nanog mailing list archives

Re: FTTP Advice, Michigan and other areas


From: Fletcher Kittredge <fkittred () gwi net>
Date: Tue, 1 Sep 2015 18:54:40 -0400

Jared;

What you are trying to do is quite achievable, but a huge topic worthy of a
book, not an email post. Also, situations vary significantly between states
due to incumbents, regulatory regimes, and level of state support. NANOG is
a bad place to get advice about this topic. There are many other venues
with literally thousands of other organizations/groups/companies on the
same path as you. I would start from the FTTH Council, Next Century Cities,
Institute for Local Self-Reliance and work out from there.


On Tue, Sep 1, 2015 at 4:27 PM, Jared Mauch <jared () puck nether net> wrote:

I’m looking for some advice/input from people either public or private
about woes building fiber to reach people outside the footprints of the
existing incumbents.

There is a group of people looking to organize private fiber to reach
areas that are unserved.

There’s been recent local people doing this like Lightspeed (Lansing) and
the Vergennes Broadband folks.

When it come to private right of way, public right of way use, swaps, pole
attach and other things, any best practices people can share either in
public or private?

TL;DR background for those interested:

        Many wireless ISPs are finding it harder to locate equipment or
utilize frequencies based on interference or congestion.  Advanced
encodings like 16-QAM that are seen in 802.11ac hardware also introduce
latencies that are not ideal.  The FCC is also making it harder for
equipment to be qualified in this space, in some cases rightly so due to
out of band emissions or just adjacent frequency noise.  The revisions of
rules in 5Ghz are helpful, but the cellular industry is also looking to
exploit these frequencies to solve indoor coverage.

        There are two groups I’m trying to assist, a local cooperative
which is trying to just own the fiber and let providers gain access and
some WISPs that are looking to improve service due to increase customer
demand.

        Getting service on the fiber is “easy” once it’s there, but
gaining access or building it is the part I’m looking for insights in.

- Jared




-- 
Fletcher Kittredge
GWI
8 Pomerleau Street
Biddeford, ME 04005-9457
207-602-1134


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