Hi Bob,


> On Oct 8, 2023, at 21:27, rjmcmahon <rjmcma...@rjmcmahon.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Sebastian,
> 
> Here's a good link on Glasgow, KY likely the first U.S. muni network started 
> around 1994. It looks like a one and done type investment. Their offering was 
> competitive for maybe a decade and now seems to have fallen behind for the 
> last few decades.
> 
> https://www.glasgowepb.com/internet-packages/
> https://communitynets.org/content/birth-community-broadband-video

        [SM] Looks like they are using DOCSIS and are just about to go fiber; 
not totally unexpected, it takes awhile to amortize the cost of say a CMTS to 
go DOCSIS and only after that period you make some profit, so many ISPs will be 
tempted to operate the active gear a bit longer longer after break even, as 
with new active gear revenue will likely not generate surplus. The challenge is 
to decide when to upgrade...

My preferred model however is not necessarily having a communal ISP that sells 
internet access services (I am not against that), but have a communal built-out 
of the access network and centralize the lines (preferably fiber) in a few 
large enough local IXs, so internet access providers only need to bring their 
head-ends and upstream links to those locations to be able to offer services. 
In the beginning it makes probably sense to also offer some sort of GPON/XGSPON 
bit stream access to reduce the up-front cost for ISPs that expect to serve 
only a small portion of customers in such an IX, but that is pure 
speculation.... The real idea is to keep those things that will result in a 
natural monopoly to form in communal hands (that already manage other such 
monopoly infrastructure anyway) and then try to use the fact that there is no 
local 800lb Gorilla ISP owning most lines to try to create a larger pool of 
competing ISPs to light up the fiber infrastructure... That is I am fine with a 
market solution, if we can assure the market to be big enough to actually 
deliver on its promises.


> LUS is similar if this article is to be believed. 
> https://thecurrentla.com/2023/column-lus-fiber-has-lost-its-edge/

        [SM] The article notices that comparing things is hard... as the offers 
differ considerably from what alternate ISPs offer (e.g. LUS offers symmetric 
capacity for down- and upload) and the number compared seems to be the 
advertised price, which IIRC in the US is considerably smaller than what one 
happens to actually pay month per month due to additional fees and stuff... (in 
Germany prices for end-customers typically are "all inclusive prices", the 
amount of VAT/tax is shown singled out in the receipts, but the number we 
operate on is typically the final price, but then we have almost no local taxes 
that could apply).


> The LUS NN site says there is no congestion on their fiber (GPON) so they 
> don't need AQM or other congestion mgmt mechanisms which I find suspect. 
> https://www.lusfiber.com/net-neutrality

        [SM] Actually intriguing, would I live in their area I would try them 
out, then I could report on the details here :) 
Browsing their documentation I am not a big fan of their volume limits though, 
I consider these to be absurd measures of control....(absurd in that they are 
too loosely coupled with the relevant measure for the actual cost).

> This may demonstrate that technology & new requirements are moving too 
> quickly for municipal approaches.

        [SM] That might well be true. I have no insight any more on how this 
affects commercial ISPs in the US either (I only tried two anyway sonic and 
charter)

