Joel Esler wrote:
On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 3:06 PM, Jack Bates<jbates@brightok.net> wrote:
jim deleskie wrote:
I agree we should all be telling the FCC that broadband is fiber to the home. If we spend all kinds of $$ to build a 1.5M/s connection to homes, it's outdated before we even finish.
I disagree. I much prefer fiber to the curb with copper to the home. Of course, I haven't had a need for 100mb/s to the house which I can do on copper, much less need for gigabit.
Pro's for copper from curb:
1) power over copper for POTS 2) Majority of cuts occur on customer drops and copper is more resilient to splicing by any monkey.
I have fiber to the home. I can't imagine going back to "cable modems" now. eww..
The problem that the FCC faces is making a realistic definition that can apply to the whole US and not just cities. How does fiber (home or curb) figure in the rural sections of the country?