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    Broadband

    July 09, 2008

    Cycling At The Fiber Age

    IMG_0608 Le Tour de France will make its annual stop here in Pau next week. The city is readying for the big show, with signs, ads, and welcome events popping up everywhere. In the meantime, the new release of the blockbuster "Pro Cycling Manager" game is on the shelves.

    Among the key features of this 2008 version, there's one which rings a bell to me :

    " Play in single and/or multi-player mode (allows up to 20 players over the Internet or via LAN). "

    Imagine the benefits of FTTH Fiber-To-The-Home for such a game : no more players number' s limitation, so that you could be part of a *real* 200+ racers' peloton, even better graphics, and a faster speed of reaction for you to counterattack your rivals...

    FTTH does offer many other possibilities to practice sports like Cycling or Skiing. For instance, imagine home-trainers connected to the Internet, simulating a real competition between cyclists for their  indoor training during winter...

    Shall you be a game developer loving Sports (e.g. Cycling, Tennis, Ski, Rafting, etc.), please feel free to drop me a line : Pau is the place you should be.

    June 27, 2008

    Fete du Tres Haut Debit, Photos


    Created with Admarket's flickrSLiDR.

    "Fete du Tres Haut Debit" Running Notes

    Yesterday in Mortain, a beautiful small town a few miles away from the Mont St Michel,was the 3d Ultra-Broadband Conference, held by the french optical cable manufacturer ACOME.

    Here are my running notes, as is - means no re-writing * ( my personal comments under brackets ) :


    Regis Paumier, CEO, ACOME. keynote speech :

    - CETHD Center of Expertise for Ultra Broadband : 1,000+ visitors to date (note : opened mid 2007)

    - there are many issues with Quality and Maintenance (on optical networks, FTTx)

    - key issue in France (on FTTH) : rural environment.


    Ms. Agnes Huet, President, Comptoir des Signaux. market survey by the FTTH Council Europe :

    - FTTx networks Business Model :

    a) OpenAccess is mandatory

    b) Operator vs. End-User : capacity becomes commodity; extends potential services; puts the End-User at the center of the market.

    - User-oriented solutions : puts the End-User at the epicenter of the system : dynamic bandwidth allocation, dynamic services allocation.

    - Open Access / Open Networks not widely adopted in France : very few existing networks allow such services.

    - xPON infrastructures limit Open Access systems.

    - Collectivities want to : investigate all potential solutions; model contribution and ROI.

    - Collectivities claim they don't have visibility on those solutions (hence the need for permanent live show-rooms).


    Yves Le Mouel, President, French Federation of Telecoms (i.e. : Operators) :

    - FTTH in France : need 100k new subscribers per month to be considered "mainstream";

    - Investments : estimation = 10 Billions euros over 10 years (see recent announcement by SFR - link in french);

    - New Business models must be invented, because based on abundance of bandwidth and services;

    - the key question is : how to deploy a complex infrastructure to deliver services the simplest way (note : hence the need for a complete paradigm shift. Think Different);

    - how FTTH will win by 2012 : the Killer App.

    - the Killer App : images, video, online gaming, music, unlimited storage (read : Cloud Computing);

    - services : teleworking, telemedicine, teleassistance, telemonitoring, online shopping;

    - QoS : PnP, Easy2Go, AlwaysOn.

    - avoid the Digital Divide : think Geography, Social, residential customers vs. enterprises...

    - issues to be fixed : evangelisation, training & education of networks' deployment professionals (comment : good to hear that from the operators themselves);

    - this represents more than 100,000 jobs (comment : good to hear that one too. I personally claim FTTH is a unique opportunity for new jobs and businesses creation, since months);

    - target FTTH France 2012 : 3-Mo new subscribers per year. Same as ADSL. (comment : on this one, I slightly disagree : ADSL is easy to deploy, because it uses an existing infrastructure. FTTH : you need to install at least the last mile).


