Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-04 Thread Masataka Ohta

Baldur Norddahl wrote:


Sorry but that claim is completely wrong. Cabling cost scales linearly

with

the number of cores.



My apology to Masataka Ohta for my too strong wording by calling you wrong.
The moderators put me in place. I wanted to say I disagree with the claim.


I rather thank you for your very strong statements with so obviously
wrong reasoning, as it is trivially easy for me and, as you can see,
other participants of the list to argue against.


It is true that trenching costs are higher than the cables themselves. But
that does not mean the cables are cheap and that it is an
insignificant cost. Cables + duct is about 20% of our cost to lay down the
network.


"Cables + duct is about 20%"???

Are you saying reduction of 20% of cost of single star by PON
matters if duct cost of PON, which is as significant as that
of single star, could be ignored?

Maybe. it could actually be 20% of cost reduction, if, in addition,
cost of complicated closure and unnecessarily lengthy drop cable
cost of PON could be ignored.

So?


Not having huts with active equipment spread all around is also a
huge cost saving that can not be ignored.


Are you saying single star has "huts with active equipment"?

The reality is that reach of single star without active relays
is a lot longer than that of PON, because single star does not
use splitters, which is lossy.

With a fiber of 0.2dB/km loss, 9dB loss inherent to 8 way
splitter of PON means 45km less reach.


I should point out that I probably buy more cable than most. The exact
pricing is of course not public, but lets say a core cost somewhere between
1 to 2 USD cents per meter. Then


When? 50 years ago?

Masataka Ohta


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-04 Thread Josh Luthman
All I'm going to say is at $5/foot for fiber, even if it's 864 count, you
are royally overpaying for material!

Josh Luthman
24/7 Help Desk: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373


On Fri, Jun 4, 2021 at 3:42 AM Baldur Norddahl 
wrote:

>
>
> On Fri, Jun 4, 2021 at 2:53 AM Masataka Ohta <
> mo...@necom830.hpcl.titech.ac.jp> wrote:
>
>> Baldur Norddahl wrote:
>>
>> > Sorry but that claim is completely wrong. Cabling cost scales linearly
>> with
>> > the number of cores.
>>
>
> My apology to Masataka Ohta for my too strong wording by calling you
> wrong. The moderators put me in place. I wanted to say I disagree with the
> claim.
>
>
>> Most of cabling cost is cost to lay cables. Backhoe costs.
>> Space factor of a fiber cable is negligible if you put a
>> cable into utility tunnels which is wide, especially when
>> tunnels were used for copper cables of POTS.
>>
>
> It is true that trenching costs are higher than the cables themselves. But
> that does not mean the cables are cheap and that it is an
> insignificant cost. Cables + duct is about 20% of our cost to lay down the
> network. Not having huts with active equipment spread all around is also a
> huge cost saving that can not be ignored.
>
>  > The cost of 144 is not
>>  > double that of 72.  288 is not double the cost of 144.
>>
>> Yup. When PON was first conceived several tens of years ago, core
>> cost a lot. But, today...
>>
>
> I should point out that I probably buy more cable than most. The exact
> pricing is of course not public, but lets say a core cost somewhere between
> 1 to 2 USD cents per meter. Then you simply multiply up to get an
> approximate price of the cable. Holds true for cables with more than about
> 12 cores. This is because with larger cables the cost of the cores dominate
> the price of the cable. When you buy as much as we do, you do not really
> get a huge rebate for buying more cores in a single cable - we already buy
> insane amounts of core - it is just distributed in more cables.
>
> The moderator is right in that we do not seem to progress much here in
> this discussion. So lets agree to disagree. But let me get this closing
> comment in anyway... the guy that actually builds PON networks says he does
> so, because it is significantly cheaper. We have no other motivations as
> our network is not open to third parties in any case. Our motivation is to
> stay profitable.
>
> Regards,
>
> Baldur
>
>
>


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-04 Thread Baldur Norddahl
On Fri, Jun 4, 2021 at 2:53 AM Masataka Ohta <
mo...@necom830.hpcl.titech.ac.jp> wrote:

> Baldur Norddahl wrote:
>
> > Sorry but that claim is completely wrong. Cabling cost scales linearly
> with
> > the number of cores.
>

My apology to Masataka Ohta for my too strong wording by calling you wrong.
The moderators put me in place. I wanted to say I disagree with the claim.


> Most of cabling cost is cost to lay cables. Backhoe costs.
> Space factor of a fiber cable is negligible if you put a
> cable into utility tunnels which is wide, especially when
> tunnels were used for copper cables of POTS.
>

It is true that trenching costs are higher than the cables themselves. But
that does not mean the cables are cheap and that it is an
insignificant cost. Cables + duct is about 20% of our cost to lay down the
network. Not having huts with active equipment spread all around is also a
huge cost saving that can not be ignored.

 > The cost of 144 is not
>  > double that of 72.  288 is not double the cost of 144.
>
> Yup. When PON was first conceived several tens of years ago, core
> cost a lot. But, today...
>

I should point out that I probably buy more cable than most. The exact
pricing is of course not public, but lets say a core cost somewhere between
1 to 2 USD cents per meter. Then you simply multiply up to get an
approximate price of the cable. Holds true for cables with more than about
12 cores. This is because with larger cables the cost of the cores dominate
the price of the cable. When you buy as much as we do, you do not really
get a huge rebate for buying more cores in a single cable - we already buy
insane amounts of core - it is just distributed in more cables.

The moderator is right in that we do not seem to progress much here in this
discussion. So lets agree to disagree. But let me get this closing comment
in anyway... the guy that actually builds PON networks says he does so,
because it is significantly cheaper. We have no other motivations as our
network is not open to third parties in any case. Our motivation is to stay
profitable.

Regards,

Baldur


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Masataka Ohta

Mikael Abrahamsson wrote:

> My experience is that people can prove either active-e or pon is the
> cheapest by changing the in-parameters of the calculation. There are
> valid concerns/advantages with both and there is no one-size-fits-all.

Indeed, there are people who insist cost of PON were small without
valid reasons. See below for an example.

Baldur Norddahl wrote:


As cabling cost is mostly independent of the number of cores in a
cable, as long as enough number of cores for single star are provided,
which means core cost is mostly cabling cost divided by number of
subscribers, single star does not cost so much.



Sorry but that claim is completely wrong. Cabling cost scales linearly with
the number of cores.


It's *cabling* cost. OK?


A 192 core cable is approximately twice the price of a


Cabling cost means cost including but not limited to cable cost.

Most of cabling cost is cost to lay cables. Backhoe costs.
Space factor of a fiber cable is negligible if you put a
cable into utility tunnels which is wide, especially when
tunnels were used for copper cables of POTS.

Josh Luthman wrote:

> The cost of 144 is not
> double that of 72.  288 is not double the cost of 144.

Yup. When PON was first conceived several tens of years ago, core
cost a lot. But, today...

Masataka Ohta


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Josh Luthman
Baldur,

Dude you are just so wrong.  You really need to stop guessing at things.

