Showing posts with label Fiber To The Home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fiber To The Home. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Home fibre plans survive downturn

The benefits of fibre to the home go beyond speed

More than two million people in Europe now have fibre broadband direct to their home, suggests a survey.

The latest figures on superfast broadband delivered by fibre to the home (FTTH) shows 18% growth over the last survey compiled in late 2008.

The continued growth suggests that the global economic downturn has not hit plans to build a fibre infrastructure.

Sweden tops the list of nations rolling out the technology, with 10.9% of its broadband customers using fibre.

Karel Helsen, president of Europe's Fibre-To-The-Home Council, said the growth matched predictions that were revised when the credit crunch started to make itself felt.


TOP FIBRE NATIONS

1) Sweden - 10.9%
2) Norway - 10.2%
3) Slovenia - 8.9%
4) Andorra - 6.6%
5) Denmark- 5.7%
6) Iceland - 5.6%
7) Lithuania - 3.3%
8) Netherlands - 2.5%
9) Slovakia - 2.5%
10) Finland - 2.4%

"The numbers in 2009 are in line with the latest forecasts," said Mr Helsen.

By 2012, the FTTH Council expects that 13 million people across 35 European nations will have their broadband delivered by fibre. Such services would start at speeds of 100 megabits per second (mbps), said Mr Helsen.

Around Europe more than 233 projects were underway to lay the fibres that would connect homes or buildings to the net, said Mr Helsen. Many of those, he said, were being operated by local governments or smaller net firms.

Local governments were interested in FTTH because of the economic and social benefits it brought in its wake, said Mr Helsen.

The low latency or delay inherent in high-speed fibre networks made possible novel uses of broadband, he said.

"No delay is very important," he said, "specifically if you talk about applications that are time dependent such as personal communications, conference calls or video calls where delays cause a lot of interference."

While early FTTH services were concentrated in cities, said Mr Helsen, many more were reaching out to rural areas for e-health and e-learning projects.

Separate studies show that an FTTH infrastructure can have a direct impact on local economic output, said Mr Helsen.

The UK, France and Germany have yet to break into the list of top ten FTTH nations.

Friday, January 18, 2008

New Techniques in Underground Fiber Installation


Installing fiber-to-the-home does not have to mean digging up streets and sidewalks. Learn from this video about recent developments in horizontal directional drilling.

IF YOU NEED TO PURCHASE HARDWARE FOR FTTH PROJECTS PLEASE CONTACT ME BY PHONE +31650730710 OR BY MAIL DESIGNFORIT@LIVE.NL

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Fiber To The Home Reaches 2 Million

Source: Mike Sachoff

Around 2.1 million U.S. households, or close to 2 percent, have fiber optic connections to the Internet, according to a study sponsored by the Fiber-to-the-Home Council and Telecommunications Industry Association and conducted by RVA Market Research.

That is an increase from 1 million households with fiber optic Internet connections in September 2006.

"Clearly, American consumers want what only fiber can deliver, and that is a pipe big enough to handle the high-bandwidth Internet and video applications of the future," said Joe Savage, president of the FTTH Council.

About 1 million U.S. households receive video over fiber-to-the-home, an increase of 160 percent over the past six months.

"While annual growth in the number of connections has doubled for the past two years, we expect to see a further increase in the growth rate as more high-bandwidth applications come to market and as more major service providers begin offering fiber to the home," said Michael Render of RVA Market

IF YOU NEED TO PURCHASE HARDWARE FOR FTTH PROJECTS PLEASE CONTACT ME BY PHONE +31650730710 OR BY MAIL DESIGNFORIT@LIVE.NL