Re: Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-07-08 Thread Jussi Peltola
On Sat, Jun 27, 2015 at 07:56:03AM +1000, Mark Andrews wrote:
 You don't think about the size of power lines coming into a house
 as they are overkill for just about anything you will do in the
 house.
 
 You don't think about the size of water pipes coming into a house
 as they are overkill for just about anything you will do in the
 house.  Very occasionally you will want to connect directly to the
 mains (filling a pool) but otherwise the pipe is more that sufficient.

Water pipes are sized by pressure drop. You do not want your shower to
have fluctuating water pressure if the washer is on while you're there.
If you hook up a hose that is the same size as your water main, you can
get quite a lot of water at an unacceptable pressure drop, but this may
erode the pipe long-term and certainly makes it impossible to shower
while you're doing it.

Power cables are sized by voltage drop. If the power company sized the wires
like they are usually done in houses (just big enough to not overheat
and no more) your lights would dim every time you turn any appliance on
and you would find it unacceptable. But you could get more power without
the cable catching fire if you replaced the main breaker with a bigger
one, just watch out for undervoltage and an upset power company.

For some reason, it seems some people have problems grasping the idea of
having an uncongested path to the Internet even though some of your
devices are downloading updates and someone in your family is watching
netflix.

I wonder if these people leave the tap dripping overnight into a bucket
so they can shower while not using more than a few liters per hour? Who
would possibly ever need more? And I assume they need to store city gas
in a bag to light up their cooker, too. And Tesla's home battery must be
the greatest thing since sliced bread. Who would possibly need more than
1-2kW of power per person?

Jussi



Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-07-08 Thread Mike Hammett
You also pay those utilities for usage. You don't do that for Internet. Well, 
most don't. 




- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 



Midwest Internet Exchange 
http://www.midwest-ix.com 


- Original Message -

From: Jussi Peltola pe...@pelzi.net 
To: nanog@nanog.org 
Sent: Wednesday, July 8, 2015 8:46:52 AM 
Subject: Re: Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland 

On Sat, Jun 27, 2015 at 07:56:03AM +1000, Mark Andrews wrote: 
 You don't think about the size of power lines coming into a house 
 as they are overkill for just about anything you will do in the 
 house. 
 
 You don't think about the size of water pipes coming into a house 
 as they are overkill for just about anything you will do in the 
 house. Very occasionally you will want to connect directly to the 
 mains (filling a pool) but otherwise the pipe is more that sufficient. 

Water pipes are sized by pressure drop. You do not want your shower to 
have fluctuating water pressure if the washer is on while you're there. 
If you hook up a hose that is the same size as your water main, you can 
get quite a lot of water at an unacceptable pressure drop, but this may 
erode the pipe long-term and certainly makes it impossible to shower 
while you're doing it. 

Power cables are sized by voltage drop. If the power company sized the wires 
like they are usually done in houses (just big enough to not overheat 
and no more) your lights would dim every time you turn any appliance on 
and you would find it unacceptable. But you could get more power without 
the cable catching fire if you replaced the main breaker with a bigger 
one, just watch out for undervoltage and an upset power company. 

For some reason, it seems some people have problems grasping the idea of 
having an uncongested path to the Internet even though some of your 
devices are downloading updates and someone in your family is watching 
netflix. 

I wonder if these people leave the tap dripping overnight into a bucket 
so they can shower while not using more than a few liters per hour? Who 
would possibly ever need more? And I assume they need to store city gas 
in a bag to light up their cooker, too. And Tesla's home battery must be 
the greatest thing since sliced bread. Who would possibly need more than 
1-2kW of power per person? 

Jussi 




Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-30 Thread Jean-Francois Mezei
On 15-06-26 14:04, Hank Disuko wrote:
 Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of Toronto 
 with the World's Fastest Internet™.
 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html


BTW, initally, Bell limits it to 940mbps. Likely because the Sagemcom
routers it uses don't have the umph to handle higher bandwidth. (these
boxes also have the hacked VDSL modem that interfaces with the
not-so-compliant and long ago discontinued Stinger DSKAMs that Bell
continued to deploy until 2012 despite these being discontinued in 2005
and never getting full compliance with VDSL2.)

