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2.5Gb/s Internet For French Homes
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Wed Jul 26, 2006 07:36 AM
from the gentlemen-start-your-envy dept.
from the gentlemen-start-your-envy dept.
Erick Lionheart at www.gamersloot.net writes "Presence-pc at reports that France Telecom just announced they are offering 2.5 Gb/s Internet connections to select cities in the Paris region. For ... $85(70 Euros) a month you also get free phone and TV. From the article (in French): 'The historical operator opted for a GPON (Gigabit Passive Optical Network) FTTH architecture (Fiber To The Home). This technology allows up to 2.5 Gbits/s download and 1.2 Gigabits/s upload.'"
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FP (Score:3, Funny)
Sweet Mother of Potatoes! (Score:5, Funny)
Wait, did I just say what I think I said...?
Re:Sweet Mother of Potatoes! (Score:3, Interesting)
Holy hell, this is quicker than my Gigabit LAN. My hard-drives already aren't quick enough to saturate the network, I'm trying to imagine downloading files at 2.5Gbit/sec. The mind boggles.
Re:Sweet Mother of Potatoes! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Sweet Mother of Potatoes! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Sweet Mother of Potatoes! (Score:5, Funny)
From the top of my head
Parent
Re:Sweet Mother of Potatoes! (Score:5, Insightful)
1. VPN
2. VNC
3. Game Servers - Battlefield 2 reccomends a minimum of 64kb a player for a 64 player map that's 4Mb. If you want to eventualy double players to 128, or go crazy with 256 you will need 8Mb, and 16Mb respectively.
4. HD video from youtube/google.video
5. VOIP telephone banks
6. Website hosting
7. Remote backups
9. Anything that is bandwidth intensive
Asking what use this would have is kind of missing the point. You put this type of bandwidth in every home, and uses will be made the download speed is nice, but it's the bandwidth up that's going to cause HUGE changes.
Make no mistake the US being this far behind is hurting us, how much does it cost for a US based buisiness a month to get a 40Mb of upload? literaly Thousands if not tens of thousands. It costs, a French company less than $90. Yes I would like to get this to my home, but the bandwidth gap in the home is not what concerns me. The US had better get its but in gear or else we will be left in the dust on this whole information age thing. It's still the wild wild west out there and anything can happen. French companies now have a huge leg up on thier US counterparts.
-manno
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Re:Sweet Mother of Potatoes! (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
Re:Sweet Mother of Potatoes! (Score:5, Insightful)
Trust me people will find awesome uses for 40Mb of bandwidth up. I honestly believe VPN for home will catch on, or a service with remote storage that works similarly. with 80Mb down, 40Mb up and a VPN connection to your home PC from anywhere an OS from MS/Apple/distro-of-the-day could create a way for you to set up a network share that would allow you to treat your WAN like your LAN. You could download your media collection from your home PC to wherever you are. Personal Video/Music on demand. Think TIVO-to-go no need to use email to transfer files from one PC to another one located at a remote location. VPN will become seamless in the not to distant future. It's that way for me already, if you haven't tried it out yet, use OpenVPN. If you use it in tunnel mode on Windows XP you can make it start up and connect to your VPN server automatically, and treat your network share as a mapped drive or folder... The only drawback? US DSL/Cable upload bandwidth. I'm talking working on remote files at local speeds.
A more likely scenario would be a company like Google offering 50-100GB of storage, and you'll log onto it with every PC you use to get your music, videos, everything. Thinking about a 80mb down/40mb up in terms of "it's like a 6mb down 0.375Mb up only faster" is wrong. If French telecom can manage to deliver 50% of that bandwidth "to the jack" this is going to be HUGE. The key hear again is UPLOAD.
Speaking as a US citizen to the other US citizens - We are shooting ourselves in the foot leaving our national IT infrastructure in the hands of people spending more time on finding a cheaper easier way to line their pockets rather than the old fashioned entrepreneurs who would find an undeserved market, and offer them a fair service at a fair price. If not addressed soon this will be a huge problem. Again home bandwidth would be nice but it's business BW that's really going to screw us over in the long run.
-manno
Parent
Re:Sweet Mother of Potatoes! (Score:4, Funny)
I for one welcome our hairy, smelly, horny, degreaser drinking Internet Overlords...
Parent
Re:Sweet Mother of Potatoes! (Score:3, Informative)
France is for sure not the only country in the world with regions where very fine wines are made. There are Italy, Spain and Chile, just to name some (and Germany for white wine). But by calling a good Bordeaux "engine de-greaser", you clearly display that you do not have a bit of a clue about good wine. Although these wines are heavily overpriced:. A "Montes Alpha" from Chile for 15,- is similar in quality to Bordeau
Define "free"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ummm.... if it's $85/month, it isn't really "free," is it?
