On 2016-03-31 19:38, Baldur Norddahl wrote:
You will find that total data download per month is unrelated to service speed except for very slow service.
Yep. Netflix still takes 7mbps even if you are on a 1gbps service. However, with families, higher speed allow more family members to be active at same time and this could begin to have visible impact (if not already). Note that a rural coop deployed FTTP for their territory, but only offer 40mbps max subscription because they can't afford the transit from the single incumbent who offers transit in their region. So I assume that with under 1000, service speed starts to matter when sizing the transit capacity.
If you have too few users the pattern becomes chaotic.
My question has to do with how does one determine that theshold where you start to get more chaotic patterns and need more capacity per customer than if you had over 1000 customers ? My goal is to suggest some standard to prevent gross underprovisioning by ISPs who win subsidies to deploy in a region.
From what I am reading, the old standard (contention ratio of 50:1 for residential service) is no longer valid as a single metric especially for smaller deployments with higher speeds.
For the last mile, GPON is easy as it is essentually 32 homes per GPON link. For cable, the CRTC would have its own numbers for number of homes per node. (BTW, Australia's NBN V2.0 plans to have 600 homes per node since they don't have budget to split nodes). But for fixed wireless and satellite, there needs to be some standard to provent gross oversubscription. Say you have a fixed wirelss tower with enough spectrum to broadcast 40mbps. How do you calculate how many customers at average speed of 15mbps can comfortably fit on this antenna ? I realise existing ISPs use monthly statistics of 95th percentile to see how much capacity is used and whether the link has reached saturation and there should be s stop sell or get more spectrum. But from a regulatory point of view, in evaluating a bid to serve a region, the regulator would need rules to establish whether the bidder will be able to serve the population with whatever solution the bidder proposes. Does the FCC have any such rules in the USA, or are its broadband deployment subsidies only based on the ISP marketing speeds that meet the FCC's definition of "broadband" ? (and no concern about whether those will be delivered or not).