Sorry Owen, but I live in Illinois. Government corruption is a way of life here. On Wed, Jan 30, 2013 at 2:49 PM, Owen DeLong <owen@delong.com> wrote:
On Jan 30, 2013, at 6:33 AM, Jason Baugher <jason@thebaughers.com> wrote:
There is much talk of how many fibers can fit in a duct, can be brought into a colo space, etc... I haven't seen much mention of how much space the termination in the colo would take, such as splice trays, bulkheads, etc... Someone earlier mentioned being able to have millions of fibers coming through a vault, which is true assuming they are just passing through the vault. When you need to break into one of those 864-fiber cables, the room for splice cases suddenly becomes a problem.
The other thing I find interesting about this entire thread is the assumption by most that a government entity would do a good job as a layer-1 or -2 provider and would be more efficient than a private company. Governments, including municipalities, are notorious for corruption, fraud, waste - you name it. Even when government bids out projects to the private sector these problems are seen.
I now this is a popular refrain, but in reality, it's not all that accurate.
I have no problem with allowing L1/L2 to be done by private enterprise, so long as said private enterprises are required to abide by the following rules:
1. They are not allowed to sell L3+ services. 2. They are not allowed to own any portion of any L3+ service provider. 3. They must sell their L1/L2 services to any L3+ service provider on equal terms.
Owen