One new CPE routers are found, Bell intends to raise marketed up to
speed to 1gnps. Of course, it will br priced so that few people order it
so congestion in 32 home sectors won't be too much of a problem.

Question:


From the network operator's point of view, is there a huge difference in
network planning:

1- user spends 2 hours streaming a Netflix movie at roughly 6mbps.

2- user spends 5 minutes downloadimng that movie at 150mbps  and then is
idle for 2 hours while watching it ?

Does 2 end up requiring less total capacity because on average fewer
people use it at the same time ?


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-30 Thread Baldur Norddahl
On 30 June 2015 at 22:32, Jean-Francois Mezei jfmezei_na...@vaxination.ca
wrote:

 BTW, initally, Bell limits it to 940mbps.


940 Mbps is what speedtest.net will give you on a linespeed 1 Gbps
connection. That sounds more like marketing people trying to understand
overhead.

Regards,

Baldur


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-28 Thread Eugeniu Patrascu

  On Jun 26, 2015, at 2:41 PM, Rafael Possamai raf...@gav.ufsc.br wrote:
 
  How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single
 person
  it is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics,
  going from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average
  transfer rate, at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to
  comment? Just really curious, as to me it's more of a marketing push than
  anything else, even though gigabit to the home sounds really cool.


You don't run it hot all day long, it's just that you don't wait forever
for things to download when you need something from the Internet.


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-28 Thread Keith Stokes
Use wireless. There are reasonably priced point to point bridges available.

--

Keith Stokes

 On Jun 26, 2015, at 11:18 PM, Peter Kristolaitis alte...@alter3d.ca wrote:
 
 On 6/26/2015 7:26 PM, Joe Abley wrote:
 
 On 26 Jun 2015, at 15:04, Hank Disuko wrote:
 
 Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of Toronto 
 with the World's Fastest Internet™.
 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html
  
 
 Bell Canada is in the business of defending the current regulatory regime 
 from claims that internet speeds are slow, or that investment by incumbents 
 in the last mile is lacking, or that it ought to be required to share its 
 access network with competitors. Read the press with that context in mind.
 
 There's cooperative, rural broadband in the UK [1] that offers 10G access to 
 farms at a lower price than Bell charges for some satellite TV bundles. I 
 don't think anybody need waste any cycles persuading other people here that 
 the fastest internet claims are not aligned precisely with the kind 
 reality you find even on this list.
 
 Joe
 
 [1] http://b4rn.org.uk
 
 And defend the current regulatory regime well they do.  I live literally 
 minutes outside of the Ottawa urban area and I have as choices for network 
 connectivity either LoS wireless or satellite. I can, however, stand at the 
 end of my driveway and look in EITHER direction to see houses that can get 
 cable service, yet none of the incumbents are willing to service my little 
 stretch of road (affecting me and ~5 neighbours).
 
 I'm told by the neighbours (I just moved here) that they've been bugging the 
 incumbents for YEARS and getting no traction at all. I'm thinking of pricing 
 out a fiber run and running a little local co-op network access provider for 
 me and the neighbours, but I suspect that install costs might nix that idea.
 
 (For extra fun, I was told by one of the incumbents that my address was 
 serviceable with up to 150Mbps cable before I purchased the property.  Then 
 when I took possession and tried to get service set up -- nope, sorry.  But 
 that's a whole other story...)
 


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-27 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Fri, 26 Jun 2015 15:35:40 -0500, mikea said:
 And just possibly for more than seven computers on the continent.

