FTTP Commentary Archive
:: FTTP Commentary Archive ::
FiOS Installs Put Safety First
By Eric Rabe
As many in our industry no doubt know, Verizon-New York is working with the New York Public Service Commission staff to clarify grounding requirements associated with multiple types of FiOS installations....
Is Fiber's Rose Still Blooming?
By Carol Wilson
The Big Headlines of 2008 weren't particularly kind to the fiber-to-the-home crowd....
Who woulda thunk it?
By Carol Wilson
Back in the dark ages, as the late '80s are now known, before voice over IP, the cable companies were already pondering how to get into the telephone business and vice-versa....
Broadband Agnostics
By John M. Celentano
Broadband is all the rage these days. Seems like you can’t discuss any kind of electronics gear -– phones, computers, or flat screen TVs -- without mentioning high-speed broadband connections...
Fiber broadband – it’s duh marketing!
By John M. Celentano
Fiber broadband, and its alphabet soup of flavors -- fiber-to-the-premise (FTTP), -to-the-node (FTTN), to-the-whatever (FTTx) --always catches my attention. It’s interesting, it’s the next big thing, and it’s terribly misunderstood....
Capex with a capital C
By John M. Celentano, Skyline Marketing Group
Capital expenditures (capex) remain the most closely watched metric for determining the direction and level of investment that telecom carriers are making in network equipment and services. The problem is that capex is never linear in its behavior. Predicting what the carriers are likely to spend on their networks is a black art, at best...
Infrastructure matters
By Ed Gubbins
The numbers don't lie
By Carol Wilson
Earnings reports are a study in spin -- read a press release announcing even the most dire earnings, and you'll be hard-pressed to find the gloom and doom among the highlighted statistics...
MDU Odd Couples
By Ed Gubbins
Remember the opening to the Odd Couple TV show, which asked whether two divorced men could share an apartment without driving each other crazy? Here at the Broadband Properties Summit in Dallas today, I heard a building owner basically paraphrase that line, talking about telecom providers competing for customers in the same multidwelling unit...
Shoe on the other foot
By Carol Wilson
When the cable companies decided to get into VoIP, they didn’t go into the marketplace touting the new technology they’d discovered and trying to attract new customers that way. Instead, they called it “digital phone service” and focused on its low cost, a long list of features and reliability. The approach paid off...
Public/private potholes
By Ed Gubbins
This has been a tough week for public/private partnerships in the telecom sector. Last night the city of Corpus Christi, Texas, voted to take its Wi-Fi network back from EarthLink, which bought the 147-square-mile network a year ago for roughly the same amount it cost the city to build ($7 million)...
The big bandwidth lie
By Vince Vittore, Yankee Group
Perhaps it all started with Brian Roberts. Standing on the stage on a balmy Las Vegas morning, Roberts wowed the bleary eyed crowd by downloading a 4 gigabit collection of encyclopedias and dictionaries in just a shade under four minutes...
Power crisis looming?
By John M. Celentano, Skyline Marketing Group
Telecom power is a little like Rodney Dangerfield … it gets no respect! Well, not really. But, DC power is one of the last elements to be designed into a telecom network, after the packet-this and optical-that systems are selected...
Charting the global FTTH push
By Carol Wilson
Last week’s release of the new fiber-to-the-home global ranking gave everyone something to crow about. The Asia-Pacific region continues to dominate the world in FTTH deployment, but the U.S. was among the top three nations in terms of annual growth and Europe cracked the 1 million FTTH line mark in late November, making 2007 the best year yet for FTTH...
The riddle of the convergence gateway
By Joe McGarvey, Current Analysis
To answer subscribers’ cravings for communications and entertainment services that will flow across any type of access network and display on any type of device, carriers need to reconstruct the edges of their networks to perform the session management acrobatics required to fulfill these end user expectations...
DSL decline
By Ed Gubbins
There’s been a lot of talk lately about efforts to pump more power and speed into DSL. Whether its bonding VDSL2 pairs, bonding ADSL with cable, reallocating upstream and downstream bandwidth, reducing noise on the line or just giving the signal a little boost, everyone’s interested in squeezing more speed out of DSL...
No tough times for telecom?
By Carol Wilson
It seems inevitable that the slowing U.S. economy will begin to spill over onto the sales of the voice, video, data and wireless bundles that telecom service providers are now peddling. Or it did to me. But that’s not necessarily the case, according to some of the industry analysts I polled for this column...
Consumers want it all
By Carol Wilson
Consumers want faster Internet access and cheaper prices, right? Apparently not. In the U.K., where broadband service speeds are going up and prices are falling, customer satisfaction is going down...
The new digital divide
By Teresa Mastrangelo
Though I applaud Verizon for making fiber to the home a cornerstone of its future -- the FiOS network has reduced operating costs significantly while giving consumers faster speeds, higher quality, and unique services and features -- in reality, it poses a problem that highlights the potential for a new type of digital divide: fiber vs. copper...
Beyond our control
By Ed Gubbins
Since we reported that Houston’s Optical Entertainment Network had abruptly and mysteriously discontinued service earlier this month, many of you have contacted me wanting more information on what had happened to the company. Get in line...
SureWest East
By Ed Gubbins
Two weeks ago I reported on SureWest Communications’ stated desire to scale its fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) business through acquisition. At the time, I offered the only potential candidates I could think of, under time pressure, that might appear on SureWest’s short list...
It's an upstream world
By Vince Vittore
Forget what you know about network engineering because it's worthless...
Survey says: AT&T is wrong
By Carol Wilson
Last week, I asked what you thought about AT&T's plans to stick with its fiber-to-the-node strategy, in the face of industry criticism, and you didn't disappoint. Most respondents agree with the critics that AT&T is being short-sighted, and they brought up some issues I didn't tackle, such as...
FTTN the favorite
By Ed Gubbins
AT&T’s pronouncement today that it will lower its deployment projections and raise spending on its fiber-to-the-node (FTTN) network will no doubt get a lot of attention. What probably won’t surprise anyone, however, is that BellSouth is essentially becoming the third of four Bell carriers to adopt FTTN, leaving Verizon (the carrier with the oldest copper) the only Bell to favor FTTP instead...
Standoff at the bandwidth corral
By Carol Wilson
Most of the time, when presented with two absolutely conflicting views, I can figure out which one I believe. In the life-standard debates, Republican vs. Democrat, Cubs vs. Sox, chunky vs. creamy, I have no problem picking sides. When it comes to AT&T’s broadband strategy, however, I admit to being flummoxed...









