chewed wrote: » What I can't understand is that a village 4km from my village has a Blue (Fibre Services Planned) status. When I click this it states:Estimated date for first Live FTTH Fibre Services with speeds up to 1000Mb/s is Winter 2016/ Spring 2017 But, in my village, which by the way is much bigger in size, has a Green (Fibre Build Commenced) Status. When I click this it statesEstimated date for first Live FTTH Fibre Services with speeds up to 1000Mb/s is H2'2017 How can a village that has work already started (I have seen the vans laying cables) have a later rollout date than an area where no work has commenced?
daraghwal wrote: » Was in openeir tent at ploughing. My exchange is live for FTTC and FTTH 2017-2020. I asked about the map and he said don't mind the 2017-2020, every blue line will be done by mid 2017... The employees don't even know what they're talking about
Johnboy1951 wrote: » I would love to believe HE knew what he was talking about
Gonzo wrote: » where's he getting that from lol, even Eir themselves don't admit that. This first phase is taking along time to even get going proper. Sure there is a few small exchanges planned for 28th of September but only a portion of those exchanges is due to go live and there is 1 for mid October, after that who knows. It's a huge undertaking and they clearly don't have enough manpower to complete 100,000 during 2017 when you factor in they still have 64 cabs to finish, there will be winter storms and other work for them to do at same time. There is months of waiting between each phase of development, thats enough to tell that the manpower has to spread itself widely from one area to the next.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » Yet openeir seem to believe they can deliver ....... which to me means delivering the fibre roll out which is separate to the individual connections to homes. I suppose it is possible to have all the fibre laid by openeir within the time-frame ..... but it does look exceedingly unlikely IMO.
Gonzo wrote: » I think the problem is they were over confident with their initial March 2017 completion of 100,000 premises. We already know that target is no more and some of those premises wont be even looked at till next Autumn. I am not bashing Eir, they are the only ones who are doing something to fix the rural problem, it's just that the time frame didn't add up when they have lots of other stuff going on at same time against the sheer number of KM's of fiber to be laid over a relatively short period of time.Also look at the opposition, Siro have completed 3/4 towns in 2 years with another 40+ to go by end of 2018, not a chance they are going to meet their target either. It's nearly October and there has been very little action when you look at the amount of premises/km's of fiber that has to be laid. A few months ago I would've thought several places be completed by now and that we would be seeing reports all over the place at this stage. Let's see what happens between now and mid December. I think it would be a safe bet that if your area is not on the live list by end of November, your looking at 2017 before going live. Fingers crossed we see a huge increase in action over the next week or 2 for the Winter 2016 exchanges.
Gonzo wrote: » This would at least show that you are in line for getting fiber at some stage soon, rather than just looking at a blue line on a map hoping for the best.
daraghwal wrote: » It was also quite funny when they got in a tech guy to set fibrerollout.ie as the homepage on internet explorer because someone closed the browser. They were like ooooooh ok. That's how to do it... In fairness yes, they are doing really good work regarding rural fibre but the people sent to the ploughing didn't have a clue.
digiman wrote: » 99% of the homes will be done within 3 years according to Caroline Lenihan. Let's just say that they can roll out the network to 900k homes in 3 years and there is 25% take up then you need to also connect 333 homes a day. I would think that a lot of these homes will be very difficult to install and could take a couple of days for some homes to be connected and probably on average about 1 day for a lot or private dwelling houses. It's really difficult to see where the manpower is going to come from especially as we are not the only country who are currently doing this as you will also have SIRO doing their plan and with VM also talking fibre in new builds it just doesn't add up to me.
rob808 wrote: » digiman wrote: » 99% of the homes will be done within 3 years according to Caroline Lenihan. Let's just say that they can roll out the network to 900k homes in 3 years and there is 25% take up then you need to also connect 333 homes a day. I would think that a lot of these homes will be very difficult to install and could take a couple of days for some homes to be connected and probably on average about 1 day for a lot or private dwelling houses. It's really difficult to see where the manpower is going to come from especially as we are not the only country who are currently doing this as you will also have SIRO doing their plan and with VM also talking fibre in new builds it just doesn't add up to me. The take up will be alot higher than 25% in rural Ireland it be more like 100% since the speeds are slow.It be lower in urban areas that has FTTC and cable were the uptake might be slower.
rob808 wrote: » The take up will be alot higher than 25% in rural Ireland it be more like 100% since the speeds are slow.It be lower in urban areas that has FTTC and cable were the uptake might be slower.
digiman wrote: » I obviously don't know exactly what it will be, 25% was just to show as an example that even at that rate her numbers are not realistic. But you also have to factor in that people will be tied Into existing contracts with wisps, lots of homes won't see the need for it, some people won't want new cables run into their homes, and there's is an older generation of people who don't have internet already and have no interest at all in it. The rollout also won't be fully complete so 225k connections to fibre in rural Ireland would be huge witching the first 3 years. We will never get to 100% or even close to it in first 3 years, I would think if there was 50% take up it would be a huge success and that means 666 connections a day!!