Note that there's scant evidence that Thomas Watson actually said it - and more
evidence that others said something similar.  Also, given that during that
timeframe there was already more than 5 or 7 computers in existence, there's
reason to think that what was being discussed (no matter who it was) was
similar to what we now call a supercomputer - take a look at the Top 10
systems in the Top500 list, and there's always just 5-10 beasts that are an
order of magnitude faster than the huge pile from slots 11 to 100

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_J._Watson#Famous_misquote


pgpzAVHdlmOJO.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-27 Thread Irwin, Kevin
Based on our 1Gbps residential customers usage, I believe you just sit at home 
and run speedtest all day.

Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 26, 2015, at 2:41 PM, Rafael Possamai raf...@gav.ufsc.br wrote:

 How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person
 it is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics,
 going from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average
 transfer rate, at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to
 comment? Just really curious, as to me it's more of a marketing push than
 anything else, even though gigabit to the home sounds really cool.



 On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 1:13 PM, Eric Dugas edu...@zerofail.com wrote:

 Nice try Bell.. So-Net did it two years ago, 2Gbps FTTH in Japan.

 Article: http://bgr.com/2013/06/13/so-net-nuro-2gbps-fiber-service/

 If you read Japanese: http://www.nuro.jp/hikari/

 Eric

 -Original Message-
 From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Hank Disuko
 Sent: June 26, 2015 2:04 PM
 To: NANOG
 Subject: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

 Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of Toronto
 with the World's Fastest Internet™.

 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html



The information transmitted is intended only for the person or entity to which 
it is addressed and may contain confidential and/or privileged material. Any 
review, retransmission, dissemination or other use of, or taking of any action 
in reliance upon, this information by persons or entities other than the 
intended recipient is prohibited. If you receive this in error, please contact 
the sender and destroy any copies of this document.


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-27 Thread Rafael Possamai
Good for you.

On Sat, Jun 27, 2015 at 6:36 PM, Irwin, Kevin kevin.ir...@cinbell.com
wrote:

 Based on our 1Gbps residential customers usage, I believe you just sit at
 home and run speedtest all day.

 Sent from my iPhone

  On Jun 26, 2015, at 2:41 PM, Rafael Possamai raf...@gav.ufsc.br wrote:
 
  How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single
 person
  it is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics,
  going from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average
  transfer rate, at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to
  comment? Just really curious, as to me it's more of a marketing push than
  anything else, even though gigabit to the home sounds really cool.
 
 
 
  On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 1:13 PM, Eric Dugas edu...@zerofail.com
 wrote:
 
  Nice try Bell.. So-Net did it two years ago, 2Gbps FTTH in Japan.
 
  Article: http://bgr.com/2013/06/13/so-net-nuro-2gbps-fiber-service/
 
  If you read Japanese: http://www.nuro.jp/hikari/
 
  Eric
 
  -Original Message-
  From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Hank Disuko
  Sent: June 26, 2015 2:04 PM
  To: NANOG
  Subject: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland
 
  Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of
 Toronto
  with the World's Fastest Internet™.
 
 
 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html
 
 
 
 The information transmitted is intended only for the person or entity to
 which it is addressed and may contain confidential and/or privileged
 material. Any review, retransmission, dissemination or other use of, or
 taking of any action in reliance upon, this information by persons or
 entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you receive
 this in error, please contact the sender and destroy any copies of this
 document.



RE: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Eric Dugas
Nice try Bell.. So-Net did it two years ago, 2Gbps FTTH in Japan.

Article: http://bgr.com/2013/06/13/so-net-nuro-2gbps-fiber-service/

If you read Japanese: http://www.nuro.jp/hikari/

Eric

-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Hank Disuko
Sent: June 26, 2015 2:04 PM
To: NANOG
Subject: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of Toronto with 
the World's Fastest Internet™.
http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html

  


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread TR Shaw
But what about us in Northwestern Ontario who can only get dialup, if that, 
from Bell?

 On Jun 26, 2015, at 2:13 PM, Eric Dugas edu...@zerofail.com wrote:
 
 Nice try Bell.. So-Net did it two years ago, 2Gbps FTTH in Japan.
 
