency to transmit that signal.
if you're talking about bytes, which are already a power of 2: 2^3 bits, why would you use SI prefixes instead of power-2 prefixes? hence the rule of least convenience.
Ok, every seems to be narowly focused on how to reach website A or Torrent site Z. Folks, the bulk of the upgrades for faster speeds to the home isn't meant to give you faster downloads for websites or the like. Sure, it is a nice thing to have, and a great marketing weapon, but the real necessity for it is pushing more content services to the customer.
IPTV is well on its way, and from an insider's point of view, I can guarantee you that the calculations are done for how much bandwidth it takes to deliver raw Internet, VOIP and various flavors of video (normal channels, HD channels and VOD).
Big companies don't spend hundreds of millions of dollars just so the end user can download items from off-net providers. That increases transit costs for your ISP, which negatively effects their cost of goods sold. But, if they augment your pipe to provide paid services like VOIP and video, those feeds typically come from their own VOIP gateways and video headends, and they are generating revenue to support those initiatives.
But the grandparent was *obviously* talking about the difference between the abbreviations for Kelvin bytes and Kelvin bits. I don't know what you're talking about with all this "SI prefix for 10^3" business.
The thing that'll move tax-payer funded broadband for consumers from a "want" to a "need" is telecommuting.
Businesses already can pay for the development of broadband.
Yes then im finally able to uppgrade from my crappy 10mbit/2mbit adsl2 line. I love this country :)
Presentation about this thing at http://www.goodmood.net/teleste_vg_preview/pres2/T eleste_2.html
Here in Moscow, Russia I 100Mbps home connections are quite widespread. Well, they are actually provided by fiber + cat5 going to individual apartments. It's not overly reliable, so failures do occur sometimes, and sometimes network is somewhat overloaded, but usually it's quite tolerable. Actually you can get download speed of 3-5 Mbytes/s from many Russian sites (and up to about 1 Mbyte/s from American sites) at night. I'm paying about $30 (converted from RUR) for 6 Gb/month prepayed limit, which is quite enough for me.
Sweden has had 100 MBit (full duplex) home Internet connections for a long time, at least since four years. The news here is that some homes are getting full gigabit connections, also full duplex, servers allowed.
What's the next story up, something about DSL and cable penetration (which are also 20th century technology)?
Ah, so the news was 100Mbit modulation over DSL, not that there were 100Mbit connections to homes. I stand corrected...
Has anyone tried Verizon Fios? It boasts 15megabits down/ 2 megabits up over fiber optic for $50 a month. If it were in my area I'd definitely get it to host my site, http://www.themodwiki.org/ as it is running on a slower connection currently.
The story about the little boy who put his finger int he dyke takes on a whole new meaning =0
The upload speed of that service is 1000 Mb/s too.
Optimum Online is already testing a 100mbps system to see if they're going to roll it out. Right now they're only running it around 50mbps. I believe the pilot project is in Smithtown, out on Long Island.
Introducing the new Occam Fusion! Now with sqrt(-1) fewer blades!
I've been using the same 10 Mb hub for my home network since the mid-90s. Would this mean I have to upgrade?
I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
People commonly under-estimate the size of Finland. It's actually larger than most people think: about 1200 km from north to south (750 miles), which is roughly equal to the distance from San Francisco to Seattle. The area is 338000 sq km (130000 sq miles), which is larger than all other US states but Alaska, Texas, California and Montana. Put another way, Finland is twice the size of Florida.
Many people seem to think that a country that is twice the size as another would naturally take twice as long to deploy a new technology. In reality, however, a country twice as big would also have twice as many people to do the job. After all, it's not like the guy in New York has to fly to Los Angeles to deploy broadband Internet once he is finished in New York. The problem is solved in parallel - not serially.
You might think that population density changs this. But that too would seem to be wrong at closer inspection. With only half the population density, you would also have only half as many homes to deploy broadband to. The amount of homes per installation guy is what really matters.
Of course in reality, the people who live in the middle of nowhere will be at a disadvantage since it is less likely that a company puts in a lot of time, effort and money to deploy cables in the middle of US Alaska or Finnish Lapland.
So finally, let's examine the population densities:
Finland's population density is 13 people per square km. The USA's is 27 (and for comparison, France has 106 and the UK has 383).
....think of how much pr0n you could download with that beast!
Coding Monkey.org - Spanging the heavy spade of truth into t
Aren't all connections shared, at some point? Isn't that more or less the definition of the Internet?
Those DSL lines all go somewhere, you know, and I'm betting each one doesn't get its own T3...
"A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
"A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
That doesn't mean that symmetric technologies aren't available (though the equipment is usually more expensive), or that the CLECs aren't picking what equipment to use based on what market they think they're selling to, because obviously they are, or that they aren't using them rudely or stupidly, but they really are asymmetric technologies. For a given amount of equipment cost, they could sell you a symmetric circuit (at least for DSL), but the downstream bandwidth would be slower than if they'd spent the same money on an asymmetric circuit, and residential consumers care a lot more about downstream speeds.
