gunnerfitzy wrote: » Will the fact that I am approx 2KM (and quite rural) from the exchange mean that it could be months/years after the first FTTH service goes live on my exchange before I will get FTTH? Or will this make no difference and I may get FTTH soon after my exchange goes live for FTTH?
The Cush wrote: » It should be available to you about the time they run the fibre cable past your house
gunnerfitzy wrote: » Understandably so. If I may rephrase... Will the roll out from the exchange be in planned stages working out from the exchange AFTER it goes live - in this case the closer the property is to the exchange the sooner it will get the service OR will all the relevant cabling be put in place PRIOR to the exchange going live - in this case all properties on the routes can seek a connection when the exchange goes live ?
Gonzo wrote: » this is something I been thinking about since the announcement about rural FTTH was first made, but with 1 rural exchange in county Wexford already taking orders, it appears that only one segment of 1 blue line is taking orders while the rest of the blue line and other blue lines in the same area are not taking orders yet. So it seems they made part a certain route and do that first before moving onto others. One radial route could get done much faster than another radial route even if the person is living close to the village/town/exchange. We will know more in a month's time when a few more exchanges are taking orders. Ballyfarnan in County Leitrim and Athboy in County Meath will be live 28th September, or at least part of them will be.
damienirel wrote: » Very interesting. I wonder why they would do it that way? It would be even more of a hassle moving from exchange area to exchange area and then coming back again to finish it off. But I guess it probably looks better on paper and word of mouth would help on it's uptake - very interesting indeed. Also assuming that this is the way they're doing it I presume they knock of the potentially busier lines first(this is good news for me if that is the case). I'm hopeful my line starts early 2017 even though it's one of the 2017-2020 exchange areas. No flies on this new/old incumbent operator!
pegasus1 wrote: » I was talking with a friend of mine last night who was high up in eir...he was saying that even someone in eir who is high up does not know when anything is happening or even to get a blue line extended a few more houses beyond where it stops... Its only a small team, 20ish people, who know anything at all, as they are the ones planning it...
ED E wrote: » If your friend is in retail then he's not allowed to know, per regulation.
damienirel wrote: » When will I get fibre internet? - Sorry that's classified information.
long_b wrote: » Surely this "connect one blue line at a time then move to different exchange" would make a nonsense of the scheduled dates though?
Estimated date for first Live FTTH Fibre Services is...
Gonzo wrote: » hopefully it doesn't end up that way, I can't see how its practical. Doing entire exchanges in clusters would make much more sense. Dunshaughlin, Batterstown and Ratoath are all down for Winter 2014 and all located beside each other and blue lines cross from one exchange into the next. Hopefully all 3 will get completed at same time before Christmas, would make sense to cluster exchanges like this together.
Allison Puny Appetite wrote: » Not a hope I believe.
Gonzo wrote: » unfortunately your probably right, there are at least 4 or 5 exchanges per county for quite a few counties listed for Winter 2016, that's alot of exchanges, no way are they gonna be complete by end of Winter, at least half of them will still be waiting to be starting in Spring. It probably will be one blue line or a segment of 1 blue line active and then eventually they will finish the rest. This is just an estimation, by December we should know more and really get to see how much of each exchange is getting completed. So far we have very little to go on other than some ground work and a cluster of houses live in a rural village of County Wexford.
Allison Puny Appetite wrote: » Yes it is unfortunate but I just don't see where the incentive is for Openeir to complete this rollout on time. Siro have proven to be a damp squib of a competitor. ENET have no infrastructure. All the while in the near future there will be subsidies provided to connect these premises. I believe it is just too tempting for Openeir to holdout for the NBP. All just my opinion of course.
KOR101 wrote: » The one argument against this is that Openair are, in part, trying to provide themselves with a basis for a legal complaint should they lose out on the NBP, and it's also helpful to have the threat of this to boost their NBP chances. To have that legal basis they really need to have a concrete, evidence supported, rollout under way.
Allison Puny Appetite wrote: » A few premises here, a few there.
KOR101 wrote: » Well that's a really weak basis for a legal complaint. Also, it is absolutely clear that Eir is presently pivoting from their FTTC programme onto the FTTH one. I think the available teams will simply be set to work on FTTH. It would even be helpful to Eir if they could demonstrate clearly that they can rollout 600km a month. That might completely knockout SIRO.
KOR101 wrote: » It would even be helpful to Eir if they could demonstrate clearly that they can rollout 600km a month. That might completely knockout SIRO.
Gonzo wrote: » That's very true, the pace at which Siro is developing, is far too slow, 3 towns in 2 years and they have what, another 30 towns in their list, at the current pace it will take them 12 to 13 years to complete their first phase. If Eir really rollout 600km per month they will destroy Siro.
rob808 wrote: » siro using ESB network which is dangerous because of the electric power cables.were as Eir just using normal poles it doesn't surprise me siro taking longer with it rollout.There doing 50 towns looking at there site it 7 towns probably 8 by end of this year.
Gonzo wrote: » I didn't think Siro were using esb cables? I thought that idea was put to bed years ago? I presume they using normal fiber just like Eir?
David McCourt wrote: We've built more homes (broadband connections) in the last six months than they have in the years they've had their Siro partnership.
ED E wrote: Get Vodafone Simply Fibre BB and keep Sky. If you take TV from Eir or Vodafone you're shaving 20Mb off your line for a worse product.