>A 192 core cable is approximately twice the price of a 96 core cable

192 doesn't even really exist in the mass market.  The cost of 144 is not
double that of 72.  288 is not double the cost of 144.  This is accurate as
of June 1 2021 from my quotes.

>On top of that, the price to splice is also linearly related to the number
of cores to splice. Yes there is the setup time, but then working on 192
cable takes a whole day, requires larger enclosures, requires larger
manholes, while we might only need 2 (!) splices to do the same work with
GPON.

A)  Don't splice the 190 or B) use ribbon and it takes only a few minutes
total.

Josh Luthman
24/7 Help Desk: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373


On Thu, Jun 3, 2021 at 12:14 PM Baldur Norddahl 
wrote:

>
>
> On Thu, Jun 3, 2021 at 5:41 PM Masataka Ohta <
> mo...@necom830.hpcl.titech.ac.jp> wrote:
>
>> As cabling cost is mostly independent of the number of cores in a
>> cable, as long as enough number of cores for single star are provided,
>> which means core cost is mostly cabling cost divided by number of
>> subscribers, single star does not cost so much.
>>
>
> Sorry but that claim is completely wrong. Cabling cost scales linearly
> with the number of cores. A 192 core cable is approximately twice the price
> of a 96 core cable. Only at very low core count does this break up
> somewhat. A 12 core cable is still significantly cheaper than 24 cores. A 1
> core cable is the same price as 4 cores however.
>
> On top of that, the price to splice is also linearly related to the number
> of cores to splice. Yes there is the setup time, but then working on 192
> cable takes a whole day, requires larger enclosures, requires larger
> manholes, while we might only need 2 (!) splices to do the same work with
> GPON.
>
> Then there is the price to the ducting. A 192 core cable requires bigger
> ducts and plastic is not only expensive, it has recently become scarce.
> Putting in a 24 core cable in a 10/6 duct is much cheaper than a 192 core
> cable.
>
>
>> Then, PON, needing large closures for splitters and lengthy drop
>> cables from the closures, costs a lot cancelling small cost of
>> using dedicated cores of single star.
>>
>
>
> Now a splitter can be mounted in a splice enclosure taking up the same
> space as 12 splices. We use dome shaped water tight enclosures for 96
> splices and then we replace one of the splicing trays with the splitters.
> All of this fits in a handhole about 70 cm long, 60 cm wide and 30 cm deep.
>
> Another operator here instead has the splitters in cabinets with a cabinet
> for every 50 to 200 passed homes. You could build a P2P network like that,
> but then you would need power and active equipment in these cabinets.
>
> Not sure what you are talking about with regards to drop cables. The house
> connection is identical in a GPON and P2P network.
>
>
>
>> On the other hand, if PON is assumed and the number of cores in a
>> cable is small, core cost for single star will be large and only
>> one PON operator with the largest share (shortest drop cable from
>> closures to, e.g. 8 customers) can survive, resulting in monopoly.
>>
>
>
> Typically the infrastructure owner runs the PON equipment and resell vlan
> based access to ISPs.
>
> Regards,
>
> Baldur
>
>
>
>


RE: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Travis Garrison
In my opinion, if a city is installing a fiber network for other providers to 
use, they need to plan on active-e only. Let it be up to the providers back at 
the head end to either plug the individual strands into a switch for active-e 
or into a splitter for a PON type setup. 

Thank you
Travis Garrison

-Original Message-
From: NANOG  On Behalf Of 
Mikael Abrahamsson via NANOG
Sent: Thursday, June 3, 2021 11:00 AM
To: Masataka Ohta 
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband 
connections)

On Fri, 4 Jun 2021, Masataka Ohta wrote:

> As cabling cost is mostly independent of the number of cores in a 
> cable, as long as enough number of cores for single star are provided, 
> which means core cost is mostly cabling cost divided by number of 
> subscribers, single star does not cost so much.
>
> Then, PON, needing large closures for splitters and lengthy drop 
> cables from the closures, costs a lot cancelling small cost of using 
> dedicated cores of single star.
>
> On the other hand, if PON is assumed and the number of cores in a 
> cable is small, core cost for single star will be large and only one 
> PON operator with the largest share (shortest drop cable from closures 
> to, e.g. 8 customers) can survive, resulting in monopoly.

My experience is that people can prove either active-e or pon is the cheapest 
by changing the in-parameters of the calculation. There are valid 
concerns/advantages with both and there is no one-size-fits-all.

-- 
Mikael Abrahamssonemail: swm...@swm.pp.se


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Baldur Norddahl
On Thu, Jun 3, 2021 at 5:41 PM Masataka Ohta <
mo...@necom830.hpcl.titech.ac.jp> wrote:

> As cabling cost is mostly independent of the number of cores in a
> cable, as long as enough number of cores for single star are provided,
> which means core cost is mostly cabling cost divided by number of
> subscribers, single star does not cost so much.
>

Sorry but that claim is completely wrong. Cabling cost scales linearly with
the number of cores. A 192 core cable is approximately twice the price of a
96 core cable. Only at very low core count does this break up somewhat. A
12 core cable is still significantly cheaper than 24 cores. A 1 core cable
is the same price as 4 cores however.

On top of that, the price to splice is also linearly related to the number
of cores to splice. Yes there is the setup time, but then working on 192
cable takes a whole day, requires larger enclosures, requires larger
manholes, while we might only need 2 (!) splices to do the same work with
GPON.

Then there is the price to the ducting. A 192 core cable requires bigger
ducts and plastic is not only expensive, it has recently become scarce.
Putting in a 24 core cable in a 10/6 duct is much cheaper than a 192 core
cable.


> Then, PON, needing large closures for splitters and lengthy drop
> cables from the closures, costs a lot cancelling small cost of
> using dedicated cores of single star.
>


Now a splitter can be mounted in a splice enclosure taking up the same
space as 12 splices. We use dome shaped water tight enclosures for 96
splices and then we replace one of the splicing trays with the splitters.
All of this fits in a handhole about 70 cm long, 60 cm wide and 30 cm deep.

Another operator here instead has the splitters in cabinets with a cabinet
for every 50 to 200 passed homes. You could build a P2P network like that,
but then you would need power and active equipment in these cabinets.

Not sure what you are talking about with regards to drop cables. The house
connection is identical in a GPON and P2P network.



> On the other hand, if PON is assumed and the number of cores in a
> cable is small, core cost for single star will be large and only
> one PON operator with the largest share (shortest drop cable from
> closures to, e.g. 8 customers) can survive, resulting in monopoly.
>


Typically the infrastructure owner runs the PON equipment and resell vlan
based access to ISPs.

Regards,

Baldur


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Mikael Abrahamsson via NANOG

On Fri, 4 Jun 2021, Masataka Ohta wrote:

As cabling cost is mostly independent of the number of cores in a cable, 
as long as enough number of cores for single star are provided, which 
means core cost is mostly cabling cost divided by number of subscribers, 
single star does not cost so much.


Then, PON, needing large closures for splitters and lengthy drop
cables from the closures, costs a lot cancelling small cost of
using dedicated cores of single star.