    Thierry Houdart, Deployment Director, Axione (ETDE groupe Bouygues). an innovative solution for optical cable deployment :

    IMG_0512

    - install the optical cable along the low-voltage power distribution network;

    - speed : up to 1-km per day, by 2 technicians;

    - no traffic disruption (road, power, telecom, etc.);

    - capillarity : the fiber cable can go right to the end-user;

    - infrastructure' cost : divided by a factor of 2 to 3 compared to existing traditional solutions, e.g. buried cables;

    - green deployment : lower the CO2 emissions by 50%.

    My personal take (this time w/o brackets, because it's a pretty crucial point ;-) : I assume the cost of deployment with this new solution is less than 30€ per meter, all together - site survey, components, installation, etc. Let say we can achieve 15€/m : a fantastic quantum leap for FTTH. 


    This solution is a true paradigm shifting one anyway : the split of the cost of deployment is no longer 80% civil work and 20% components + instal; it is now 20% civil work and 80% components + installation. On top, it's an eco-friendly solution. Fiber finally goes Green. Brilliant.

    * I wish I could capture notes this way ;-)

    June 19, 2008

    The True Broadband Country

    At NXTcomm'08 yesterday, Verizon Communications Inc. announced its plan to offer 50-Mbit/s FiOS service to its FTTH Fiber To The Home customers (approx. 10 million households).
    Read LightReading article by
    Raymond McConville for more details.

    According to LightReading, " the 50-Mbit/s FiOS package will be offered for $90 per month in New York and Virginia, and at $140 per month in all other markets. The 50-Mbit/s downstream speeds will be coupled with the 20-Mbit/s upstream speeds Verizon began offering in October 2007."

    Writes McConville, " Verizon’s ultimate goal is to enable 100-Mbit/s downstream to each FiOS subscriber. The carrier says it has successfully conducted 100-Mbit/s field trials with employees, but hasn't yet set a timetable for a commercial launch.".

    Bokay. That's a truly compelling offer for the lucky FiOS' subscribers. But this is still an annoucement. For people - read Online Gamers, developers, entrepreneurs - looking for ultra-broadband access today, there's a place on Earth where they'll find 50Mbit/s upstream & downstream, immediately : Pau, France.

    For less than $53 per month, installation and first month for free*.

    Since decades, Australian and Californian surfers move to Biarritz for its beautiful spots. Why wouldn't the young *Net* generation, online gamers first, move to Pau for its blazzingly fast broadband access (and its wonderful landscapes in the meantime) ?

    ps : 100Mbit/s is also commercially available, since a couple of years...

    * by NeufCegetel, until June 30th.

    January 30, 2008

    The I-Take-Some-Time-For-Blogging On Fiber-To-The-Home Edition [01-30-08]

    Aworldoffiber_3

    Buddy Blogger Benoit Felten has published an outstanding interactive map on the actual situation of FTTH Fiber-To-The-Home networks worldwide. Worth the look (and bookmark) for all of us working in the FTTx field.

    FYI, here's the comment I just left :

    "About Pau : the 6,000 active subscribers milestone will be achieved within the next couple of weeks.

    Based on the map, which is pretty accurate thanks to Benoit's outstanding work, one can note that Pau is the ONLY european city south of the Loire river (means, where weather conditions are wonderful for most of us ;-) that offers up to 100Mbps connectivity to enterprise & residential customers."

    Go to the map here.

    January 22, 2008

    France 2.0 ?

    Buddy Blogger Benoit Felten has posted a very interesting article on the recent report from the French business owners/managers' Union MEDEF : "How to make of France a leader in the Digital Economy." (link and pdf document in french).

    January 14, 2008

    " Looking for IPTV? Then move to France. "

    This article, by Ray Le Maistre, International News Editor at the mandatory Light Reading, demonstrates once again that my country (France. You know, the little old piece of european land ruled by a superb showman) is truly leading the Telecoms World. But nobody here knows it, including our Emperor, ooops sorry, er. President, unfortunately.

    December 27, 2007

    2007 : The Digital Divide

    Thanks to The Broadband Hub, this highly interesting presentation by Dr. Robert Atkinson of The Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF). Although it's 100% USA-focused, I'm sure most of the ratios apply to the rest of the Western World too (incl. France of course and unfortunately).

