murphaph wrote: » Ireland will leapfrog Germany in every metric in a couple of years.
Allison Puny Appetite wrote: » Germany only recently got on the ranking list from the FTTH Council Europe meaning that they have at least 1% household penetration. Ireland hasn't made the list. Yet!http://wireandcablenews.crugroup.com/wireandcablenews/news/free/2016/02/4596272/
Johnboy1951 wrote: » Fibre or cable or even copper tel line ....... speed, reliability and price are what concerns consumers, and not the tech used to deliver.
damienirel wrote: » Yes - based on the promises of Eir and Siro at the moment that would be true. But I wouldn't hold my breath. We just have to wait and see if we ever get on that graph. But at the moment you're ignoring completely that ze Germans are already on it, contrary to your anecdotal evidence.
damienirel wrote: » That seems to be the approach Germany is taking by the looks of it. But the problem is technical, Fibre is by far and away the superior technology, ignoring that now while speed demands are met via copper could prove to be very short sighted.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » As we know it is not being ignored in Ireland, but that does not mean that, for instance, there would be anything real to be gained by replacing cable with FTTH, at this time ...... and possibly for the medium term also. So those households served by cable will not be included in the figures on that site, yet they have more than adequate service without FTTH.
murphaph wrote: » The fact is that Germany should, by rights, have far superior broadband to Ireland given the population densities and settlement patterns in each country. Germany has no one off dispersed housing problem to worry about but the small villages generally have terrible internet here. These places in Ireland now all seem to have FTTC. The cities here have mediocre broadband. Vectoring is just starting to make some inroads but as I said, our former home in central Berlin could only get 50/10, which is distinctly average for a developed capital city. Cable operators here offer up to 100/10, miles away from what Virgin offer in Irish cities and cable is much less widely available here anyway. our town of 12k has no cable whatsoever. I personally consider that Germany is at the bottom of that list as a disgrace for a wealthy country like this, with excellent preconditions for broadband provision!
damienirel wrote: » I don't disagree - but where we have the opportunity to go straight to fibre - i.e. areas that have inadequate or no broadband we should be doing that, or it should be already done - giving us a place on that league table.
murphaph wrote: » We are doing exactly that. Eir is rolling out FTTH to 300k of the 700k premises that can't currently get fast broadband. The NBP will take care of the remainder, also through FTTH in all likelihood.
legocrazy505 wrote: » The pace at which Eir are going at to get just 300k done makes it look like it could be 2025-2030 before it's finished. By which point a future government could screw over the remaining 700k households not on the blue lines.
damienirel wrote: » Yeah the 2018 blue line completion date is pie in the sky alright. For now anyways we're not on any league table for fibre. And like lego said it could be years before anything happens. I wouldn't count any chickens just yet.
murphaph wrote: » What do you mean though? Stuff is happening. It's also not going to be a linear roll out because as crews gain experience they get faster. More crews are being hired. Existing techs are being retrained for fibre from copper. As more rural customers move to IP based telephony over fibre there will be fewer maintenance call outs, freeing up even more crews to do fibre installs. Even if it's 2019 or 2020 it will be an incredible achievement.
legocrazy505 wrote: » The only way we'll know is once we get over the winter months I think. Once we are into next year we'll either see the slow progress continuing or a nice increase in the number of houses that get passed every month. Even then the winter so far hasn't been dreadful.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » I don't consider the progress slow at all. There is a lot of work to be done prior to the fibre being strung out. Most of the manpower is concentrated on that work. We should have a better idea of progress by mid-February I think.
Gonzo wrote: » The fibre being stung out is the quick bit! The preparation, especially the ducting is the slow bit where manholes have to be created, old manholes reopened and ditches, fields and even parts of road side gardens and drives dug if the pre existing ducting is there. From what I've seen the ducting is about 60% of the work. Once they get past the ducting and onto the poles it's really fast.
Gonzo wrote: » lads are outside my front gate wiring up:) They must have started really early as they are almost finished!
Shyboy wrote: » Eir are still telling me that I cannot get FTTH as yet, although the Eir phone line /Eir Code checker is now telling me I can. I know everything is done in our village but I would say the whole exchange area is not fully done yet. Surely the Eir website should not be giving me the option of ordering it until the exchange is launched? I can place the order, but then they ring me back and say it is not available to me as yet... Frustrating...:mad:
long_b wrote: » Gonzo, we demand photos. Tomorrow will do
Gonzo wrote: » sorry guys was away with the family all weekend, left while the guys were finishing up on Saturday morning. Photos will have to wait till tomorrow, lads were back on the road this morning while I was away. The coil of cable on the pole beside my gate is no longer visible, the splice box was fitted so the cable must be inside that? I've yet to take a walk down the road to look at what was done since saturday morning!.