republican-creole
Search:  

 
 
   All ForumsHot TopicsGallery






how-to block ads


 
Forums » Japanese 'Fiber Blowout' » Their country is smaller
Search Topic:
Share Topic:
RSS topic:
toggle:
flat / full
normal / watch
Post a:
Post a:
Typical USA »
« Its not just about net access with fiber  
AuthorAll Replies


tiger72
SexaT duorP
Premium
join:2001-03-28
Saint Louis, MO
clubs:
·T-Mobile US
·RoadRunner Cable


1 edit
reply to soothsayer15
Re: Their country is smaller

said by soothsayer15 See Profile:


said by maartena See Profile:



said by Nerdtalker See Profile:

Well, firstly, Japan is much smaller than the US.

Need I say more?
That explains why 70% of the U.S. cannot get and will never get FTTH most likely. It does not explain why there is pretty much NO FTTH available in the entire Greater Los Angeles area which is packed up with 16 million inhabitants.

You'd think they would at least be able to do SOMETHING for the 30% of the population that lives in very urbanized areas, but in reality there isn't even FTTH availabilty to even a full 1 percent of the population. Its that way in most European cities too by the way, but they are making an effort there like in Sweden, Germany and the Netherlands there are projects to fiber up entire cities in the next 5 years.
This is what's I'm talking about. Random statistics that mean nothing coming from thin air.
actually it seems that they're coming from logic. Out of 300 million people, 30 million of which live in New York City or Los Angeles. Another 30+ million live in cities like Dallas, Houston, Chicago, Seattle, San Francisco, Atlanta, etc...
I'd say that his 30% statistic could hold some water.
As far as his FTTH claim, I'd be willing to believe that too. Out of all of the information that I've looked at, i'd actually say it's probably even less than 1% though. Only a very small number of select expensive neighborhoods around the nation have direct access to Fiber internet connectivity. I wouldn't think that 3 million people have Fiber connectivity.
On to the Euro cities - I have no clue. I know that Sweden provides 10mbps and 100mbps connectivity for around the same prices we pay here for cable. Just look at the swedish ISPs and you'll see for yourself. As far as Germany - i'm not sure. Although I hear that Former East Germany has massive Fiber buildout, I haven't heard anything in regards to the rest of it.

Random Statistics pulled from thin air? I don't think so. A simple google search would back up most of those claims.
Forums » Japanese 'Fiber Blowout'Typical USA »
« Its not just about net access with fiber  


Monday, 23-Nov 12:11:27 Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Hosting by www.nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo | feedback | contact
over 10 years online! © 1999-2009 dslreports.com.
page compression OFF
Most commented news this week
· [18] Frontier Increases Modem Rental Fee
· [14] New AT&T Ad Campaign Hits Back At Verizon
· [11] Earthlink Suffers From Major E-mail Outage
· [5] Vivendi In Way Of Comcast's NBC Desires
· [2] Monday Morning Links
Most people now reading
· Extra charge to use Master Card instead of Visa? [General Questions]
· Smoker's Applecare warranties may not be worth anything [All Things Macintosh]
· Best Bluray player [General Questions]
· Bell's Network Management practices page [TekSavvy]
· Slow speeds in the evenings [TekSavvy]
· [WotLK] Icecrown Citadel Raid Access Progression [World of Warcraft]
· Sealing air ducts [Home Repair & Improvement]
· [How to] Install Asterisk on an Asus WL-520GU router [VOIP Tech Chat]
· WoW's Fall from grace [World of Warcraft]
· linux box alternative to NetEqualizer ? ? Does it exist? [Wireless Service Providers]