Re:Define "free"? (Score:5, Insightful)
When you consider the bandwidth used by VoIP and IPTV over a 2.5 Gb/s connection, it IS practically free to provide. I would pay twice this price to get this here and more than willingly make this my largest bill. Where I live, the best that I can get is 6 Mb/s / 384 Kb/s for over $80 month.
It's disgusting! What country invented DSL? America. What country is in dead last place among the industrialized world for DSL speeds? America.
But, oh, our poor widdle local monopolies can't compete against all that howwibble competition. It just makes me mad enough to spit.
Parent
Re:Define "free"? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Define "free"? (Score:5, Insightful)
I've heard this argument before, but there are places in New York and other large metropolises that are just as packed as some of less dense Asian cities and even they don't have bandwidth to compare.
By trying to encourage phone companies to lay out phone wire where it would not be profitable in the 40s and 50s, we granted them monopolies, and now they've become as poorly managed as the airlines.
I would point out that most phone companies in European countries are also monopolies. The difference is that they're government regulated and partially (or wholly) government funded monopolies. It's that lack of state intervention that makes the huge difference. On the one hand, Americans have never really had to wait long times to get phone service for decades. On the other hand, our internet growth has become a quagmire.
I think some sort of boost is needed, but I'm not sure what. Obviously, the market is providing enough incentive to innovate and expand services.
Parent
Re:Define "free"? (Score:5, Interesting)
Um, no. The phone companies are happy soaking us for what we little bandwidth they'll sell you. I want a $15-20 a month bill that pays for Gigabit speeds up and down. I want to be able to watch IP TV and use IP telephones instead of the piece of crap system that we currently have. We should have not just full video conferencing now, but we should have hi-def video conferencing anywhere in the US by now. Our entire communications infrastructure is a disgrace.
Parent
Re:Define "free"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Interesting you mention airlines. Telecom and airlines are both industries that are either government-run or government-subsidized in the typically social-leaning European nations.
For good or bad, those are the kind
Damn it (Score:3, Funny)
offering 2.5 Gb/s... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:offering 2.5 Gb/s... (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
STILL WANT. (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, well only 80 Mbps. I'd still take that. I'd still just about kill for that, especially if it was affordable.
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Re:offering 2.5 Gb/s... (Score:5, Funny)
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2.5Gbps? (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously though, it' s trade-off. We could have this sort of thing in parts of North America, but it would require consumers and gov't to stop moaning and griping about where telecos and cablecos pick to choose their deployments. Cherry-picking, if you will.
Because in case you didn't notice, all these Asian and European plans that seem so fast (and than always get everyone green with envy) always have the disclaimer "in select areas/markets" on them. Which means "deployed to a very few affluent areas that can likely afford it", a concept which seems to go over OK in Asia and Europe, but not so OK in North America.
Re:2.5Gbps? (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem is we just bought a house in an area we could afford. Not the ghetto, but not an area where I compete with cars in morning rush hour that cost more than my new house, either. I probably won't have FiOS ava
The weakest link (Score:5, Insightful)
You are only going to get the bandwidth that you are being served.
With that said, if I'm downloading a huge ISO or other multimedia file from a site on my 2.5GB connection, and the remote site is sitting on a 256K upstream cable modem, then I'm going to get no more than 256K.
While YOU might have 2.5GB of downstream available to you, most providers these days serving upstream content don't have anything close to that availability.
And furthermore, I seriously doubt that many PCs today even have the ability to CONSUME 2.5GB of bandwidth. Are they making 10GB ethernet cards for the consumer market? Ummm... no.
FT (Score:5, Interesting)
Let's hope that they'll compete by innovating, but I doubt it.
Internet, Phone and TV for $85.00? (Score:5, Funny)
Sigh.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Sigh.... (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.utopianet.org/ [utopianet.org]
Seriously, we have FTTH here and its great. It probably covers 50 to 75% of the population center for the state. At home its 5Mb up/down with no restrictions on use. We also have it at the office which gives us 30 Mb up/down and its only $130 per month. Yesterday at work, I checked something out from sourceforge and was downloading at peak 5 MBytes per second and averaged about 2.2 MBytes per second. So its starting to come, but you have to live in Utah.
Ok, so I'm gloating a little bit.
-br
Parent
Le Net (Score:5, Funny)
French models usually aren't tech saavy, but this one is.
Covering all France would cost less than you think (Score:5, Insightful)
French experts agree that getting all the homes connected in France would cost approximately 30bn (with an average cost of 1500 per house).
That may sound like a lot but in fact it's only the price of 500KM of new highway.
