Why on earth would you do this with PON instead of active Ethernet? What GPON vendor have you found where their technical staff will tell you this is a good architecture for their PON offering? On Sat, Feb 2, 2013 at 1:40 PM, Jay Ashworth <jra@baylink.com> wrote:
Ok, here's a rough plan assembled from everyone's helpful contributions and arguing all week, based on the City with which, if I'm lucky, I might get a job Sometime Soon. :-) (I'm sure some of you can speculate which city it might be, but Please Don't.)
It's about 3 square miles, and has about 8000 passings, the majority of which are single or double family residential; a sprinkling of multi-tenant, about a dozen city facilities, and a bunch of retail multi-unit business.
Oh, and a college campus, commuter.
My goal is to fiber the entire city, with a 3-pr tail on each single-family residence (or unit of a duplex/triplex), and N*1.5 on multi-tenant business buildings, and probably about N*1.1 or so on large multi-unit residences. Empty lots, if we have any, will also get a 3-pr tail, in a box.
My plan is for the city to contract out the design and build of the physical plant, with each individual pair home-run to a Master Distributing Frame in a city building. Since the diameter of the city is so small, this can be a single building, and it need not be centrally located -- since we are a coastal city, I want it at the other end. :-)
I propose to offer to clients, generally ISP, but also property owner/ renters, L1 connectivity, either between two buildings, or to a properly equipped ISP, and also to equip for and offer L2 aggregated connectivity to ISPs, where the city, instead of the ISP, will provide the necessary CPE termination gear (ONT). The entire L0 fiber build, and all L2 aggregation equipment (except potential GPON splitters mentioned next) will be the property of the City.
Assuming that the optical math pans out, we will hang GPON splitter frames in the MDT, and cross connect subscriber ports to the front of them, and the back of them to Provider equipment in an associated colo, in rooms or cages; we'll also probably do this for our L2 subscribers, using our own GPON splitters. Those will then be groomed into Ethernet handoffs for whatever providers want to take it that way, at a higher MRC. Splitters installed for Providers who take L1 handoffs will be their property, though installed in our MDF room.
We will do all M-A-C work on the MDF, into which Provider employees will generally not be admitted, at least unescorted, on a daily basis, except in "emergencies", for which an extra NRC will be levied.
The cost we will charge the Providers, per subscriber, will be a fixed MRC, similar to a 'tariffed' rate, which is published, and all Providers pay the same rate, which is subject by contract to occasional adjustment in either direction, and which is set to recover our costs to provide the service, based on take rates and depreciation periods which I have not yet determined. I'm assuming I can get 30 year depreciation out of the fiber plant with no problems, probably 40... maybe 50 if it's built to high enough standards -- I do not expect passive glass fiber to become obsolete in 50 years.
Active equipment, a much shorter period, of course, probably between 4 and 7 years, depending on how far up the S-curve of terminal equipment design it proves that we've already traveled. At the moment, my comparison device is the Calix E7-20, with either 24-port AE or the GPON cards; either 836GE interior ONTs, or their equivalent exterior ones (since the power module has to be inside anyway, I'm not sure you gain that much by putting the ONT outside, but...)
My motivation for not doing L3 is that it is said to greatly improve the chances for competition at the ISP level, a fact not yet in evidence.
My motivation for not doing GPON in the field is that it's thoroughly impractical to do that in an environment where an unknown number of multiple providers will be competing for the subscribers, and anyway it breaks point to point, which the city will need for itself, and which I want to offer to residents as well.
My motivation for doing L2 is that it takes a lost of the front-end cost burden off of potential smaller 'boutique' ISPs specializing in various disciplines (very low cost/lifeline service, very high speed, 'has a big local usenet spool', or what have you); such providers will have to pay (and recover) a higher per-subscriber MRC, in exchange for not having to themselves provision and install GPON splitters and something like a Calix E7 -- such hardware will be installed by the City, and cost-shared; if/when such a provider gets big enough, they can install their own, and we'll cut them over.
I propose to take the project to the council for funding and approval having in my pocket a letter of intent from a local 2nd tier ISP of long standing to become our launch provider, with no incentives over the published rates except the guarantee of additional subscribers.
My underlying motivation, which is intended to answer any tradeoff queries which I haven't explicitly addresses before this point, is to increase the City's position as being "full service" (as small as it is, it does it's own fire, police, garbage and water already), and improve it's chances of selection by people who are deciding where to move. The City already has a relatively good image, within its target market, but as time marches ever forwards, the maximum available broadband in its footprint will become less and less acceptable, and I expect that there are a significant number of people around the country for whom "I can get Gigabit in my house? Bidirectional? I'm moving" is a valid viewpoint.
I know already that "what kind of broadband can I get" is a top-5, and sometimes top-3 selection issue for people contemplating a move.
Things, therefore, which improve the city's image with potential immigrants, be they residents or small businesses, are a Good Thing, whether because those people actually want or need those services, or whether it's merely because they like to bask in the reflected glow there of.
These things will likely reduce the city's vacancy rate, and thus increase property tax revenue and hence the city's budget, in addition to slowly improving the city's socioeconomic demographics, which will itself likely have a salutary effect on the small businesses already here, and in the decision processes of people thinking to move one here or start one.
That's my thinking so far. Now comes the hard part: assembling enough other budgetary numbers to determine how much it will cost, how much we'll have to charge, and whether people will *pay* that much.
I don't have any illusions that the wholesale charges will be a revenue stream for the City, and I won't let the council get any such ideas either; the benefits to the city (aside from dark fiber to all our own buildings) are a bit deeper than that, and will require sufficient time to come to fruition.
I wrote this as a summary for all the helpful NANOGers who chimed in this week, and as a clarification for those who weren't quite sure where *I* was trying to go -- all muni builds are sui generis, and this one moreso than most.
If any of you see anything we've already said, but I left out, please let me know...
And have a Whacky Weekend. If any of you pass through the west coast enroute to ORL, let me know. :-)
Cheers, -- jra
-- Jay R. Ashworth Baylink jra@baylink.com Designer The Things I Think RFC 2100 Ashworth & Associates http://baylink.pitas.com 2000 Land Rover DII St Petersburg FL USA #natog +1 727 647 1274
-- Scott Helms Vice President of Technology ZCorum (678) 507-5000 -------------------------------- http://twitter.com/kscotthelms --------------------------------