> 
> Bob
>> Hi Sebastian,
>> The U.S. of late isn't very good with regulatory that motivates
>> investment into essential comm infrastructure. It seems to go the
>> other way, regulatory triggers under investment, a tragedy of the
>> commons.
>> The RBOCs eventually did overbuild. They used wireless and went to
>> contract carriage, and special access rate regulation has been
>> removed. The cable cos did HFC and have always been contract carriage.
>> And they are upgrading today.
>> The tech companies providing content & services are doing fine too and
>> have enough power to work things out with the ISPs directly.
>> The undeserved areas do need support. The BEAD monies may help. I
>> think these areas shouldn't be relegated to DSL.
>> Bob
>> On Oct 8, 2023, at 2:38 AM, Sebastian Moeller <moell...@gmx.de> wrote:
>>> Hi Bob,
>>> On 8 October 2023 00:13:07 CEST, rjmcmahon via Nnagain
>>> <nnagain@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
>>>> Everybody abandoned my local loop. Twisted pair from multiple
>>>> decades ago into antiquated, windowless COs with punch blocks,
>>>> with no space nor latency advantage for colocated content &
>>>> compute, seems to have killed it off.
>>> [SM] Indeed, throughput for DSL is inversely proportional to loop
>>> length, so providing 'acceptable' capacity requires sufficiently
>>> short wire runs from DSLAM to CPE, and that in turn means moving
>>> DSLAMs closer to the end users... which in a densely populated area
>>> works well, but in a less densely populated area becomes costly
>>> fast. And doing so will only make sense if you get enough customers
>>> on such an 'outdoor DSLAM' so might work for the first to built out,
>>> but becomes prohibitively unattractive for other ISP later. However
>>> terminating the loops in the field clears up lots of spaces in the
>>> COs... not that anybody over here moved much compute into these...
>>> (there exist too many COs to make that an attractive proposition in
>>> spite of all the hype about moving compute to the edge). As is a few
>>> well connected data centers for compute seem to work well enough...
>>> I suspect in some towns one can buy out the local loop copper with
>>> just a promise of maintenance.
>>> [SM] A clear sign of regulatory failure to me, maintenance of the
>>> copper plant inherited from Bell should never have been left to the
>>> ISPs to decide about...
>>> The whole CLEC open the loop to competitive access seems to have
>>> failed per costs, antiquated technology, limited colocation, an
>>> outdated waveguide (otherwise things like CDDI would have won over
>>> Cat 5), and market reasons. The early ISPs didn't collocate, they
>>> bought T1s and E1s and connected the TDM to statistical multiplexing
>>> - no major investment there either.
>>>> The RBOCs, SBC (now AT&T) & and VZ went to contract carriage and
>>>> wireless largely because of the burdens of title II per regulators
>>>> not being able to create an investment into the OSPs. The 2000
>>>> blow up was kinda real.
>>> [SM] Again, I see no fault in title 2 here, but in letting ISPs of
>>> the hook on maintaining their copper plant or replace it with
>>> FTTH...
>>>> She starts out by complaining about trying to place her WiFi in
>>>> the right place. That's like trying to share a flashlight. She has
>>>> access to the FCC technology group full of capable engineers. They
>>>> should have told her to install some structured wire, place more
>>>> APs, set the carrier and turn down the power.
>>> [SM] I rather read this more as an attempt to built a report with
>>> the audience over a shared experience and less as a problem report
>>> ;)
>>> My wife works in the garden now using the garden AP SSID with no
>>> issues. My daughter got her own carrier too per here Dad dedicating
>>> a front end module for her distance learning needs. I think her
>>> story to justify title II regulation is a bit made up.
>>> [SM] Hmm, while covid19 lockdown wasn't the strongest example, I
>>> agree, I see no good argument for keeping essential infrastructure
>>> like internet access in private hands without appropriate oversight.
>>> Especially given the numbers for braodband choice for customers,
>>> clearly the market is not going to solve the issues at hand.
>>>> Also, communications have been essential back before the rural
>>>> free delivery of mail in 1896. Nothing new here other than
>>>> hyperbole to justify a 5 member commission acting as the single
>>>> federal regulator over 140M households and 33M businesses, almost
>>>> none of which have any idea about the complexities of the
>>>> internet.
>>> [SM] But the access network is quite different than the internet's
>>> core, so not being experts on the core seems acceptable, no? And
>>> even 5 members is clearly superior to no oversight at all?
>>> I'm not buying it and don't want to hand the keys to the FCC who
>>> couldn't protect journalism nor privacy. Maybe start there, looking
>>> at what they didn't do versus blaming contract carriage for a
>>> distraction?
>>> [SM] I can speak to the FCC as regulatory agency, but over here IMHO
>>> the national regulatory agency does a decent job arbitrating between
>>> the interests of both sides.
>> https://about.usps.com/who/profile/history/rural-free-delivery.htm#:~:text=On%20October%201%2C%201896%2C%20rural,were%20operating%20in%2029%20states.
>>> Bob
>>> My understanding, though I am not 100% certain, is that the baby
>>> bells
>>> lobbied to have the CLEC equal access provisions revoked/gutted.
>>> Before this, the telephone companies were required to provide access
>>> to the "last mile" of the copper lines and the switches at wholesale
>>> costs. Once the equal access provisions were removed, the telephone
>>> companies started charging the small phone and DSL providers close
>>> to
>>> the retail price for access. The CLEC DSL providers could not stay
>>> in
>>> business when they charged a customer $35 / month for Internet
>>> service
>>> while the telephone company charged the DSL ISP $35 / month for
>>> access.
>>> ---- On Sat, 07 Oct 2023 17:22:10 -0400 Dave Taht via Nnagain wrote
>>> ---
>>> I have a lot to unpack from this:
>>> https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-397257A1.pdf
>>> the first two on my mind from 2005 are: "FCC adopted its first open
>>> internet policy" and "Competitiveness" As best as I recall, (and
>>> please correct me), this led essentially to the departure of all the
>>> 3rd party DSL providers from the field. I had found something
>>> referencing this interpretation that I cannot find right now, but I
>>> do
>>> clearly remember all the DSL services you could buy from in the
>>> early
>>> 00s, and how few you can buy from now. Obviously there are many
>>> other
>>> possible root causes.
>>> DSL continued to get better and evolve, but it definately suffers
>>> from
>>> many reports of degraded copper quality, but does an estimate exist
>>> for how much working DSL is left?
>>> Q0) How much DSL is in the EU?
>>> Q1) How much DSL is left in the USA?
>>> Q2) What form is it? (VDSL, etc?)
>>> Did competition in DSL vanish because of or not of an FCC related
>>> order?
>>> --
>>> Oct 30:
>>> https://netdevconf.info/0x17/news/the-maestro-and-the-music-bof.html
>>> Dave Täht CSO, LibreQos
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