Geoff.D
Honorary Master
Only if you selectively read One post out of all the posts I made. And I did NOT say that, Go and read my post properly again and then see. I also did not say AON can't be used for residential.
Of course, there are others that have posted. Some of the posts are pretty much correct in their general descriptions of PON and AON. Others are just plain wrong and have already been pointed out in the rest of the thread.
Again your example depends on how the service provider designs his network and deploys the technology.
But your example of 200/200 on a typical GPON network would be a very interesting one. Would you elaborate under what conditions that one would work and how many additional customers would get service simultaneously on the passive single core fibre?
And just to be clear, were are not talking of upstream contention or congestion or network congestion at all here. That would affect both AON and PON almost equally, but without a very specific example, even that cannot be claimed as "equal".
The key words in your response are: "a correctly planned PON" and, of course, I was alluding to the issues of customers "hosting content on their site" because that makes a thin upstream pipe solution not suitable. So again just for clarity, assuming you read my other posts here is the post that seems to have ruffled feathers copied.
[QUOTEExcept that IF those businesses hog all the capacity, no one else will get any decent services! Ultimately GPON is NOT a suitable technology for business use! Businesses should be on AON.][/QUOTE]
Of course, there are others that have posted. Some of the posts are pretty much correct in their general descriptions of PON and AON. Others are just plain wrong and have already been pointed out in the rest of the thread.
Again your example depends on how the service provider designs his network and deploys the technology.
But your example of 200/200 on a typical GPON network would be a very interesting one. Would you elaborate under what conditions that one would work and how many additional customers would get service simultaneously on the passive single core fibre?
And just to be clear, were are not talking of upstream contention or congestion or network congestion at all here. That would affect both AON and PON almost equally, but without a very specific example, even that cannot be claimed as "equal".
The key words in your response are: "a correctly planned PON" and, of course, I was alluding to the issues of customers "hosting content on their site" because that makes a thin upstream pipe solution not suitable. So again just for clarity, assuming you read my other posts here is the post that seems to have ruffled feathers copied.
[QUOTEExcept that IF those businesses hog all the capacity, no one else will get any decent services! Ultimately GPON is NOT a suitable technology for business use! Businesses should be on AON.][/QUOTE]
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