Its all about the speed that is delivered to end user !
http://www.ee.co.za/article/contention-around-contention.html
http://www.ee.co.za/article/contention-around-contention.html
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Its all about the speed that is delivered to end user !
http://www.ee.co.za/article/contention-around-contention.html
Then go for active.The project is already "flying"
The cost to the suburb is the same irrespective of the architecture used, i.e. no charge. Furthermore the backhaul stays pretty much the same, so can (I believe) be ignored for the purposes of this discussion.
Then go for active.If someone is willing to pull individual fibre to each house at the same cost then let them
Thanks for the URL. The campus used in the comparison closely equates a suburb.
All of the research that I have read recommends GPON solely on the basis of cost: one can install as many as seven GPON connections for every one active Ethernet connection.
Future bandwidth shortfalls can possibly be met by switching to XG-PON and/or NXG-PON, but at what price and whose account ?
Whereas active Ethernet allows - today - a one GB connection. And since we aren't paying for it ...![]()
You are right - it's mainly about the cost.
To an extent, it's also about environmental impact (for those who include that as a criterion) - which is primarily around initial deployment, but also related to ongoing power requirement.
If you are choosing between two reputable operators and they will charge the same installation and line fees regardless, then you have a point that active is a good consideration. I certainly don't have a 'missionary zeal' or any financial interest for promoting GPON. My observation is purely from what I've seen - that the debate appears to be over-hyped.
In terms of ongoing costs and who pays: that would be as per your agreement. It's most common for telcos to absorb their own upgrade capex as well as opex (labour and electricity) but it is a pertinent question re the CPE upgrade (eg if an additional filter is required).
I imagine that all technologies will involved upgrades of one or more active elements - if not in 2 years than certainly within 5-7 years or so.
We have yet to find out in SA, but perhaps a key issue in the long run is cost structure, or whether a fibre operator can run at low enough longer term costs (most likely opex) to absorb the market pressure for ongoing price/data reductions. That's one reason that equipment is sometimes replaced even though it is working
with 80 GE of capacity, on a single port.
So as I understand it a user on a GPON network can still get for instance 1Gbps if no other users are using the network at that time?
Thanks to all who contributed to the learning experience!
Perhaps someone can explain why Vumatel's "expensive" AE service is cheaper - by a lot - than Telkom's GPON?
I'm looking at WebAfrica's FTTH pages (https://www.webafrica.co.za/fibre/ - specifically the What Does Fibre Cost tab), where they quote Vumatel's 4Mbps capped offering at R349pm with no installation fee, and Telkom's 4 Mbps at R639pm plus a R1749 installation charge.
I understand that Telkom might be worried about attrition of their ADSL installed base, but with this price structure, they're going to lose their ADSL customers to Vumatel every time instead. Or did I miss something?
I would like to know also.
It seems as though all the big players(MTN, Vodacom, Telkom) charge much more than the smaller businesses, even though they already have all the infrastructure.
This is the thing...they actually don't have all the fibre infrastructure. They have to build the fibre last mile just the same as Vuma, it's a level playing field.
With Dark fibre africa in the mix, that sorts Vuma's backhaul also and once you in Teraco all the ISP's are there.
It simply seems Vuma has a more efficient way of putting fibre into the ground for a specific area hence lower prices, I know they use a pull back fibre solution from Prysmian called Retractanet, it's a pretty efficient way to install on demand ftth.