damienirel wrote: » Thought there were a bunch of exchanges going live on friday last?? Nada on the techbytes page. No updates on the map either it seems from a quick look - don't they know we're watching them very closely? - I suppose they haven't given a sh1te before now, that's not likely to change.
Shyboy wrote: » Thanks Plodder, another thing that I will have to try tonight.
Shyboy wrote: » They sent me a replacement yesterday and I am now getting a constant 900MB+ speed on my 1000MB package...:)
Gonzo wrote: » Now we need to see speedtests, pingtests, images! It's all up to you. Wouldn't want to count on me I could be months more waiting.
damienirel wrote: » Either boards isn't very popular or very few people getting ftth. This thread is starting to stagnate, I was expecting a load of posts on here with speedtests etc. Are open eir missing all the targets - me think so.
[Deleted User] wrote: » I think the fact that this is a technical forum and many posters are simply not interested in the technical side of getting FTTH to come here. All many people are interested in is getting it and using it, they're not interested in following the progress of the rollout. Just look at any of the road construction threads to understand what I mean, 100,000s of road users and only about a dozen or so posters following the construction progress.
lucernarian wrote: » Considering the largest road project under construction right now in the state is a motorway from a point between Athenry and Galway to somewhere past Tuam, a town of 10,000 people or so, is it any wonder the road building threads are quiet? A 500 million PPP project for that, and we can't link up Cork and Limerick or even just bypass the villages on the N20 with a dual carriageway... I think plenty of folks would be coming to talk about it if there was a lot of people affected by it. But eircom haven't been promoting their work mucjlh as they've gone along, many areas (e.g. Brittas Bay) had several completed sections in November yet are launching only soon.
irishchris wrote: » Or to combine both threads, I have been denied ftth due to that motorway between athenry and Tuam (the n17 bypass). my access road to our culdesac was cutoff by the motorway and was initially on the blue line for ftth whilst the new access road has not been added for ftth. The original road has now gone live and all houses on that road as far as the motorway have ftth available whilst the ten houses after it are in limbo and surrounded on all sides by speeds of 1gb/s whilst we have less than a 1mb line available :-(
pegasus1 wrote: » Has the new motorway build been progressed to an extent that ducting is laid on a flyover or underpass?.. Perhaps when it is they will come out to do your section...
Gwynston wrote: » Eh? That would would require forward thinking and cooperative planning between two completely separate, huge, complex infrastructure projects. Can't see that happening... :rolleyes:
murphaph wrote: » Yeah I'd be amazed if the 2 disjointed sections of road weren't linked by ducting. It would be a very bad job if they weren't.
mdfire wrote: » The fibre stopped 250m short of me on our lane. We have the crazy situation of there being 2 fibre boxes each of which has four ports. The eir rep told me that only one of the 6 properties served by it wanted fibre broadband. So there is 7 spare ports just down the lane and i cant get it. Is there another country in the western world where this would be allowed to happen?
SteveD92 wrote: » Our installation for FTTH was scheduled for today. Engineer was on site and once he went to connect it he realised the code on the box which was running the fibre from the road to the house was different to what he had been issued and couldn't complete the install. Called Eir and they said it was an isolated issue and the guy on the phone hadn't heard of it happening before and had to leave it with him to sort out before getting another installation date. Said it would have to be manually fixed (whatever that means?) Any idea as to what the code has to do with it?
Johnboy1951 wrote: » Yes. This is a commercial roll out and there is no onus on open/eir to offer their service to anyone. When the NBP rolls out you should then have some right to expect a connection. Yes it is disappointing; even frustrating, but it is up to open/eir to make the service available or not, at their discretion. The sooner the NBP begins, the better for all of us. At least we can expect some responsibility to be taken when the roll out is being supported by the NBP.
pegasus1 wrote: » This is the thing each house/premises gets a 100% dedicated port so down the road - time wise - one can 100% get connected...tis the NBP you will have to wait on..