There are two different approaches to deploying the fiber monitoring hardware 
that is effectively in line with the “get your gear off of my fiber” argument. 
If the monitoring service is intended for a specific customer, the signal will 
traverse a customer-specific pair. This is pretty rare though, for a wide 
variety of reasons that have been mostly mentioned here. 

The way this generally works then is that the provider reserves a strand or 
pair on the cable for monitoring purposes and uses the characterization data to 
make assumptions about the whole cable. This is pretty effective for “track 
down the precise location of a cut” or “why did this span just go from -18 to 
-30 for no apparent reason” and not necessarily the full gamut of 
characterization issues that can come up on other pairs of glass, which is 
still enough to meaningfully impact the part of MTTR that is under a provider’s 
control. For many of you consuming a dark fiber service today, this is the 
approach being used, so there’s no provider hardware touching your glass and 
certainly no lambda for your gear to contend with avoiding. 

Dave Cohen
craetd...@gmail.com

> On Jun 8, 2020, at 10:55 PM, Tom Beecher <beec...@beecher.cc> wrote:
> 
> 
> United Cable Company is primarily a broker. 
> 
> To Rod's questions :
> 
> Sure, you can light a pair and monitor it many different ways. However, as 
> James has said already, most people who want dark fiber are going to want one 
> pair of glass from A to Z with nothing in the middle at all that they don't 
> know about. For me, I would want to know exactly what you had in place ( full 
> specifications , not hand waved 'monitoring device' ) , what wavelengths it 
> used, how it functioned (fully passive, etc), along with some extensive tests 
> to make sure I could do what I expected to without any interference or 
> surprises, before I would come near a contract with you. From my point of 
> view, any device on the glass I am leasing is essentially now part of my 
> network, so I need to know everything about it. Others may have different 
> standards of course, but that's perfectly fine. 
> 
> I would say personally though that if during due diligence, your NOC was 
> nothing more than an answering service to someone else, which it kinda sounds 
> like you want, I would personally not do business with that. Again others may 
> have different standards, and that's ok. 
> 
> 
> 
>> On Mon, Jun 8, 2020 at 7:54 PM Miles Fidelman <mfidel...@meetinghouse.net> 
>> wrote:
>> Rod Beck rod.beck at unitedcablecompany.com wrote
>> 
>>> I would calm down, Miles. 😃 Dark fiber networks are built and usually 
>>> maintained by the same construction company that installed them. And a dark 
>>> fiber network does not even need a single full time optical engineer. If 
>>> the cable is damaged, then the guys who installed it will repair it. All 
>>> the expertise is there.
>>> 
>>> And no, I am not an executive at a undersea cable system. i was one of 
>>> Hibernia Atlantic's top salesmen during the early years from 2004-2011 
>>> after which I retired.
>>> 
>> Funny thing then, given that you signed your original query as:
>>> Roderick Beck
>>> VP of Business Development
>>> United Cable Company
>>> www.unitedcablecompany.com<http://www.unitedcablecompany.com>
>> And following the link to United Cable Company's web site reveals:
>> 
>> "Your source for the world's most distinctive submarine cable assets."  And 
>> the about page says "Its mission, as a leading telecom consulting company, 
>> is to represent the world’s most distinctive submarine and terrestrial cable 
>> assets."
>> 
>> Your original query asked:
>> 
>>> Am I wrong in believing that there should be a way of lighting a single 
>>> pair in the cable and then monitoring it for signal disruption? It is not a 
>>> perfect solution, but arguably better than learning that the cable has been 
>>> damaged from an irate customer.
>> In a followup message you say:
>> 
>>> Just to clarify, this is a dark fiber network already built and will be 
>>> repaired by the construction company that built it. I just a system to 
>>> inform them as soon as the fibers are damaged.
>> So... color me confused about who you are, who you represent, what you're 
>> trying to accomplish, what you're asking, and, perhaps, why you don't 
>> already know the answer to your question, or have someone internal to your 
>> organization who already knows.
>> 
>> Miles Fidelman
>> 
>> -- 
>> In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
>> In practice, there is.  .... Yogi Berra
>> 
>> Theory is when you know everything but nothing works. 
>> Practice is when everything works but no one knows why. 
>> In our lab, theory and practice are combined: 
>> nothing works and no one knows why.  ... unknown

Reply via email to