Turfwarrior wrote: » Crews spent 2 days in the area putting up fibre a week ago but left the last 500mtrs unwired,no splice boxes yet either. Local exchange due to go live today. Can't understand why the crews don't finish an area and then move on,bad management of man power IMO
Jpmarn wrote: » The way it is at the moment it will be probably mid 2019 when Eir completes its 300k rollout.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » Was there confirmation of that 20 mil? I missed it if yes. eir, from the very beginning have played 'a blinder'. I have to admire their commercial strategy. They should end up with all they could ever have hoped for, and probably more. I do not blame eir in any way for doing the best they can from their commercial perspective. I do blame whoever was on the other side of negotiations ..... our civil servants and possibly the politicians involved. It is my understanding that, for the most part, the minister will take strong advice from his department. That puts the ball squarely in the civil servants' court. In any case it is now a done deal. eir have played a marvellous game and are set up for decades to come ..... unless we get a real surprise and Siro get both NBP contracts.
damienirel wrote: » Problem is eir are only being fined 20 mill for late delivery of the 300k and no doubt their lawyers will have a get out of jail free card ready. Once they have the NBP in the bag then the shareholders get their pay day. It's a cosy little setup.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » Hardly delays that have not been apparent since the eir 300k deal was finalised. eir could not possibly do the 300k and at the same time do any of the NBP ...... and they are the front runner for the contract/s. Even if eir were not to get any NBP contract, it will be 2019 before either of the others could really get going, as the contracts will not be awarded before mid-2018 it seems.
Allison Puny Appetite wrote: » The front page of today's Irish Times is reporting more delays to the NBP with apparent confirmation that no connections will be made until Eir finish their 300K project. With the opposition parties now ganging up on Denis Naughten over his handling of the NBP there is no incentive for him to question Eir's claims of passed premises.
Jpmarn wrote: » Listening to the radio this morning, are they having problems purchasing fibre cables and splice boxes? Such procurement problems may be causing delays. It probably causing work in my exchange area to stall.
naughto wrote: » How is the rool out going for ye in castlebar are virgin going to take some of your customers they moving at a very fast rate around the town
Westnet: Paul wrote: » The APQ file we get is for the whole country. We are only set up to provide services from certain exchanges, but we can get set up on new exchanges at short notice.
damienirel wrote: » Enet and siro don't have a chance of winning nbp the fine for eir is a slap on the wrist worrying about the lies printed in the Irish Times is pointless. We should be querying the people in charge - politicians like Naughten letting the people of Ireland down yet again.
Westnet: Paul wrote: » I really can't, sorry. I'm pretty sure I'm under NDA as far as the contents of APQ files go.
Allison Puny Appetite wrote: » Thanks Paul. Can you confirm or deny that you have received an APQ file with ~70000 premises that have FTTH available? I understand if you cannot comment and I don't wish to get you or your company into any trouble.
joe_99 wrote: » All those 70k homes are on a pre-qualification file that is provided to all operators. It allows them to identify potential customers. If the 70k figure is incorrect then operators will soon discover it and open eir will be in serious trouble with ComReg for feeding them false information.
A per Operator file confirming the available premises where Orders can be issued.
damienirel wrote: » What pre-qualification do you mean when the fibre only needs to pass premises not actually be connectable? I reckon eir have out foxed just about everybody at this stage. The 20 mill fine for late delivery is a forgone conclusion as David Brent would say. It's a slap on the wrist for the company that will be eventually rolling out country wide - it's disgusting that the government is so indifferent to any of this. Naughton is a complete failure.
"Premises Passed" means for: (a) a wireline network, when a Premises for which the wireline network has a Distribution Point sufficiently close to that Premises such that High Speed Broadband Services can be provisioned for that Premises; and eir has listed the status of the Premises as 'ready for order' on the eir NGA Plan File.
"eir NGA Plan File" means the file issued by eir on a monthly basis to industry, as required by the Regulator, which indicates eir's most up to date information relating to the availability of eir's High Speed Broadband Services and forecasted dates for future developments, and includes the file known as the Advance PreQualification File.
d31b0y wrote: » Salesman did call around about 2 weeks ago...
d31b0y wrote: » Failed install this morning. Eir took order. Openeir arranged install. KN guy came out. No infrastructure in place in my area. He couldn't tell me when it would be live. Pointed out where the lines likely are (in the ground, buried) and just told me to keep an eye out for work being done. Said it was the same situation in a lot of my village at the moment. KN guy was a nice guy. Answered some questions I had. I'll need to run a new duct down to my house for the install but he said don't bother doing that until I see work done. Ominous! Coolgreany area, Inch exchange. Fibre rollout map text has changed since I last checked it;