On Sat, Nov 26, 2005 at 07:53:32AM -0500, Robert E.Seastrom wrote:
Henry Yen <henry@AegisInfoSys.com> writes:
In (at least) the Long Island, NY market, Verizon FTTH/FIOS installers physically cut and decommission the copper upon fiber install. Bye-bye DSL competition. Since they won't bring back the copper even you don't like the FIOS service, it's permanent. ISTR that the fiber doesn't carry the same restrictions on Verizon as copper did, which is a big incentive (for them) to roll out FIOS that way.
My understanding is that there is a fairly small number of pots circuits (2?) that they can bring in over the B-PON, and that moreover ISDN BRI and hicap (eg. repeatered or HDSL DS1 service) are entirely incompatible.
In this market, it's four.
In Virginia, there's anecdotal evidence that suggests that they'll leave the copper upon request, and won't even try to remove it if you still need it for service.
Guess you know what to do. :)
Complain louder? I have more than four POTS lines, and Verizon's response was "then you can't have FIOS" (even after offering them to pay for an additional phone line on top of the FIOS service). There's anecdotal evidence in this market that they will absolutely refuse to do FIOS unless the existing copper is cut (in my case, since they can't do that, they simply refuse to allow FIOS). Ironic, as the FIOS OC-12 runs through my backyard, about 45 feet from the house... -- Henry Yen Aegis Information Systems, Inc. Senior Systems Programmer Hicksville, New York