Town to implement their own Fiber to Home (BellSouth not happy)

Darth Garth

Executive Member
Joined
Oct 29, 2004
Messages
6,207
It has been a tiring and mind numbing battle. Lafayette’s citizens have been fighting the pressure from incumbent service providers like BellSouth, as they attempt to build their own fiber network, and thus take their broadband destiny in their own hand. Today, for the first time, they can relax and celebrate. By a 62% to 38% vote, the citizens of Lafayette approved the Lafayette Fiber to the Home Project. On the occasion, Lafayette mayor, Joey Durel said, “Our citizens have sent a powerful message — Americans want their local governments to do what’s necessary to be 21st Century cities second to none.” Utilities Director Terry Huval: “Today, we did what our predecessors did 109 years ago — we took our future into our own hands.” Also “BellSouth and Cox wanted the people of Lafayette to speak, and now the people of Lafayette have spoken loud and clear. Now it’s time for BellSouth and Cox to accept what the people have said and stop throwing hurdles in our way.” Still, this is the first step. They now need to build the network, and prove the nay-sayers wrong. In many ways, the real work has just begun. I wish them luck…. may they pave the way and become the blueprint for other small communities who want control over their broadband destiny!
 

guest2013-1

guest
Joined
Aug 22, 2003
Messages
19,800
riiiight, we can do it, but we don't have any bandwidth unless we lay our own sat3 cable....
 

BTTB

Executive Member
Joined
Feb 6, 2004
Messages
8,195
Viva la Liberty.

The town, Lafayette has some interesting history.

"The Southern portion became Lafayette County, named after Marquis de Lafayette, hero of the Revolutionary War."

His motto,
Humanity has won its battle.
Liberty now has a country.


Thats what we need. Liberty from this loop of monopolistic thinking and greed.
Let the people decide whats good for themselves. Besides why shouldn't communication be a right, included with all other human rights. :confused:
 

JayT

Senior Member
Joined
Aug 26, 2004
Messages
505
Some more info found on http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cach...the+speed+and+capacity+of+a+SAT3+cable?&hl=en

SUPPLEMENTARY REPORT TO THE ISSC 1 DECEMBER 2003

Number of Fibres
vii) The existing deployed optical fibre cables in South Africa range from 12 to 144 fibres per cable. All new installed optical fibre cable has a minimum of 12 fibres.

Bandwidth
viii) Telkom’s network in South Africa is based on synchronous digital hierarchy(SDH) high capacity systems employing technologies, such as, add/drop multiplexers, cross-connects and terminal multiplexers and WDM (8-channel lambda). The bandwidth capacity of the optical fibre cables differs from cable to cable depending on the demand. The systems are capable of transmitting data at a speed of 2.5 Gbit/s on the fibre pairs or single lambda.

ix) The international SAT3/WASC undersea optical fibre cable is 14,350 km long with4 fibres and equipped with Wave Division Multiplex (WDM) systems. The SAFEundersea optical fibre cable is a 13,500 km long with 4 fibres and equipped withWDM systems. The cables are capable of transmitting data at a speed of 2.5 Gbit/s on each of the 8 wavelengths (lambdas) per fibre. The cables will soon carry 10Gb/s on each of 20 wavelengths on each fibre.
 

The_Unbeliever

Honorary Master
Joined
Apr 19, 2005
Messages
103,196
10Gb/s is, like, kwaai sterk... (wish I had one @ home... :D )

just blows your mind... 10Gigs of data per second.

Plenty of capacity there then.

Coupled with a cache server should provide us South Africans with very good bandwidth.

So, why the stuuuuuuuuuupid 3Gb caps? And why the lame excuses to keep the caps?

13,500 km long with 4 fibres

Mmmmm... might be a wee bit expensive should we want to lay a 12 core cable... ;)

Ai tog...
 

JayT

Senior Member
Joined
Aug 26, 2004
Messages
505
Am I reading this right?

- All new installed optical fibre cable has a minimum of 12 fibres.
- The cables will soon carry 10Gb/s on each of 20 wavelengths on each fibre.

So basically its 10Gb/sec x 20 x 12?
= 2400Gb/sec
 

Silent_Bob

Expert Member
Joined
May 5, 2005
Messages
1,310
telkom, they just like to get the most money for no work or cost to them......... AGG
 
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