On the other hand, if PON is assumed and the number of cores in a
cable is small, core cost for single star will be large and only
one PON operator with the largest share (shortest drop cable from
closures to, e.g. 8 customers) can survive, resulting in monopoly.


My experience is that people can prove either active-e or pon is the 
cheapest by changing the in-parameters of the calculation. There are valid 
concerns/advantages with both and there is no one-size-fits-all.


--
Mikael Abrahamssonemail: swm...@swm.pp.se


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Masataka Ohta

Mikael Abrahamsson via NANOG wrote:

I'll let Mikael confirm, but last time I checked, Stokab was mostly 
(if not all) Active-E.


Sweden is mostly Active-e. There is some PON nowadays though.

Stokab typically only rents out dark fiber, so they don't have any of it.


As cabling cost is mostly independent of the number of cores in a
cable, as long as enough number of cores for single star are provided,
which means core cost is mostly cabling cost divided by number of
subscribers, single star does not cost so much.

Then, PON, needing large closures for splitters and lengthy drop
cables from the closures, costs a lot cancelling small cost of
using dedicated cores of single star.

On the other hand, if PON is assumed and the number of cores in a
cable is small, core cost for single star will be large and only
one PON operator with the largest share (shortest drop cable from
closures to, e.g. 8 customers) can survive, resulting in monopoly.

Masataka Ohta





Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Richey Goldberg
The incumbent operators and cable companies want nothing to do with these 
networks because they already have their own.   I’ve worked with several 
smaller regional providers  and WISPs that would love to have access to muni 
networks but the local network muni either won’t allow the access or they price 
the access at a price point that it’s impossible to be competitive with the 
muni’s retail side of the house.

-richey

From: NANOG  on behalf of 
Mike Hammett 
Date: Wednesday, June 2, 2021 at 4:12 PM
To: Harry McGregor 
Cc: 
Subject: Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband 
connections)

 

The government entities that I've known of building middle or last-mile fiber 
infrastructure have reported that none of the incumbent operators wanted 
anything to do with it. Not during planning, construction, post-construction, 
etc.



-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com

Midwest-IX
http://www.midwest-ix.com

 

From: "Harry McGregor" 
To: nanog@nanog.org
Sent: Wednesday, June 2, 2021 2:55:20 PM
Subject: Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband 
connections)

Hi,

Glass and Copper (and aluminum) infrastructure is a natural monopoly, similar 
to water service.

It was purely by chance IMHO that we ended up with Cable Co and Tel Co internet 
competing with each other in many locations in the US.

That was aided by the following:
Technology for TV over telephone wire really did not exist at the time
Telcos were not very interested in PayTV at the time
Technology for Telephone over Coax really did not exist at the time
Cable Co's were not very interested in Telephone service at the time
Basically they were viewed as two very different businesses, with very 
different physical plant needs.  Now both of them are primarily fiber based, 
with Coax or Telephone Wire (in many cases you can not even call it twisted 
pair) as the very last interconnect segment.

We can all agree with hind sight (and a lot of us at the time) that the Tel 
Co's made some very stupid decisions. Perfect example being installing remote 
DLC/SLC units when the demand for analog dial tone skyrocketed, along with more 
copper in the ground/on poles in neighborhoods. At first this blocked ADSL 
deployment until remote DSLAMs were installed, then it turns out most were NOT 
close enough to enable VDSL2 or g.FAST for the majority of customers serviced 
by them. They were both "in the way" and "too far away" at the same time. If 
instead of the DLC/SLC units the Tel Cos had instead favored (with the correct 
tariffs) moving any residential customer who requested a second POTS line to 
ISDN BRI, they would have saved all of the physical plant work, which has 
turned out to be a horrible investment.

We learned a long time ago that water lines, sewer lines, and electric lines 
were natural monopolies, and should either have a municipal granted license, or 
should be run by the municipality.

The next generation last mile will almost have to be a similar structure for 
Layer 1 and a form of Layer 2, with Layer 3 and above services being sold by 
anyone who wants to provide the service. This will collapse Cable Co, Tel Co, 
and independent ISPs onto the same physical infrastructure.  This will work 
well for dense locations of course.

Wireless ISPs, and LEO based ISPs will still of course have a major role to 
play for at least several decades if not more.

I also agree entirely that most consumers will "pay the ISP too much" for 
service they "don't need".  I have worked with several people who were paying 
for Gigabit Cable Service, with 30Mbit upload, or in Spectrum territory, they 
had 400Mbit service with 20Mbit upload, and the "downgrade" was 200Mbit service 
with 10Mbit upload. Being as that was a single individual with very low upload 
needs beyond video meetings, I recommended he downgrade to the 200/10 service. 
In all cases, a proper WiFi network and wireless offloading has made far more 
difference vs upping the cable co speeds. My personal sweet spot right now is 
100/20 business cable or 100/100 small business fiber (for the few spots that 
have GPON service in Tucson). The next tier of business cable is 200/20, and I 
find the extra 100Mbit download really does not change much. If it was 200/30 
or 200/40, I would probably consider it.

None of the realities of current "needs" and "wants" really are going to change 
the financial need to consolidate physical networks. Unfortunately instead of 
it being a Layer1/2 provider and L3+ competition, most Internet networks in new 
developments around here are being deployed as physical layer and service 
monopolies. The home builder will make an alliance with Cox, Comcast, or 
CenturyLink, and then the others will not build out physical plant in the 
community.

-Harry

 

On 6/2/21 11:50 AM, William Herrin wrote:
On Wed, Jun 2,

Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Mike Hammett
The post to which I replied specifically called for a converged network for all 
operators. 

This is the second time I've had to say this. 

Do people not read an e-mail before replying to it? 




- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 

Midwest Internet Exchange 

The Brothers WISP 

- Original Message -

From: "Richey Goldberg"  
To: "Mike Hammett" , "Harry McGregor" 
 
Cc: nanog@nanog.org 
Sent: Thursday, June 3, 2021 7:41:27 AM 
Subject: Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband 
connections) 



The incumbent operators and cable companies want nothing to do with these 
networks because they already have their own. I’ve worked with several smaller 
regional providers and WISPs that would love to have access to muni networks 
but the local network muni either won’t allow the access or they price the 
access at a price point that it’s impossible to be competitive with the muni’s 
retail side of the house. 

-richey 



From: NANOG  on behalf of 
Mike Hammett  
Date: Wednesday, June 2, 2021 at 4:12 PM 
To: Harry McGregor  
Cc:  
Subject: Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband 
connections) 



The government entities that I've known of building middle or last-mile fiber 
infrastructure have reported that none of the incumbent operators wanted 
anything to do with it. Not during planning, construction, post-construction, 
etc. 



- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

Midwest-IX 
http://www.midwest-ix.com 




From: "Harry McGregor"  
To: nanog@nanog.org 
Sent: Wednesday, June 2, 2021 2:55:20 PM 
Subject: Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband 
connections) 
Hi, 

Glass and Copper (and aluminum) infrastructure is a natural monopoly, similar 
to water service. 
It was purely by chance IMHO that we ended up with Cable Co and Tel Co internet 
competing with each other in many locations in the US. 
That was aided by the following: 

* Technology for TV over telephone wire really did not exist at the time 
* Telcos were not very interested in PayTV at the time 
* Technology for Telephone over Coax really did not exist at the time 
* Cable Co's were not very interested in Telephone service at the time 


Basically they were viewed as two very different businesses, with very 
different physical plant needs. Now both of them are primarily fiber based, 
with Coax or Telephone Wire (in many cases you can not even call it twisted 
pair) as the very last interconnect segment. 
We can all agree with hind sight (and a lot of us at the time) that the Tel 
Co's made some very stupid decisions. Perfect example being installing remote 
DLC/SLC units when the demand for analog dial tone skyrocketed, along with more 
copper in the ground/on poles in neighborhoods. At first this blocked ADSL 
deployment until remote DSLAMs were installed, then it turns out most were NOT 
close enough to enable VDSL2 or g.FAST for the majority of customers serviced 
by them. They were both "in the way" and "too far away" at the same time. If 
instead of the DLC/SLC units the Tel Cos had instead favored (with the correct 
tariffs) moving any residential customer who requested a second POTS line to 
ISDN BRI, they would have saved all of the physical plant work, which has 
turned out to be a horrible investment. 
We learned a long time ago that water lines, sewer lines, and electric lines 
were natural monopolies, and should either have a municipal granted license, or 
should be run by the municipality. 
The next generation last mile will almost have to be a similar structure for 
Layer 1 and a form of Layer 2, with Layer 3 and above services being sold by 
anyone who wants to provide the service. This will collapse Cable Co, Tel Co, 
and independent ISPs onto the same physical infrastructure. This will work well 
for dense locations of course. 
Wireless ISPs, and LEO based ISPs will still of course have a major role to 
play for at least several decades if not more. 

I also agree entirely that most consumers will "pay the ISP too much" for 
service they "don't need". I have worked with several people who were paying 
for Gigabit Cable Service, with 30Mbit upload, or in Spectrum territory, they 
had 400Mbit service with 20Mbit upload, and the "downgrade" was 200Mbit service 
with 10Mbit upload. Being as that was a single individual with very low upload 
needs beyond video meetings, I recommended he downgrade to the 200/10 service. 
In all cases, a proper WiFi network and wireless offloading has made far more 
difference vs upping the cable co speeds. My personal sweet spot right now is 
100/20 business cable or 100/100 small business fiber (for the few spots that 
have GPON service in Tucson). The next tier of business cable is 200/20, and I 
find the extra 100Mbit download really does not chan

Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Baldur Norddahl
On Thu, Jun 3, 2021 at 10:44 AM Masataka Ohta <
mo...@necom830.hpcl.titech.ac.jp> wrote:

> Jim Troutman wrote:
>
> Private fiber operators are strongly motivated to deploy PON
> because PON is designed to make competitions impossible even
> if regulators forces the operators to do so, which is why
> PON is so popular.
>
> Muni fiber operators deploying PON because it is so pupular
> are just dumb stupid.
>


As the founder/owner of a private FTTH operator I can say the above is
wrong. The _only_ reason we use PON is because it is vastly cheaper to
build. It is also more flexible, which might be counter intuitive. I have
watched competitors try P2P but it is always a disaster for them. The PON
network will finish sooner, require considerably less cabling and ducts,
easier to expand with unplanned capacity, can be rerouted when an expected
permit fails to go through, and does not require much footprint for active
equipment. We have a single road side cabinet, using less than a single
square meter, serving an area in excess of 100 square kilometers. In theory
GPON can go all the way to 40 km from switch to customer, which would be
more than 1000 square km served from one point of presence.

Fiberstrands are not free. In a P2P topology you need to have cabinets with
active equipment close to the customers, otherwise you will have huge costs
for all that fiber. Your network would also become vulnerable because a
fiber cut on a duct with thousands of fiberstrands is not something that
gets fixed in a few hours. Huge cables can not easily be rerouted when
other construction works require you to do so.

Regards,

Baldur


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Masataka Ohta

Jim Troutman wrote:


However, with PON, only the provider with the largest share can
win the initial competition, after which there is monopoly.



No.  Most of the municipal proposals I see are open access, even with
a PON design.


Private fiber operators are strongly motivated to deploy PON
because PON is designed to make competitions impossible even
if regulators forces the operators to do so, which is why
PON is so popular.

Muni fiber operators deploying PON because it is so pupular
are just dumb stupid.


If the network is not a "one fiber per customer" design, then the
muni network will own the entire GPON/XGS-PON infrastructure (fiber,
splitters and lit electronics).


What if the muni infrastructure is plain PON with 1G ether
switches?

Where is the competition to improve the infrastructure, even
though it is already "broadband"?

Or, even if it is GPON with 10G switches, how can it be
upgraded to 10GPON with 100G switches?


The ISP is just providing bits,
customer service, billing, and maybe the inside install and CPE.


You miss "bps", which is essential to be "broadband".

Masataka Ohta


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Mark Tinka




On 6/3/21 09:28, Mikael Abrahamsson wrote:



Sweden is mostly Active-e. There is some PON nowadays though.

Stokab typically only rents out dark fiber, so they don't have any of it.


Yes, this is how I remember it some 4 or so years ago...

Thanks for the clarification.

Mark.



Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Mikael Abrahamsson via NANOG

On Thu, 3 Jun 2021, Mark Tinka wrote:

I'll let Mikael confirm, but last time I checked, Stokab was mostly (if 
not all) Active-E.


Sweden is mostly Active-e. There is some PON nowadays though.

Stokab typically only rents out dark fiber, so they don't have any of it.

--
Mikael Abrahamssonemail: swm...@swm.pp.se


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Mikael Abrahamsson via NANOG

On Thu, 3 Jun 2021, Masataka Ohta wrote:


Mark Tinka wrote:


Which is the Stokab model.


Does it use single star?

The city should provide base infrastructure, lease it to operators atthe 
same price, and get out of the way. End of.


With single star topology, that's fine.


https://stokab.se/download/18.310b3d5c174c5513aec263/1601471204836/Framtidens%20kommunikationsn%C3%A4t%20LOWRES.pdf

It's in swede-crypt, but it boils down to single strand of fiber from a 
central area node, to the basement, one for each apartment. However, the 
building owner has to arrange for the cabling within the building. It's 
single star, and typically the "node" it's all connected to will serve 
thousands of apartments. So an ISP will colocate in this "node" and can 
then rent fibers to provide FTTH services, at a fixed monthly cost (last I 
heard it was in the ~10USD a month range).


Stokab isn't alone in this model, they're not the most successful, there 
are better examples of this.


Sweden is also home to a lot of worse examples, all from "muni networks" 
that will be L2 transport providers, that will have L3 networks, to the 
ones who are L2/L3 but also sell services themselves. It's a zoo.


There is muni broadband that sucks and there is muni broadband that is 
great. Without defining what kind of muni broadband we're talking about 
it's impossible to have a productive discussion.


