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Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
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Are you absolutely sure that all of the current copper lines to your village run overhead? Are there less than 50 homes in the village? |
Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
Definitely sure. There's no BT/Openreach manhole covers on the only road up the valley and every time an accident took out a pole everyone lost their phone service. It is a small village (probably 50-60 homes) but stretched up a narrow valley. There are no cabinets as far as I can see either in my folks' village or in the next one down where the exchange is located.
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Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
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They won't do anything with existing copper lines apart from intercept them to deliver to the mini-DSLAM - fibre to the cabinet means just that. Essentially rather than a street cabinet you get the equivalent on a pole. |
Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
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It's never been done yet as far as I know. Keep us up to date with developments in your village it sounds interesting. |
Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
It's being trialled in a few places.
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Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
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Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
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Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
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In the interim they'll tell us FTTC is good enough, and for the majority of the country we'll have no choice but to accept it as we've no alternative. |
Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
If you want FTTP the solution seems to be to either be in a flat or live out in the sticks and get it on the taxpayer's tab.
I think we must be the only country in the developed world where the majority of the incument telco's FTTP is in rural/semi-rural areas. https://www.cableforum.co.uk/images/...2014/11/25.png |
Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
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Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
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https://www.cableforum.co.uk/images/...2014/11/24.png Seems fairly extensive to me. Built up areas obviously present different challenges but that's surely about the laws of physics, not which towns and cities have been upgraded? If they're running LTE at one of the higher frequency bands it'll be impeded more by walls, etc, for sure. Doesn't change that the cell density is still probably higher in the towns and cities or that they have LTE there. |
Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
That map illustrates the point completely - masses of rural coverage yet fairly little around some of the biggest built up areas.
In case you forgot that's the way it was intended to be, the government forced them to provide extensive rural coverage before they could begin covering cities. The same sort of regulatory incentive we have here with public funding for rural build-out and not urban hotspots which the providers are already clamoring to cover among themselves. |
Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
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How about https://www.telefonica.de/fixed/news...re-on-air.html ? Those well-known rural areas Munich, Berlin, Frankfurt, Cologne, Nuremberg, Leipzig, and Düsseldorf being the first covered by Telefonica. I can't say I know the regulatory background to Deutsche Telekom's LTE deployment beyond that because they didn't **** all their money away at the start of the century they didn't end up having to sell their mobile arm to not go bankrupt and have spent a fair chunk of change on LTE. Their VDSL rollout covered less of Germany than BT covered and I believe LTE was in part a replacement for fixed services. A completely different scenario to the UK and FTTP where we just have a telco that would rather spend money on football rights than infrastructure and is probably best having the retail unit spun off from the rest so that they can set about trying to be Sky without handing Wayne Rooney et al the network repair and upgrade cash. |
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https://www.cableforum.co.uk/images/...2014/11/22.png That aside comparing the rural coverage above with the rural LTE coverage of D-T's (joint) operations in the UK: https://www.cableforum.co.uk/images/...2014/11/23.png Note the almost complete lack of any coverage outside of the major urban areas. Compare with the map of Germany's coverage above - and then consider that Telekom Germany and EE UK have almost the same coverage, population wise: both in the mid 70%'s. Quote:
https://www.telegeography.com/produc...lte-on-1-july/ Your article is dated mid-2013, two full years later... Quote:
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Re: Could FTTC prove to be a mistake ?
Looking at the effort you went to there I sadly do not have as much time on my hands to prove people wrong on the Internet, so thank you for the correction.
The rural LTE there seems to be a completely different story from the LTE deployed here. It was a condition of the spectrum licenses to use it initially for rural areas where there was no fixed line broadband service. If you could find me the regulatory equivalent that required BT to downgrade their FTTP plans from ~25% of their initial 2/3rds purely commercial deployment to virtually zero outside of trial areas that'd be great. |
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