lawlerp wrote: » The updated fibre rollout map is now saying winter 2016/17 and the exchange status is now "Commenced". I wonder how many exchanges have had their date changed from winter 2016 to winter 2016/2017 have had their status changed from planned to commenced?
lawlerp wrote: » I'm just after checking the status of our exchange on the efibre roll out map. The map shows two messages when I hover the mouse over the exchange - "Fibre Broadband Cabinet is planned for this location" and "Estimated date for first Live FTTH Fibre Services with speeds up to 1000Mb/s is Winter 2016" I As the blue line passes my house, My reading is that this means that I'll be able to get 1gb fibre when the work is completed?. Is that right? I live about 4kms from the exchange. Cheers
plodder wrote: » Depends how you look at it. Mine was FTTH and fibre services Winter 2016. The dot was blue (planned) but is since today green (build commenced) and Winter 2016 was always ambiguous. Did it mean Jan/Feb or Nov/Dec of 2016? I always suspected it meant Winter 2016/17.
Estimated date for first Live Fibre Services is mid/late 2016. Estimated date for first Live FTTH Fibre Services with speeds up to 1000Mb/s is Winter 2016/17
Allison Puny Appetite wrote: » The map has been updated today. There may be a sign of some project slippage. My exchange had been listed as: It is now listed as: I suspect all former Winter 2016 exchanges have been given the extended deadline.http://www.openeir.ie/Our_Network/
Estimated date for first Live FTTH Fibre Services with speeds up to 1000Mb/s is Winter 2016.
Estimated date for first Live FTTH Fibre Services with speeds up to 1000Mb/s is Winter 2016/17
daraghwal wrote: » EDIT: Am I right in assuming that everyone on a blue line is to get FTTH by 2020 from eir?
Allison Puny Appetite wrote: » No, I don't believe that you can read into the rollout like that. To understand the map you have to look at the timeline of eir announcements in relation to FTTH:4th June 2015 - (then) Eircom announce 300000 homes to benefit from FTTH as reported here3rd March 2016 - openeir announce the locations of the first 100000 premises to get FTTH by March 2017 here However if you compare the graphic in Adrian Weckler's report with the March 2016 announcement they are quite different. For example in my own county out of 11 areas announced in June 2015 only 4 made it into the March 2016 announcement of 15 exchange areas. I believe the message is related to the June 2015 announcement. All the areas announced in my county in 2015 have the message but as I have already stated a lot of these areas have been overlooked with regard to the first 100000 so I believe you cannot expect them to be included in the next 100000.
daraghwal wrote: » For some exchanges that are not part of the first 100,000 homes but are part of eir’s 300,000 blue line scheme it says “XXX premises in this exchange can now access up to XXMb/s fibre broadband. open eir’s FTTH 2017-2020 rollout programme with speeds up to 1Gb/s includes premises in this exchange area.” For others that are part of the remaining 200,000 it just says XXX premises in this exchange can now access up to XXMb/s fibre broadband.” Could this be an indication of what exchanges will be part of the next 100,000 homes or is it just the way the map is done? My local exchange info was updated in april just saying people can now access up to 70Mb/s fibre broadband. It is part of the blue line scheme but doesn’t say anything about FTTH!
open eir's FTTH 2017-2020 rollout programme with speeds up to 1Gb/s includes premises in this exchange area.
daraghwal wrote: » I realise that but I am wondering about the FTTH element. On many exchanges it give the FTTC info then the FTTH info. On my own exchange and many others it just gives FTTC info. I am wondering is this an indication of what exchanges are part of the second 100,000 to be done or is it just the way they are updating the map? The two situations I mentioned above are both FTTC live at the moment and are due for upgrade to FTTH as part of the 300,000 eir are going to do. Neither are part of the first 100,000.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » From what I understand that up to 70 or 100 refers to lines connected to cabs that have gone live. Other premises which are further out will get FTTH from the same exchange.
Red Alert wrote: » Thanks for posting that! What's the IPTV situation? I don't have it but g/f may want it.
ED E wrote: » (as long as you dont want their IPTV).
daraghwal wrote: » Is that file the pictures are taken from available somewhere? I can't find it.
The Cush wrote: » Install pics posted here last Nov - http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showthread.php?p=97793128#post97793128, http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showthread.php?p=97842227#post97842227 This from an open-eir document previously
Red Alert wrote: » How are they terminating the FTTH?
Red Alert wrote: » How are they terminating the FTTH? I presume they supply an optical interface but can I still use my own router via ethernet to it, or are they doing a "Virgin Media" on it and insisting you use their router?
ED E wrote: » And yet if you both pay €50, €70 pays for your line and €30 for theirs. If it were fair, you'd pay more.
daraghwal wrote: » Really not fair for many people in rural Ireland, like me who are on a connection that at night is lucky to obtain 0.9 Mb/s to have to pay the same price over 2 years as someone getting 150Mb/s with FTTH. Drives me mad. Someone with a 100Mb/s service pays even less!! :mad:
fergus1001 wrote: » Where do I go to check my line ??
ED E wrote: Exchange Code: Unknown DSL Enabled: Yes - 12 MB NGB Enabled: No Fibre Enabled: Yes - 40 MB LLU Enabled: No