--
Mikael Abrahamssonemail: swm...@swm.pp.se


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Mark Tinka




On 6/3/21 09:15, Mark Tinka wrote:



  In South Africa (we don't have city-owned/operated fibre access)...


That's actually untrue - I just remembered that the City of Cape Town 
actually does build fibre. It's not very clear to me to what extent they 
operate it, particularly beyond supporting municipal departments:


https://www.capetown.gov.za/Media-and-news/City%20digs%20in%20smartly%20to%20install%20fibre-optic%20cabling

It's possible some other cities are doing the same, but the message I 
was pushing is that pretty much all FTTx of note going into homes, 
businesses and data centres is being built and operated by the private 
sector.


Mark.


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Mark Tinka



On 6/3/21 09:07, Jim Troutman wrote:



No.  Most of the municipal proposals I see are open access, even with 
a PON design.


In South Africa (we don't have city-owned/operated fibre access), all 
the major fibre operators run a GPON network. They all provide open 
access to the ISP's they partner with. So far, it seems to work well.


I'd say only one of the fibre operators is not an ISP (there may be 
more, it's a big country). The rest are, but they run the businesses as 
a silo so that they are fair to both their ISP divisions as well as the 
3rd party ISP's they partner with.


Mark.


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Jim Troutman
On Thu, Jun 3, 2021 at 1:37 AM Masataka Ohta <
mo...@necom830.hpcl.titech.ac.jp> wrote:

> > The city should provide base infrastructure, lease it to operators at
> > the same price, and get out of the way. End of.
>
> With single star topology, that's fine.
>
> However, with PON, only the provider with the largest share can win
> the initial competition, after which there is monopoly.
>

No.  Most of the municipal proposals I see are open access, even with a PON
design.

If the network is not a "one fiber per customer" design, then the muni
network will own the entire GPON/XGS-PON infrastructure (fiber, splitters
and lit electronics).  The ISP is just providing bits, customer service,
billing, and maybe the inside install and CPE.  Sometimes, the transport to
the customer is a fee paid by the ISP to the network owner.  In other cases
the end-customer pays the fiber transport cost directly to the network
owner, and then pays a separate bill just for their desired ISP service.
This is all designed for open access with each ISP having their own NNIs
and service VLANs on the lit network to connect back to their ISP service
network.

Often the muni owners are looking for a "network operator" that is usually
one of the ISPs on the network, who will handle all the physical
administration and connection work for the lit network, and is paid some
sort of fee for doing this.  They have to stay neutral as the operator,
when dealing with other ISPs, with contract requirements and SLAs for
maintaining the network for all involved.

There are several successful municipal or utility district owned open
access fiber infrastructure projects in the US.  Some of the
implementations even allow the customer to "self service" switch to a new
ISP as desired, via a web portal and have several choices for providers.

Occasionally a muni network will want a single ISP for the entire network.
They will offer an ISP an exclusive contract for a fixed period of time,
and negotiate for the lowest possible price for their residents for the
bandwidth provided.  I know of muni owned networks where the residents are
paying $30/month for full 1GigE ISP service, and all the other costs are
paid by their property taxes servicing a long term bond for the
construction costs.

-- 
Jim Troutman,
jamesltrout...@gmail.com
Pronouns: he/him/his
207-514-5676 (cell)


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-03 Thread Mark Tinka




On 6/3/21 07:36, Masataka Ohta wrote:


With single star topology, that's fine.

However, with PON, only the provider with the largest share can win
the initial competition, after which there is monopoly.


I'll let Mikael confirm, but last time I checked, Stokab was mostly (if 
not all) Active-E.


Mark.


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread John Osmon
On Wed, Jun 02, 2021 at 04:02:02PM -0500, Mike Hammett wrote:
[...]

> Getting the incumbents on-board certainly isn't a requirement. The
> post I was replying to favored a future where all providers converged
> on one infrastructure. I was saying that wasn't likely to happen. 

If there's any regulation, it ought to be along the lines of:
   If you use the public ROW, you cannot be an L3 provider.

Let the last mile people connect last mile entities to ISPs.

Let ISPs compete for consumers based on service, not on what
infrastructure they have to a geographic group of consumers.

There will be unintended consequences, but it does stop "silo" issues
and forces things towards common infrastructure.




Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread Masataka Ohta

Mark Tinka wrote:

> Which is the Stokab model.

Does it use single star?

The city should provide base infrastructure, lease it to operators at 
the same price, and get out of the way. End of.


With single star topology, that's fine.

However, with PON, only the provider with the largest share can win
the initial competition, after which there is monopoly.

Masataka Ohta


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread Mark Tinka




On 6/2/21 18:12, William Herrin wrote:


If you were to structure muni broadband to enhance competition rather
than limit it, you might get a different result. For example, if
municipalities installed and leased fiber optic cables to every
structure but didn't provide any services on those cables, relying
instead on third parties directly billing the customer to do so, it
could work out as well as having municipalities pay for roads and
letting people buy their own cars and trucks to use on them.


Which is the Stokab model.

Was the assumption that the city would be providing both the fibre and 
the Internet service? No, that would not necessarily work.


The city should provide base infrastructure, lease it to operators at 
the same price, and get out of the way. End of.


Mark.


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread Chris Adams
Once upon a time, William Herrin  said:
> A comparable Internet setup would be where the municipality implements
> a local network distribution service and then you buy from the
> Internet provider of your choice.

That's sort of how it works where I live.  The city-owned non-profit
utility company wanted to build out a network to support smart metering,
better monitoring, etc.  They contracted out to someone to build fiber
to the curb throughout the city, got their piece for the smart meters
and such, and then leased access to anyone that wants it.

They signed Google Fiber as the initial carrier, who then has people
come run the fiber from the curb to the house and install the ONT and
router.  I think GFiber is the only company selling service city-wide on
it, although I think there are some companies doing business services in
some areas.

It's not quite the same as the multi-vendor electricity setup, where
only one company actually delivers the amps to your house, but kind of
close.

So far, the old-school carriers (AT, Comcast, and WoW) I think have
ignored the utility's network.  About three months after the utility
fiber was buried on my street and I got Google Fiber, AT came through
digging up yards again to run their own fiber.  They then advertised
promotional rates that were $20/month more than GFiber (and the AT
rate required a bundle and a contract, while GFiber required neither).
I can't imagine they got many takers except from people who just stay
with AT out of momentum.

I'd think that eventually, AT/Comcast/WoW would switch over to the
utility's network, at least in new developments, but who knows.  I have
no idea how the prices works out for them vs. building and maintaining
their own thing.

We've had two cable TV companies available at most addresses since the
mid-1980s, which meant we had some of the lowest cable prices in the
country for a long time.  About the time Dish/DirecTV cranked up, I
think both recognized they could get away with raising their rates to
something competitve with the satellite providers.  No actual collusion
or anything (probably), but our cable rates went up really fast there
for a while.