Monthly bandwidth caps aren't a technical issue - they're pure greed, and they seem to have originated with Telstra in Australia, who were always the Developed World's Most Clueless-for-data-users Telco, and because most other cable modem companes are also clueless and evil, their idea spread like wildfire around the cable industry. One of the Aussie telcos used to have a separate cap or pricing for Aussie vs. foreign content, because the overseas cables were still somewhat overpriced, while domestic bandwidth was much less of a problem (and most of it was local to two cities anyway.)
Anti-Server policies are a more complex case. Sure, some of it's because cable modem companies are suicidally clueless and think that they're better off selling to Couch Potatoes who treat the Internet like TV with different shows rather than to Real Users who create interesting content that other people want to download. But a lot of it dates to the early history of the industry. They didn't have traffic-shaping mechanisms, so a user really *could* swamp their block's total upstream, and the trial network in Fremont CA had equipment problems for a while, so a user could *really* *easily* swamp their block's total upstream, and PacBell (the local telco, who sold DSL service) did a bunch of dishonest but devastatingly effective "Web Hog" commercials about how if you were foolish enough to buy cable modem service instead of DSL, you'd couldn't depend on it and you'd have to do all your real use way after midnight when the network was quiet enough to work. Also, if you remember the popular-press issues of the time, the obvious thing that could generate enough upstream traffic to trash the network was a web server that had suddenly become popular, especially a (*gasp*) pr0n server, and they were trying to present a family-friendly sales pitch about how getting your kids on the network was really important if you wanted to keep up with the Joneses (and the Chens and the Kumars...), so if their network got bogged down by a pr0n server, it would be really bad PR for them. And since they couldn't manage bandwidth adequately anyway, they chose to ban servers instead, and to prevent users from treating that as damage and routing around it, they chose to ban anything that looked even vaguely server-like (including mail servers that *receive* mail, but have "server" in the name and are obviously for business.)
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
Hey, M00se pings can be pretty painful, y'know....
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
If the ISPs aren't stuipd, this will also make it easier for people to provide content, including Finnish-language and international-market material. (Of course, it also doesn't hurt performance if they run a major file-sharing server in Finland for Finnish users to access :-)
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
It will allow thousands of Finnish homes to download many Linux distribution ISO images every day! Because that is what p2p networks are used for, right? Seriously folks, who REALLY needs over 256kbps line at home for anything useful? No, porn and warez do not count.
I dont really see the point. I was using a 6 MBPS, now moved up to 30 MBPS wireless connection here -> courtesy My ISP , but i am not sure i have gained any major speed advantage because of this. And now 100 MBPS, without the back bone of the servers increasing accordingly.
Go figure. Here I am in the states stuck on a 31.2 Kbps connection. Nothing else is available in my area, or within 14 miles of me.
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It literally just means "broad band company" (I think, my Swedish is pretty rusty).
But because they've always had such high connection speeds for their customers, and great service, people on pirate hubs and in piracy circles would indicate they used Bredbandsbolaget by having [BBB] in front of their name.
[BBB] eventually got picked up by non-Swedes as meaning "great connection" and you could see a lot of non-swedes with [BBB] in front of their names. Even today on DC hubs [BBB] denotes high speed.
ComHem (the biggest cable provider in Sweden) said they were going to start with tests this fall with this technology. Their equipment comes from Cisco and as far as I know they would use Docsis 3.0 but I know that its not ready yet so I havent got a clue how they will do it.
Uhmmm Finland is not Holland
How fast do you REALLY need a relay? Jesus people, put it in perspective! I really don't need 100mgps access to my residential home. WTF is wrong with 2.5mgps? Can your 1.4 mhz(avg) computer even handle this? What's the issue? Americans are slow? Europe has something we don't? Who gives a FythgFck~!
my drive is very hard right now!
What????? No, 2Mbit internet connection is not the fastest we have here in Finland, it's an AWERAGE speed of internet connections people have bought here. It's not the fastest we have. Where do you think we live? In Russia? Eg. my ISP is offering 12Mbit ADSL+ for 55EUR/month and 24Mbit ADSL2+ for 63EUR/month. Lucky guys and gals in campus areas already have 100Mbit connection ar home. If you have eg. Welho cable-connection, then you can have up to 6Mbit connection. I don't know if it's possible to get faster speed using cable here, but cablemodem is not the only choise. Most of the people have DSL anyway.
Why roll 8mb when other European countries are already pushing to 20mb?
In the UK, "broadband" starts at 128kb... while in France, providers move their customers from 4mb to 8mb or 16mb, sometimes for free.
Well, that's why you have Erlang's queue theories. The idea is that not all users should have a sustained need to 100 Mbps (yes i know Bittorrent is a thorn in the model). You can put a whole bunch of 100 Mbps users behind a 1 Gbps uplink, provided they behave, and everybody will feel they have a tremendous network experience.
~rL
Whenever I see kb in a program As far as I'm concerned, kb in a program let me think about a keyboard. And, btw, sometimes my kb is blo
Bredbandsbolagets real name is B2 Bredband, and they are imho not so great at all.
