  jadebangle Premium join:2007-05-22 Olathe, KS
·SureWest Internet
·AT&T Yahoo
·Comcast
1 edit | reply to iansltx Re: deploy and buy
said by iansltx :The modems are expensive so I hear. As much as a few hundred $$$s. Upgrading to 3.0 for speed of 12/2 won't increase speed or performance
Very few user will get it most of us will be fine with 2.0 or 1.0
Another waste of hardware upgrade
Cable haven't even used up 42/10 on docsis 1.0 for any subscriber If we are offered 42/10, my bandwidth use would slow everyone down to a crawl. Cable technology is limited by bandwidth not how fast you can download/upload  |
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 iansltx
join:2007-02-19 Golden, CO
·Comcast
·Qwest.net
·magicjack.com
·BeeCreek Communica..
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
| Wait...that's like saying a car isn't limited by speed, jsut by how fast it can go.
DOCSIS 3 bonds channels to allow for extra bandwidth, and thence higher quality of service, and thence the ability for higher speed packages. Yes, you can push 30/5 over DOCSIS 2, but it's hard to do. DOCSIS 3 is all about headroom.
Also, DOCSIS 3 isn't for 12/2. It's for 22/5 or 50/10 or 60/5. It's pointless if your node isn't overcrowded on the last mile an you'r eonly offering 10/1, but as speeds increase yoou're gonna want better DOCSIS.
Again, DOCSIS 3 allows for Nx38/30 (and eventually Nx30) connectivity on the last mile. It alleviates congestion issues, and allows for greater speeds.
Of course, fiber can do all of this no problem, but you know the spiel... |
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 koolkid1563 Premium,MVM join:2005-11-06 Powell, WY clubs:
·Bresnan Online
| The Bresnan node we were on had 200+ subs on it according to what one of the techs told me. The internet always slowed to a literal crawl during peak hours and we couldn't expect to get any download speeds above 2Mb/s no matter what time of the day it was. Their claim is that no server (not even Microsoft's or Nvidia's) can push anything faster than 2Mb/s and that their network is more than adequate to handle it...Though they also said that I could only expect downloads of 2Mb/s max on their 15/1 tier. I could do it on my 10Mb/s connection on U-verse and I can do it now on the 10Mb/s FTTP connection I have through Powellink. Right now Bresnan is offering 8/384 or 15/1, but neither tier actually delivered.
DOCSIS 3 might help with the oversubscribed nodes giving them more headroom, but I don't think it will help their network backhauls which seem saturated as well. I also don't expect them to be upgrading the Powell market anytime soon if ever. On the TV side they haven't deployed VoD here due to the deployment costs being too high, so I doubt they will do anything with the internet either. In the meantime, the Powellink network will have time to mature and flex it's muscles and get a couple faster tiers going while Bresnan remains on DOCSIS 1.1. |
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  Pizz Hi
join:2000-10-27 Astoria, NY
·Verizon Online DSL
·RoadRunner Cable
| It's all about the last mile run, with MSOs. Majority of these last mile runs, are all running on outdated hardware. I don't understand why the Cable COs just improve that in their network, instead of doing inept patch jobs, or implementing a service, they cannot provide. |
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 iansltx
join:2007-02-19 Golden, CO
·Comcast
·Qwest.net
·magicjack.com
·BeeCreek Communica..
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
| reply to koolkid1563 So I hear. It's pitiful when a provider like Bresnan not only has node congestion issues (caused by DOCSIS 1.1 plus high people counts per node...though honestly 200 or so is average) but also has uplink bandwidth problems despite their use of cheap networks (360 etc.).
Bottom line: PowelLink is an amazing example of what places should do. That is to say, provide FTTH, high upload/download speeds, non-sucky access by building out their own infrastructure (fiber) that pretty much won't have to be replaced ever again  |
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 percosan
join:2002-03-13 San Francisco, CA
| Careful ... you can deploy FTTH and still offer a crappy service.
DOCSIS 3.0, if deployed, will achieve the objectives you describe below.
-s
said by iansltx :So I hear. It's pitiful when a provider like Bresnan not only has node congestion issues (caused by DOCSIS 1.1 plus high people counts per node...though honestly 200 or so is average) but also has uplink bandwidth problems despite their use of cheap networks (360 etc.). Bottom line: PowelLink is an amazing example of what places should do. That is to say, provide FTTH, high upload/download speeds, non-sucky access by building out their own infrastructure (fiber) that pretty much won't have to be replaced ever again |
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 iansltx
join:2007-02-19 Golden, CO
·Comcast
·Qwest.net
·magicjack.com
·BeeCreek Communica..
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
| The difference is that, once FTTH is in the ground, you just upgrade the equipment on the ends of the fiber and watch your speed go through the roof. As in gigabits, tens of gigabits or even hundreds of gigabits per second. Cable is going to run into problems pretty quickly even with DOCSIS 3 if fiber truns on the heat anywhere.
One big thing right now: uploads. 30 Mbps per node. FiOS has no problem doing 20 Mbit symmetric. Cable companies can't do this without breaking their networks.
Heck, even downloads are iffy. Four channels bonded gets 152 Mbps of bandwidth, shared between everyone on the node. BPON shares 622 Mbps with everyone on the node, GPON shares 2.4 Gbps. THe big difference: cable companies have an order of magnitude more subscribers per node than PON systems do, or close to it, in normal instances. |
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 hottboiinnc ME
join:2003-10-15 Cleveland, OH | i don't see cable having any issues. they're fiber is farther out to the customers and can quickly run the last mile to fiber as well. I wouldn't doubt many new build outs and upgrades have the FTTH/HFC equipment at the nodes just for that. |
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