    Among many key figures which help understanding the real situation in regards of Broadband access & use, the one about the perception of the Internet by Disabled persons (page 39) is quite questioning : the Internet, which normally should be considered as one of the most powerful tool to get Disabled people on board, is not. There is a good news behind the bad one : there is plenty of stuff still to be done for real innovation and entrepreneurship in this domain. "Change the World", right ?...

    ps: also found in this presentation, the Virginia Tech’s eCorridors Broadband Access Map, that enables real-time, bottomup broadband mapping. Got to find the same for Europe. Or create it if it doesn't exist yet !...

    December 26, 2007

    FTTH Market Overview, An Old Yet Useful Study

    Digging the Web for data on FTTx Fiber-To-The-Something key players in the Bay Area, I found this 125+ pages document. Quite an extensive overview of the FTTx markets, although the study is dated 2003. Considering that the Telecoms industry just recovered by the end of 2006, IMHO most of the informations you'll find in there are still pretty much relevant - simply change names when M&A apply.

    Ehrhardt & Ehrhardt consulting firm website here (in Dutch)

    November 01, 2007

    Fiber To The Home ? What For ?

    Ever wanted to know if Dan Brown was right ? Click here. But better have a real broadband connection *, Buddy !

    * it's worth a fiber-to-the-home subscription...

    October 27, 2007

    Anyone Willing To Relocate To France, American Fellows ?

    Dscf0011

    Earlier this week, US Telco Verizon  unveiled a Groundbreaking FiOS Internet Service. Claims the press release : " Verizon has changed the definition of "fast" with the introduction of a new, symmetrical Verizon FiOS Internet service for consumers, featuring an upload and download speed of up to 20 megabits per second (Mbps)."

    Wow. 20Mbps on fiber, that's quite a breakthrough. For the US. Because, not willing to play the Arrogant Frenchie, but... we've got 20Mbps DSL since years, allowing real TriplePlay services including HD-TV. Okay, DSL is not symmetrical. Guess what : we (well, the lucky guys in Paris or Pau and many other cities across the country) can get full-symmetrical 100Mbps on fiber since months.

    Take the city of Pau and its state-of-the-art 'Pau Broadband Country' broadband access network : 40,000+ homes passed, with 6,000+ active subscribers : NeufCegetel offers symmetrical 50Mbps   since May this year, whilst enterprises and high-end users enjoy a full 100Mbps connection.

    So, for those of you who seek bandwidth hungrily : take a one-way ticket to the 21st Century' (Broadband) Capital : Pau.


    Update 10-27-07 : I just replaced the previous photo for the one above. The reason is that the author of the original photo sent me a message today, claiming the copyright. He wanted me to mention his name, blahblahblah. Well, I would, should this famous photo be about a private thing or so. Fact is, the photo shows a public work on a public street, for a public community (a french city somewhere in the Alpes). In summary, the guy shot a picture of something paid by the French citizens, and he wants a copyright on it. Weird, IMHO. Especially at the Age of the Web 2.0.
    To reach this modest person, click here, er, nowhere : I haven't seen any "email me" button on his weblog, which is
    here.

    post-scriptum : the photo is mine, means I shot it myself some years ago, somewhere in Santa Rosa, California.
    I must apologize : I didn't ask the authorization to PacBell to take this picture. However, it's here for you, with no copyright. Enjoy it, copy it, save it, distribute it : it's free, because I decided to put it here, on my blog, on the Web, on the Internet.
    By the way, the PacBell folks did a great job repairing a fiber optics cable this beautiful morning. I wish the French telcos and I&M contractors be able to deliver the same level of quality. But that's another story.

    October 09, 2007

    Exaflood ? Exaflood.

    Did you know that by 2010, 20 typical households will generate as much traffic as the entire internet moved in 1995 ? This fact, and much more, on this video.

    See the video on the original website here
    More on Internet Innovation later this week.

    September 26, 2007

    Building Fiber-To-The-Home Vs. Building Homes

    395518_1678

    Heard from Mr Dominque Paret, IT Development Director at the Region of Loire (you know, Saint-Etienne, their Soccer Team, their Schlumberger/Wavetek/Acterna/JDSU/Who'sNext? Fiber Optics Test R&D & Manufacturing Plant, etc...)  last week at the Odebit Conference in Paris, this true fact - for France in this case, however I'm sure it also apply to many other countries in Europe : when you build a new road, you know the traffic will double the next year AND you know there will be a new college within the next five years. Simply because people have moved all along that new road.