-- 
Chris Adams 


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread Mike Hammett
This wouldn't be for the purposes of entering a new market, but an opportunity 
to shed your high-cost legacy infrastructure and provide better service in 
existing markets. 




Getting the incumbents on-board certainly isn't a requirement. The post I was 
replying to favored a future where all providers converged on one 
infrastructure. I was saying that wasn't likely to happen. 




- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

Midwest-IX 
http://www.midwest-ix.com 

- Original Message -

From: "Christopher Morrow"  
To: "Mike Hammett"  
Cc: "Harry McGregor" , "nanog list"  
Sent: Wednesday, June 2, 2021 3:46:16 PM 
Subject: Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband 
connections) 







On Wed, Jun 2, 2021 at 4:11 PM Mike Hammett < na...@ics-il.net > wrote: 




The government entities that I've known of building middle or last-mile fiber 
infrastructure have reported that none of the incumbent operators wanted 
anything to do with it. Not during planning, construction, post-construction, 
etc. 






If your whole model is monopoly services (att/verizon/cabletown) why would you 
bother entering a service area where you might have competition? (and an 
operational model which is radically different from your other properties) 


I don't think it's necessary for the 'incumbent telco' (or cabletown) to 
need/want to participate with the municipal dark-fiber-equivalent deployments, 
is it? 
All that's needed is a couple (one to start) local 'isp' that can service what 
is effectively a light-duty L1 and ethernet plant, and customer service(s). 


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread Christopher Morrow
On Wed, Jun 2, 2021 at 4:11 PM Mike Hammett  wrote:

> The government entities that I've known of building middle or last-mile
> fiber infrastructure have reported that none of the incumbent operators
> wanted anything to do with it. Not during planning, construction,
> post-construction, etc.
>
>
If your whole model is monopoly services (att/verizon/cabletown) why would
you bother entering a service area where you might have competition? (and
an operational model which is radically different from your other
properties)

I don't think it's necessary for the 'incumbent telco' (or cabletown) to
need/want to participate with the municipal dark-fiber-equivalent
deployments, is it?
All that's needed is a couple (one to start) local 'isp' that can service
what is effectively a light-duty L1 and ethernet plant, and customer
service(s).


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread Mike Hammett
The government entities that I've known of building middle or last-mile fiber 
infrastructure have reported that none of the incumbent operators wanted 
anything to do with it. Not during planning, construction, post-construction, 
etc. 




- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

Midwest-IX 
http://www.midwest-ix.com 

- Original Message -

From: "Harry McGregor"  
To: nanog@nanog.org 
Sent: Wednesday, June 2, 2021 2:55:20 PM 
Subject: Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband 
connections) 


Hi, 

Glass and Copper (and aluminum) infrastructure is a natural monopoly, similar 
to water service. 

It was purely by chance IMHO that we ended up with Cable Co and Tel Co internet 
competing with each other in many locations in the US. 
That was aided by the following: 


* Technology for TV over telephone wire really did not exist at the time 
* Telcos were not very interested in PayTV at the time 
* Technology for Telephone over Coax really did not exist at the time 
* Cable Co's were not very interested in Telephone service at the time 

Basically they were viewed as two very different businesses, with very 
different physical plant needs. Now both of them are primarily fiber based, 
with Coax or Telephone Wire (in many cases you can not even call it twisted 
pair) as the very last interconnect segment. 

We can all agree with hind sight (and a lot of us at the time) that the Tel 
Co's made some very stupid decisions. Perfect example being installing remote 
DLC/SLC units when the demand for analog dial tone skyrocketed, along with more 
copper in the ground/on poles in neighborhoods. At first this blocked ADSL 
deployment until remote DSLAMs were installed, then it turns out most were NOT 
close enough to enable VDSL2 or g.FAST for the majority of customers serviced 
by them. They were both "in the way" and "too far away" at the same time. If 
instead of the DLC/SLC units the Tel Cos had instead favored (with the correct 
tariffs) moving any residential customer who requested a second POTS line to 
ISDN BRI, they would have saved all of the physical plant work, which has 
turned out to be a horrible investment. 
We learned a long time ago that water lines, sewer lines, and electric lines 
were natural monopolies, and should either have a municipal granted license, or 
should be run by the municipality. 
The next generation last mile will almost have to be a similar structure for 
Layer 1 and a form of Layer 2, with Layer 3 and above services being sold by 
anyone who wants to provide the service. This will collapse Cable Co, Tel Co, 
and independent ISPs onto the same physical infrastructure. This will work well 
for dense locations of course. 

Wireless ISPs, and LEO based ISPs will still of course have a major role to 
play for at least several decades if not more. 

I also agree entirely that most consumers will "pay the ISP too much" for 
service they "don't need". I have worked with several people who were paying 
for Gigabit Cable Service, with 30Mbit upload, or in Spectrum territory, they 
had 400Mbit service with 20Mbit upload, and the "downgrade" was 200Mbit service 
with 10Mbit upload. Being as that was a single individual with very low upload 
needs beyond video meetings, I recommended he downgrade to the 200/10 service. 
In all cases, a proper WiFi network and wireless offloading has made far more 
difference vs upping the cable co speeds. My personal sweet spot right now is 
100/20 business cable or 100/100 small business fiber (for the few spots that 
have GPON service in Tucson). The next tier of business cable is 200/20, and I 
find the extra 100Mbit download really does not change much. If it was 200/30 
or 200/40, I would probably consider it. 
None of the realities of current "needs" and "wants" really are going to change 
the financial need to consolidate physical networks. Unfortunately instead of 
it being a Layer1/2 provider and L3+ competition, most Internet networks in new 
developments around here are being deployed as physical layer and service 
monopolies. The home builder will make an alliance with Cox, Comcast, or 
CenturyLink, and then the others will not build out physical plant in the 
community. 
-Harry 


On 6/2/21 11:50 AM, William Herrin wrote: 


On Wed, Jun 2, 2021 at 9:46 AM Andy Ringsmuth  wrote: 



Muni broadband sucks for several reasons but the most important one is:

Competition. Municipal broadband eliminates it. If it's not obvious
why, feel free to Google how competition and monopolization impact
product quality. It's a pretty universal trait.


If you were to structure muni broadband to enhance competition rather
than limit it, you might get a different result. For example, if
municipalities installed and leased fiber optic cables to every
structure but didn't provide any services on those

Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread Harry McGregor

Hi,

Glass and Copper (and aluminum) infrastructure is a natural monopoly, 
similar to water service.


It was purely by chance IMHO that we ended up with Cable Co and Tel Co 
internet competing with each other in many locations in the US.


That was aided by the following:

 * Technology for TV over telephone wire really did not exist at the time
 * Telcos were not very interested in PayTV at the time
 * Technology for Telephone over Coax really did not exist at the time
 * Cable Co's were not very interested in Telephone service at the time

Basically they were viewed as two very different businesses, with very 
different physical plant needs.  Now both of them are primarily fiber 
based, with Coax or Telephone Wire (in many cases you can not even call 
it twisted pair) as the very last interconnect segment.


