And most people today would probably think the Napierian base was a rebel base 
in Star Wars.


From: Chuck McCown 
Sent: Sunday, February 07, 2016 3:07 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] HFT Networks

Nepers, not Napiers.  Named after Napiers, until now I thought the spelling was 
the same.  

From: Chuck McCown 
Sent: Sunday, February 07, 2016 2:03 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Fw: [AFMUG] HFT Networks

I was asked to investigate firing up a WWII cable between Hokkaido and Sakhalin 
once upon a time.   It was coax and originally had 1000 volts on it.  Cannot 
remember what the voltage was for unless there was an undersea amp ( or a 
string of amps).  

I do remember that loss was expressed in Napiers (Np) per meter.  Never got 
past the conceptual phase.  We did send a Japanese speaking attorney to 
Hokkaido to look for upstream providers.  That’s about it.  

About 29 miles.  I recommended microwave.  Some of it got built via Inmarsat 
then the Russians did the opposite of privatization to Shell Oil and a few 
others (same thing Hugo did in Venezuela).  Not sure what you call the reverse 
of  privatization. Stealing?

From: Chuck McCown 
Sent: Sunday, February 07, 2016 1:54 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] HFT Networks

Surprised it didn’t swing by Siberia, at the very least Sakhalin Island.  It is 
kinda on the way.  Think the Russians could intercept and decode?   

From: Mike Hammett 
Sent: Sunday, February 07, 2016 1:43 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] HFT Networks

http://arcticfibre.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/ArcticFibre-1.7.14.jpg

It looks like they plan on eight landing stations in Alaska and another seven 
in Canada, though I won't pretend to know and don't care enough to lookup the 
populations at them all. There is another cable proposed to go all over the 
place in northern Canada.

For sure there will still be vast areas that will be satellite only, but any 
steps towards reducing that number...




-----
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions

Midwest Internet Exchange

The Brothers WISP






--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: "Eric Kuhnke" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sunday, February 7, 2016 2:11:30 PM
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] HFT Networks


Arctic fibre, if built, will service Iqaluit and maybe one other city. 95% of 
Nunavut by square km will remain dependent on satellite. It makes sense, the 
total population is about 32,000 people spread over a truly vast area.

On Feb 7, 2016 6:16 AM, "Mike Hammett" <[email protected]> wrote:

  BTW: They're already building west, I assume to the northwest. Well, at least 
the PCNs are going in, I'm not sure if any of the paths have actually been 
licensed or built yet. I'll check on that. I assume to hit the submarine cables 
going to Tokyo and Hong Kong.

  Arctic Fiber has multiple prongs:

  1) HFT
  2) Ability to avoid the US
  3) Non-satellite Internet to remote areas of Alaksa and Canada
  4) Non-HFT applications that benefit from decreased latency

  There are other routes going on as well, such as one or more that goes over 
Russia instead of over Canada.




  -----
  Mike Hammett
  Intelligent Computing Solutions

  Midwest Internet Exchange

  The Brothers WISP






------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: "Eric Kuhnke" <[email protected]>
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: Saturday, February 6, 2016 6:20:34 PM
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] HFT Networks


  That makes me happy to be on the west coast. No trading exchange in Seattle 
to interconnect with. I feel sympathy for anyone trying to do new part101 PTP 
links in the general area between Chicago and NYC. 


  Now, the ultimate HFT venture capital weirdness is the people raising money 
to build a new submarine fibre cable between London and Tokyo via the high 
Canadian arctic. It'll probably have 10G waves priced 5x higher than the 
competing options because it'll have at least 20ms lower latency than all other 
routes. 

  http://arcticfibre.com/

  http://arcticfibre.com/category/press-releases/page/2/




  On Sat, Feb 6, 2016 at 9:02 AM, Mike Hammett <[email protected]> wrote:

    Old saves (almost two years), but it gives you an idea of how many are 
doing this and how extensively.




    -----
    Mike Hammett
    Intelligent Computing Solutions

    Midwest Internet Exchange

    The Brothers WISP







Reply via email to