//MMN-o
I am a Bostream customer (still have an active contract with them) with a 100 Mb/s full duplex connection split to the 55 houses in my neighborhood (as everyone else who claims to have 100 Mb/s, but I'll get back to that). This costs each house 111 SEK/month, which is not much more than 11 Euro (not paid per-house actually, but that's how we've split the costs). This is with a supposed limit with a maximum 5GB/day outside of their peering net which currently stretches throughout the Nordic countries. Though they've said themselves that they don't supervise the limits at all, which seems to be true considering how well I'm using my connection.
B2 Bredband bought the company Bostream last fall, though. And our contract should be running out soon, meaning we'd have to sign up with B2 Bredband, who are way more expensive. You just heard up to six times the price in this post's grandparent.
Luckily there's a new company on the market called http://www.riksnet.se/ that offer great deals and we'll be signing up with them when the contract with Bostream runs out.
This company broke out of Bostream when B2 Bredband bought them, and keep the same superb policy, as well as bandwidth offers. 1 Gb/s uplink for the neighborhood, with 100 Mb/s links to each individual house. And as one of their employees say, "if anyone abuses his/her connection by downloading immense amounts of obscure manga, it can't be helped". Meaning they don't discourage people to actually use their high-speed connections. Something I haven't seen in B2 Bredband at all.
Also should I mention B2 Bredband has closed down port 25 for all users with their contracts and that they discourage all kinds of servers? And that they stopped offering VDSL immediatly after the deal was closed with Bostream?
Not a great company at all, if you ask me. If I can't use my high-speed connection to my own personal bandwidth-filling fetishes, what's the point of exceeding the speeds of ADSL?
Not only is 100 Mbit the new standard here in Japan, it's cheaper than slow ADSL in the States. I just signed on--free installation, the first five months free, and just under US$35 a month thereafter. For another $8 I can put my regular phone number on the LAN, meaning I can get rid of my old landline and its $27/mo bill. I'd thought I might move back to the States this fall and was looking into service, but in broadband the US hasn't even caught up to where Japan was when I moved here five years ago. I'm glad I'm staying! Check out https://asahi-net.jp/en/service/ftth.html for details.
I'm getting over 3.3 mbps here, no problems. Must be your setup.
I hate hearing about new broadband services offered to people, and the possibility of it coming to the US.. Simply because, there still is NO simple and cost efficient broadband service provided in the area I live in.. we need concentrate on providing EVERYONE with broadband, before we can talk about upgrading.. help a nigga out!!!
*plays the Apogee theme song music*
It's pretty obvious that enabling high speeds for customers is pretty cheap once the initial cost (drawing the fiber to the house holds) has been covered and the traffic is mostly within the local ISP's network.
In my country some ISPs cover the initial fiber investment either by community tax "dollars" or by tying up consumers to the specific ISP for a few year (e.g. 3 years) after the fiber is in place. These 100 MBit pipes we have are for within the ISP network. Outside the network the speed cap is at 10 MBit and so the ISP has put instruments in place to be able to make money.
Having 100 MBit constrained mostly to the ISP network might not be such a bad thing, especially since the ISP usually has direct fiber connections to major traffic hubs (such as central caches and large file dumps for the most popular sites). Also big files (such as apt or rpm or ISO repositories) are often plentiful witin the network and even the P2P community has a lot of peers within the network as well. So all in all, most stuff is available at a high speed.
If one goes outside the local ISP network and the country, the speeds almost never reaches even 10MBit. Right now, the average speed to the US is something around 3-4 MBit (and doubling every 1.5 years it seems).
As more and more get fiber, the ISPs will hopefully come up with more reasonable peering fees, allowing more traffic to flow between the networks at low cost.
Point is that today high speed internet access can be profitable for ISPs while at the same time providing good service per $ to consumers. Unfortunately it seems that only startups will be able to get the fiber initiative rolling in countries having a history of major telco or cable domination (as was our situation and the US at present).
In a society that believes in nothing, fear becomes the only agenda ~ Bill Durodié
Upload speed it zero. They devote everything to the download, that's why it's so fast.
I have 15/5Mbps Verizon FIOS at home... that's a direct fiber line to the house, not the CO or the curb, but to the HOUSE. And the line will soon carry digital tv signals with capacity for thousands of channels and come with an MS-powered DVR box capable of recording six streams simultaneously. And both theoratically (and in practical) the net bandwidth can be increased upto 10Gbps.
Beat that Finland!
Mozilla stole tabs from NetCaptor. So what? Right?
This has been around in Sweden for like 3-4 years now.
-- http://z80.org - all opinions, all the time --
I'm telling you, that you wouldn't want to live here in Finland. I have now this 2mb/512 DSL and i pay 49/month for it. I also had a cable connection as fast as this, but it totally sucked... Terrible pings and a lot of downtime.
And in a article I read a little time ago they wrote that in 2006 98% of Finns had a broadband connection and the average speed would be 8mb....Well not with these prizes and with that my friend lives really near to me (about two miles) and they can only have 128 ISDN! And I live near one of the biggest cities in Finland. So I'm very surprised if they get even to that average 8mb.
Wow... I thought it would be obvious!