We can all agree with hind sight (and a lot of us at the time) that the 
Tel Co's made some very stupid decisions. Perfect example being 
installing remote DLC/SLC units when the demand for analog dial tone 
skyrocketed, along with more copper in the ground/on poles in 
neighborhoods. At first this blocked ADSL deployment until remote DSLAMs 
were installed, then it turns out most were NOT close enough to enable 
VDSL2 or g.FAST for the majority of customers serviced by them. They 
were both "in the way" and "too far away" at the same time. If instead 
of the DLC/SLC units the Tel Cos had instead favored (with the correct 
tariffs) moving any residential customer who requested a second POTS 
line to ISDN BRI, they would have saved all of the physical plant work, 
which has turned out to be a horrible investment.


We learned a long time ago that water lines, sewer lines, and electric 
lines were natural monopolies, and should either have a municipal 
granted license, or should be run by the municipality.


The next generation last mile will almost have to be a similar structure 
for Layer 1 and a form of Layer 2, with Layer 3 and above services being 
sold by anyone who wants to provide the service. This will collapse 
Cable Co, Tel Co, and independent ISPs onto the same physical 
infrastructure.  This will work well for dense locations of course.


Wireless ISPs, and LEO based ISPs will still of course have a major role 
to play for at least several decades if not more.


I also agree entirely that most consumers will "pay the ISP too much" 
for service they "don't need".  I have worked with several people who 
were paying for Gigabit Cable Service, with 30Mbit upload, or in 
Spectrum territory, they had 400Mbit service with 20Mbit upload, and the 
"downgrade" was 200Mbit service with 10Mbit upload. Being as that was a 
single individual with very low upload needs beyond video meetings, I 
recommended he downgrade to the 200/10 service. In all cases, a proper 
WiFi network and wireless offloading has made far more difference vs 
upping the cable co speeds. My personal sweet spot right now is 100/20 
business cable or 100/100 small business fiber (for the few spots that 
have GPON service in Tucson). The next tier of business cable is 200/20, 
and I find the extra 100Mbit download really does not change much. If it 
was 200/30 or 200/40, I would probably consider it.


None of the realities of current "needs" and "wants" really are going to 
change the financial need to consolidate physical networks. 
Unfortunately instead of it being a Layer1/2 provider and L3+ 
competition, most Internet networks in new developments around here are 
being deployed as physical layer and service monopolies. The home 
builder will make an alliance with Cox, Comcast, or CenturyLink, and 
then the others will not build out physical plant in the community.


-Harry


On 6/2/21 11:50 AM, William Herrin wrote:

On Wed, Jun 2, 2021 at 9:46 AM Andy Ringsmuth  wrote:

Muni broadband sucks for several reasons but the most important one is:

Competition. Municipal broadband eliminates it. If it's not obvious
why, feel free to Google how competition and monopolization impact
product quality. It's a pretty universal trait.


If you were to structure muni broadband to enhance competition rather
than limit it, you might get a different result. For example, if
municipalities installed and leased fiber optic cables to every
structure but didn't provide any services on those cables, relying
instead on third parties directly billing the customer to do so, it
could work out as well as having municipalities pay for roads and
letting people buy their own cars and trucks to use on them.

In many municipalities, you can choose your electricity provider. And yet there 
are not multiple companies running power lines to every house.

Hi Andy,

Take a closer look at how that works. Your electricity vendor is also
the one who chooses which generating companies to buy from. You're
stuck with the municipal distribution network (just like you're stuck
with the municipal roads) but you have a choice in who you buy
electricity from and how you 

Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread William Herrin
On Wed, Jun 2, 2021 at 9:46 AM Andy Ringsmuth  wrote:
> > Muni broadband sucks for several reasons but the most important one is:
> >
> > Competition. Municipal broadband eliminates it. If it's not obvious
> > why, feel free to Google how competition and monopolization impact
> > product quality. It's a pretty universal trait.
> >
> >
> > If you were to structure muni broadband to enhance competition rather
> > than limit it, you might get a different result. For example, if
> > municipalities installed and leased fiber optic cables to every
> > structure but didn't provide any services on those cables, relying
> > instead on third parties directly billing the customer to do so, it
> > could work out as well as having municipalities pay for roads and
> > letting people buy their own cars and trucks to use on them.
>
> In many municipalities, you can choose your electricity provider. And yet 
> there are not multiple companies running power lines to every house.

Hi Andy,

Take a closer look at how that works. Your electricity vendor is also
the one who chooses which generating companies to buy from. You're
stuck with the municipal distribution network (just like you're stuck
with the municipal roads) but you have a choice in who you buy
electricity from and how you structure it. Want a flat rate? There's
someone who will sell you that. Want a discount for load shedding?
There's someone who will sell you that too. Carbon neutral? Someone
for that too. You can bet wrong and suffer for it (see: Texas winter
storms) but mostly you get better power service.

A comparable Internet setup would be where the municipality implements
a local network distribution service and then you buy from the
Internet provider of your choice. He bills you and passes the muni's
distribution portion onward. He makes his own arrangements for
upstream Internet or whatever services he elects to vend. Max speed,
flat rate, 95th percentile, IP addresses, etc. are controlled by the
competitive Internet provider who, if you're unhappy with him, could
be replaced.


> I’m generally all for private enterprise. But when those private enterprises 
> take public money, don’t do what they are supposed to do with it, squander 
> it, and nothing changes, again and again, well, what’s that definition of 
> insanity?

Yes it is, which is why I'm also against subsidizing large carriers to
build out monopoly networks.

Regards,
Bill Herrin

--
William Herrin
b...@herrin.us
https://bill.herrin.us/


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread Jared Mauch



> On Jun 2, 2021, at 12:44 PM, Andy Ringsmuth  wrote:
> 
>>> On Mon, May 31, 2021 Mike Hammett wrote:
 Muni broadband does suck, but that's another thread for another day.
>>> Excluding cases where muni broadband doesn't suck, why does muni broadband 
>>> suck?
>>> 
>>> Personally I wouldn't mind more access to dark fiber à la Stokab, much like 
>>> the dry copper pairs of yesterday.
>>> 
>>> If the default state of muni broadband of is suck, what is the root cause? 
>>> Is it a people problem and/or can something be done to improve on the 
>>> default state?
>> 
>> 
>> Muni broadband sucks for several reasons but the most important one is:
>> 
>> Competition. Municipal broadband eliminates it. If it's not obvious
>> why, feel free to Google how competition and monopolization impact
>> product quality. It's a pretty universal trait.
>> 
>> 
>> If you were to structure muni broadband to enhance competition rather
>> than limit it, you might get a different result. For example, if
>> municipalities installed and leased fiber optic cables to every
>> structure but didn't provide any services on those cables, relying
>> instead on third parties directly billing the customer to do so, it
>> could work out as well as having municipalities pay for roads and
>> letting people buy their own cars and trucks to use on them.
> 
> In many municipalities, you can choose your electricity provider. And yet 
> there are not multiple companies running power lines to every house.
> 
> It is easy to make the argument “muni broadband sucks because no competition” 
> but it is much more difficult to back it up with hard data.
> 
> Take a look at Nebraska for instance. Here, by law, electricity is a public 
> utility. And yet we have some of the lowest rates and highest uptime in the 
> country. No competition, low prices, stellar service record.
> 
> I’m generally all for private enterprise. But when those private enterprises 
> take public money, don’t do what they are supposed to do with it, squander 
> it, and nothing changes, again and again, well, what’s that definition of 
> insanity?
> 
> 
> Here in Lincoln, Nebraska, we actually do have fiber available at every 
> address in the city. And a private company did it. 100 percent underground, 
> all 96 square miles of the city. They did it all in about two years. I can 
> get 50Mbps synchronous for $45, 500 for $70 or gig for $99. TV and phone also 
> if I want it. Local support too, not India. 
> 
> They now have fiber in 15 Nebraska cities and two in Colorado and are 
> expanding rapidly. Why? A great product at a great price with outstanding 
> customer service. Spectrum is losing customers like crazy as a result, and 
> precisely zero people are shedding any tears (Spectrum salesmen excepted).
> 
> It can be done. Is it an investment? Yes. Just like anything else. Some 
> investments have a quicker return on capital than others.