    According to Mr Paret, this is a well known and well mastered model (that's why we have those ENA and X and Mines things ;-). The problem with fiber is that there is no such a model at the moment : nobody can tell for sure what will be the outcomes of a FTTx network  five years after its completion.

    Shall YOU have heard or experienced or built such a model yourself (i.e. in/for your community), please don't hesitate to share it !

    September 25, 2007

    Chattanooga Choo Choo

    Thanks to the weekly delivery of my YouTube' subscriptions, just discovered this video from the Electric Power Board, a.k.a. EPB, of the city of Chattanooga, Tennessee.

    A Chattanooga' s public utility, EBP launched a Fiber To The Home initiative back in August this year. In the official announcement, Harold DePriest, EPB’s President and CEO said : ”A Fiber to the Home infrastructure will help ensure a growing supply of jobs for our children – and our grandchildren. Fiber to the Home will be as critical to Chattanooga’s quality of life as electric power was in the 1930s or the Interstate system was in the 1950s. On top of that, it will help make electricity in our area even more reliable and affordable.

    What makes this initiative an interesting case study for the cities and local collectivities wondering if a FTTH network is worth the investments : it's a 160,000 inhabitants town, with a local economy that includes a diversified mix of manufacturing and service industries, four colleges, and several preparatory schools. According to Wikipedia : Chattanooga is the corporate headquarters of many mid-sized firms including bicycle manufacturer Litespeed  (looking for a titanium bike ? there you go ;-) and sustainable design company Tricycle Inc.. Many businesses in the banking and insurance industries run their operations from Chattanooga. The city is also home of large branch offices of  AT&T and UBS. In summary, Chattanooga is pretty similar to lots of european cities, take many Germany, UK, and France for instance, which might benefit from Fiber-To-The-Home too...

    Back to DePriest announcement :

    A recent study by a group of professors at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga and Tennessee State University suggests these economic and social benefits alone could top $600 million for Chattanooga over ten years.
    Another study, verified by the Electric Power Research Institute, indicates that Fiber to the Home will also allow EPB to make significant improvements to its electric power distribution system. The infrastructure can help the company locate problems earlier, restore outages more quickly and gain efficiencies that are not currently available. It will also allow EPB to provide more tools to help customers reduce their power usage and cost.
    The value to electric power customers in the form of reduced outages, energy conservation and other efficiencies is estimated at roughly $300 million over ten years, bringing Fiber to the Home’s total value to the community to nearly $1 billion over the course of ten years.

    Quite an interesting ROI, right ?...

    See the video - and much much more - directly on EPB' s website here.
    Read why the such an initiative always generates FUD here and here.

    More on the lovely city of Chattanooga  here. Among many other key factors to make a city a nice place to live in, this :  "The city supports a downtown shuttle fleet of zero-emission electric buses -  manufactured here in Chattanooga - for commuters and visitors wishing to park-and-ride."

    Post-Scriptum : for those of you who are too young to remember, here's why the title, and a pretty cool video to illustrate it.

    September 21, 2007

    GPON Deployment Forum

    The Fiber Optics Industry keeps accelerating its pace towards  full recovery and  bright  sustainable future. The forthcoming "GPON Deployment Forum" organized by IIR Telecoms is a must-attend for all of you involved with FTTH Fiber To The Home networks.

    GPON Deployment Forum is to be held Mon 03 Dec  - Thu 06 Dec 2007 at the Moevenpick Hotel, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

    Event detailled presentation here.
    Event brochure here.
    Registration here.

    September 19, 2007

    BroadBand Business Models 2.0

    UK-based Telco 2.0 is running a market survey on the future business models in the Broadband arena. To participate, click here.
    My take : IP, FTTx, and Web 2.0 are going to change the whole Telecoms landscape, with Telcos and ISPs and others to make money on services rather than on infrastructure.

    Thanks Benoit for the heads up.

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