Analysis & commentary on America's troubled transition from analog telephone service to digital advanced telecommunications and associated infrastructure deficits.
Sunday, March 18, 2007
Qwest follows dubious AT&T strategy of video over copper via DSL
Wednesday, March 14, 2007
Fiber may be the future, but copper is now for cable rustlers
Verizon spokesman Jon Davies said the company had lost $297,795 in copper since 2006 in California alone, not including money spent on work to replace the wire or loss of service to customers.
"This is a national problem," he said. "We try to keep our cables high on the poles to make it harder to get, but the people who do this are highly motivated, and they have the equipment to get at it."
Tuesday, March 13, 2007
BPL technical standards announced
Illustrating the still nascent state of BPL is a news release issued today by the IEEE Standards Association that establishes technical standards for BPL.
Tech coalition wants to use TV airwaves for broadband
"Broadband drought" in the land down under
A first step is to build fibre-to-the-node (FTTN), extending optical fibre from telephone exchanges to street-corner nodes from where houses would be served by their telephone connections.
Telstra has offered to invest $4.2 billion in FTTN but has it on hold because the regulatory environment does not suit it.
Meanwhile, it is pursuing persuasion and public relations. "We have a broadband drought in this country, there's no question of that," Dr Burgess says. "This week the Government announced a broadband program at 256 kilobits per second, at almost the same time as Singapore announced a program to bring 100 megabits per second to 95 per cent of its population."
Sunday, March 11, 2007
Comcast chief: DSL becoming the new dial up
Roberts' remarks reported in The Motley Fool would certainly give indigestion to lots of folks in places like El Dorado County who are stuck with dial up, unable to get DSL and often located only a mile or two -- or less -- from existing Comcast cable. Adding insult to injury, Comcast's Web site will inform visitors that cable is available in their ZIP codes when in fact it's not.
Saturday, March 10, 2007
Telco/cable duopoly kills proposed legislation requiring disclosure of broadband deployments
Apparently the telco/cable duopoly fears embarrassment and potential regulatory directives to expand broadband deployments if Maryland residents were able to determine the location of these companies' broadband black holes.