+1 on the investment lifecycle requirement.  It can require a 10-20 year 
vision.  The problem we have right now is due to squirrel chasing on the part 
of some companies the money that could have been invested in locking in markets 
was spent on other investments.  You see a big difference between forward 
looking companies and their network performance and those that are backwards 
looking.

I had to build fiber to my house because the fiber near my home (about 1200’ 
away) was not in a position to be upgraded or maintained in such a way to 
deliver service to our area.  This is a very common trend I’ve observed.

My county did a large broadband survey where a contractor drove by every 
home/property to determine what was there.  Many addresses without service have 
multiple fiber providers at the road, it’s just not the “right fiber”.  This 
also includes spare conduit and space that was built out in a forward thinking 
model that others have to duplicate later because the assets are lost or 
forgotten in paperwork.

I also see a number of the smaller ISPs (and some bigger ones) who are like 
“you can watch Netflix and zoom, what’s your problem?” When there are end-users 
that are willing to pay for the higher speeds.  Not every home is going to 
spend $8k or $100k to get service, but they certainly do exist and make the 
business case more feasible.

- Jared

Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread Andy Ringsmuth
>> On Mon, May 31, 2021 Mike Hammett wrote:
>>> Muni broadband does suck, but that's another thread for another day.
>>  Excluding cases where muni broadband doesn't suck, why does muni broadband 
>> suck?
>> 
>>  Personally I wouldn't mind more access to dark fiber à la Stokab, much like 
>> the dry copper pairs of yesterday.
>> 
>>  If the default state of muni broadband of is suck, what is the root cause? 
>> Is it a people problem and/or can something be done to improve on the 
>> default state?
> 
> 
> Muni broadband sucks for several reasons but the most important one is:
> 
> Competition. Municipal broadband eliminates it. If it's not obvious
> why, feel free to Google how competition and monopolization impact
> product quality. It's a pretty universal trait.
> 
> 
> If you were to structure muni broadband to enhance competition rather
> than limit it, you might get a different result. For example, if
> municipalities installed and leased fiber optic cables to every
> structure but didn't provide any services on those cables, relying
> instead on third parties directly billing the customer to do so, it
> could work out as well as having municipalities pay for roads and
> letting people buy their own cars and trucks to use on them.

In many municipalities, you can choose your electricity provider. And yet there 
are not multiple companies running power lines to every house.

It is easy to make the argument “muni broadband sucks because no competition” 
but it is much more difficult to back it up with hard data.

Take a look at Nebraska for instance. Here, by law, electricity is a public 
utility. And yet we have some of the lowest rates and highest uptime in the 
country. No competition, low prices, stellar service record.

I’m generally all for private enterprise. But when those private enterprises 
take public money, don’t do what they are supposed to do with it, squander it, 
and nothing changes, again and again, well, what’s that definition of insanity?


Here in Lincoln, Nebraska, we actually do have fiber available at every address 
in the city. And a private company did it. 100 percent underground, all 96 
square miles of the city. They did it all in about two years. I can get 50Mbps 
synchronous for $45, 500 for $70 or gig for $99. TV and phone also if I want 
it. Local support too, not India. 

They now have fiber in 15 Nebraska cities and two in Colorado and are expanding 
rapidly. Why? A great product at a great price with outstanding customer 
service. Spectrum is losing customers like crazy as a result, and precisely 
zero people are shedding any tears (Spectrum salesmen excepted).

It can be done. Is it an investment? Yes. Just like anything else. Some 
investments have a quicker return on capital than others.




Andy Ringsmuth
5609 Harding Drive
Lincoln, NE 68521-5831
(402) 304-0083
a...@andyring.com

“Better even die free, than to live slaves.” - Frederick Douglas, 1863



Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread William Herrin
On Wed, Jun 2, 2021 at 5:28 AM Jared Brown  wrote:
> On Mon, May 31, 2021 Mike Hammett wrote:
> > Muni broadband does suck, but that's another thread for another day.
>   Excluding cases where muni broadband doesn't suck, why does muni broadband 
> suck?
>
>   Personally I wouldn't mind more access to dark fiber à la Stokab, much like 
> the dry copper pairs of yesterday.
>
>   If the default state of muni broadband of is suck, what is the root cause? 
> Is it a people problem and/or can something be done to improve on the default 
> state?


Muni broadband sucks for several reasons but the most important one is:

Competition. Municipal broadband eliminates it. If it's not obvious
why, feel free to Google how competition and monopolization impact
product quality. It's a pretty universal trait.


If you were to structure muni broadband to enhance competition rather
than limit it, you might get a different result. For example, if
municipalities installed and leased fiber optic cables to every
structure but didn't provide any services on those cables, relying
instead on third parties directly billing the customer to do so, it
could work out as well as having municipalities pay for roads and
letting people buy their own cars and trucks to use on them.

Regards,
Bill Herrin

-- 
William Herrin
b...@herrin.us
https://bill.herrin.us/


Re: Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread Mark Tinka




On 6/2/21 14:27, Jared Brown wrote:


   Excluding cases where muni broadband doesn't suck, why does muni broadband 
suck?

   Personally I wouldn't mind more access to dark fiber à la Stokab, much like 
the dry copper pairs of yesterday.


Same here.

Municipal broadband promotes the ability for more operators and 
customers to get access to network at a stable price. That's why I 
really like the Stokab model.


Mark.


Muni broadband sucks (was: New minimum speed for US broadband connections)

2021-06-02 Thread Jared Brown
On Mon, May 31, 2021 Mike Hammett wrote: 
> Muni broadband does suck, but that's another thread for another day. 
  Excluding cases where muni broadband doesn't suck, why does muni broadband 
suck?

  Personally I wouldn't mind more access to dark fiber à la Stokab, much like 
the dry copper pairs of yesterday.

  If the default state of muni broadband of is suck, what is the root cause? Is 
it a people problem and/or can something be done to improve on the default 
state?


Jared