[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Where's the Fiber?
I was reading about T1 lines and came across this statement.. It basically said T1's are made up of copper...Wasn't T1 made up of Fiber? Is the new trend to move T1 away from fiber and use copper?

Commerical T1 systems were introduced in about 1960. Commercial fibre communications systems were introduced in about 1980. So, is T1 tied to fibre? :-)

If you want to send a T1 connection over a large distance reliably, translating the signal from copper to fibre for the bulk of the distance is a good thing. If you are only sending the signals a couple of kilometres from the exchange to the customer premises, fibre is overkill and rarely used. T1 is often carried over some form of DSL these days, adding to the options the telco may choose from. The DSL approach has higher latency (bad), but its cheap (good). This option is pretty recent compared to the others, though.

Steve

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