I think that this infrastructure should be paid for by the state and allowed access to private companies against a fee for TV, Internet and phone services.
True Story (Score:5, Insightful)
Upon closer inspection, I discovered that their expendature had been marked as 12 billion in running costs or some such, and the other 12 billion was marked as "captial infrastructural development", or some such. The main telecoms provider in france had just invested 12 billion in its infrastructural development as was down to 9 per share.
I advised him to remortgage his house and put it all on France Telecom.
He did no such thing. I believe he sold what he had at 15. The shares are now worth about 22 [google.com].
As I tried to explain, that 12 billion infrastructural fund wasn't to repaint buildings. France Telecom were giving the French telecoms system a serious upgrade, and as you can no doubt see, it's already paid off. The French can now get their phone, TV and internet over the same line. The company was never, ever going to go under as anyone who knows anything about French big business will tell you.
That's what a high bandwidth network for 70 million people costs. 12 billion, give or take. And it doesn't require any extortion policies from telecoms on internet businesses. It took a 1 billion loss in one year, and the French now have the best telecoms infrastructure on the continent, if not the world. Say what you may about the French, but when they do big infrastructural projects, they tend to get it right; TGV, Nuclear power, Millau Viaduct, etc.
Are webservers allowed? (Score:3, Interesting)
well, I guess Bittorrent might.
I ask because I setup a Gentoo-based webserver in my house but can't open it to the world because it's against my ISP's Terms of Service.
Wow... (Score:5, Funny)
What do they do with that bandwidth? (Score:3, Insightful)
Quick Handmade Translation.... (Score:3, Informative)
SERIES OF TUBES! (Score:5, Funny)
And if you don't understand those tubes can be filled and if they are filled, when you put your message in, it gets in line and its going to be delayed by anyone that puts into that tube enormous amounts of material, enormous amounts of material.
And again, the internet is not something you just dump something on. It's not a truck.
Dear Senator Ted Stevens,
The French can figure this shit out, why can't you?
Love, rm
English DOC (Score:3, Informative)
Re:And look here: (Score:3, Informative)
Wait till you hear what we get in Canada for that money. And its actually gotten slower over the past 6 years (as vendors learned QoS).
Go figure.
Re:And look here: (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:And look here: (Score:4, Insightful)
Who believes they'll upgrade anyway? They've said that before in order to get tax breaks, but they lied then just like they're lying now.
Parent
Re:And look here: (Score:3, Insightful)
As if they would upgrade their networks without net neutrality...
See, the issue is that the telcos have way too much power, things started going very good for us french (as far as internet connections go) around 2000 when the Free ISP appeared: their customer service sucks (and has always sucked), but they immediatly set extremely agressive prices for high speed and a usually good enough reliability (when they appeared, their offer was something like 512/128 for 30/mo, when you couldn't get 256/64 for less
Re:I envy you. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:And look here: (Score:3, Interesting)
I believe (I'm not totally sure but I'm reasonably confident) that both Japan and Korea have significantly higher population density than the U.S. I'm absolutely positive that continental Europe has a much higher population density than the U.S., which also happens to be why mass transit such as the French TGV and German ICE trains are so much more successful than in the U.S., where only a select few passenger routes are profitable for rail companies. (Namely, Amtrak's North
Re:You mean? (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re:You mean? (Score:5, Insightful)
Um, no. We actually spent the money to have "hispeed" like 45 MBps to all of the US through tax cuts and deregulation of the Baby Bells during the Clinton/Gore era. Those that have paid for telephone services from I think it was around 1993-current have been basically given their phone companies more profit rather than government taxes and a regulated phone industry. It was a massive bait and switch, they promised something like this French system, and after the Feds gave the Bells their carrot, the Bells gave the Feds a stick and said we can't/won't roll out/upgrade fiber to the door and will instead offer DSL. From what I've since, DSL is ok for those who can get it. The Feds were promised more than 30 times the speed of DSL though both up and down stream to us. This is something that should have been built during our 1997-2000 the internet is the wave of the future time. The Bells have screwed us. I'd actually love for the Feds to fine each one of the billions in back taxes with interest for not providing services to us and then regulating the phone industry to bring it up to spec.
Parent
Re:You mean? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:You mean? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not even sure that you know what started it all, nevermind who helped the pilgrims settle in the US and fight for their independence against England.
So do us a favour, pick up a history book and learn something for a change.
Parent
Re:You mean? (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:You mean? (Score:3, Insightful)
Take away the extreme amount of home construction the past few years in the U.S. and I think you would find U.S. unemployment at a similar if not higher rate. We are very fortunate to have large amounts of spare land to buoy the economy. Europe on the other hand does not have this luxury.