Maybe people in the wired communications business like cable and telcos already think they are doing okay without much new fiber. But it seems to me the companies with nice rights of way and no substantial communications business would be the power companies. Maybe they should start laying fiber and competing that way if they can't manage to sell data over power lines well? - Tom Manfredi, Albert E wrote: > Mike Enright wrote: > > >>If FTTH turns out to be a must in the next 5 years I would be >>surprised >>if MSO's could manage it with the debt that they are already dealing >>with and assumedly would still be paying off in that hypothetical >>future. That's why I raised the ROI issue. >> >>A separate venture might be able to do a "friendly overbuild" >>where the >>MSO might even get a share of the profits for being nice >>about it. But >>that venture would have to light the fiber and attempt to make money >>from it. Why does this remind me of @Home? > > > I've been hearing about how imminent FTTH is for almost 20 years > now. It seems to be like IPv6, though. There's always innovations > that push the timeline to the right. But eventually, most folks > still expect the shift to take place. > > Faster modems killed ISDN pretty effectively. ADSL derailed all > those FTTH must-have concepts just as effectively. Now there are > 100 Mb/s variants of VDSL which promise to continue that trend. > > I guess it's just plain easier to splice copper than to splice > fiber, so there's a lot of resistance to installing fiber inside > the customer premises. > > The other thing is, if you gamble and install fiber along with > coax, there's no guarantee that the fiber you installed is the > kind of fiber you will want when FTTH really does happen. > > Perhaps a conduit of reasonable diameter in the customer premises > is your best bet. But, ah, that's even more expensive. Very hard > to fish conduit through walls! > > Bert > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > You can UNSUBSCRIBE from the OpenDTV list in two ways: > > - Using the UNSUBSCRIBE command in your user configuration settings at > FreeLists.org > > - By sending a message to: opendtv-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the word > unsubscribe in the subject line. > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- You can UNSUBSCRIBE from the OpenDTV list in two ways: - Using the UNSUBSCRIBE command in your user configuration settings at FreeLists.org - By sending a message to: opendtv-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the word unsubscribe in the subject line.