 Article: http://bgr.com/2013/06/13/so-net-nuro-2gbps-fiber-service/
 
 If you read Japanese: http://www.nuro.jp/hikari/
 
 Eric
 
 -Original Message-
 From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Hank Disuko
 Sent: June 26, 2015 2:04 PM
 To: NANOG
 Subject: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland
 
 Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of Toronto 
 with the World's Fastest Internet™.
 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html
 
 



Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Mikael Abrahamsson

On Fri, 26 Jun 2015, Rafael Possamai wrote:


How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person
it is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics,
going from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average
transfer rate, at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to


I have 250/50 megabit/s. I frequently use the 250 megabit/s download and 
upload speed when doing larger file transfers, and I actually get the 
speed advertised.


I can get 500/50 but I'd have to pay tens of USD per month more for that, 
and it's just not worth it.


So while my transfer rate when I actually do something increases, it 
doesn't make me use more data per month, it just means that when I 
actually have to download something bigger, it takes shorter time.


And yes, fastest Internet in the world is pure BS, gigabit ethernet 
access to peoples homes have been around for years in other places.


--
Mikael Abrahamssonemail: swm...@swm.pp.se


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread jim deleskie
Its mostly marketing, a number of years ago I worked for a cable co, we
knew if we increased BW X we'd see a Y speed increase in usage.  We also
has done the math on several future generations of upgrades, so we'd know
if phone company increases to A we'd move to B.  I know the guy that did
the math for us then, he still sits in that job so I assume he still does
similar I suspect any cable so worth their salt does the same.



On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 3:39 PM, Rafael Possamai raf...@gav.ufsc.br wrote:

 How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person
 it is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics,
 going from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average
 transfer rate, at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to
 comment? Just really curious, as to me it's more of a marketing push than
 anything else, even though gigabit to the home sounds really cool.



 On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 1:13 PM, Eric Dugas edu...@zerofail.com wrote:

  Nice try Bell.. So-Net did it two years ago, 2Gbps FTTH in Japan.
 
  Article: http://bgr.com/2013/06/13/so-net-nuro-2gbps-fiber-service/
 
  If you read Japanese: http://www.nuro.jp/hikari/
 
  Eric
 
  -Original Message-
  From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Hank Disuko
  Sent: June 26, 2015 2:04 PM
  To: NANOG
  Subject: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland
 
  Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of
 Toronto
  with the World's Fastest Internet™.
 
 
 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html
 
 
 



Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Rafael Possamai
How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person
it is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics,
going from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average
transfer rate, at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to
comment? Just really curious, as to me it's more of a marketing push than
anything else, even though gigabit to the home sounds really cool.



On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 1:13 PM, Eric Dugas edu...@zerofail.com wrote:

 Nice try Bell.. So-Net did it two years ago, 2Gbps FTTH in Japan.

 Article: http://bgr.com/2013/06/13/so-net-nuro-2gbps-fiber-service/

 If you read Japanese: http://www.nuro.jp/hikari/

 Eric

 -Original Message-
 From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Hank Disuko
 Sent: June 26, 2015 2:04 PM
 To: NANOG
 Subject: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

 Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of Toronto
 with the World's Fastest Internet™.

 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html





Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread mikea
On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 04:30:05PM -0400, A MEKKAOUI wrote:
 Your right. Actually, Bell knows that home does not need that much
 BW, Bell size their network for much less than that. However, from a
 marketing perspective, when Bell says to a client I am offering you
 1G at $100 and competition are offering you 30M at $60, some clients
 likes that because they ignore that 1G will not make a difference
 compared to 30M.

 Also Bell is currently using ADSL technology to provide internet
 service which is a dead technology. So, Bell has no choice but to move
 to fiber if they want to stay on the market.

 KARIM M.

When I'm downloading an ISO or USB bootable image of, say, FreeBSD 10.x, that
speed difference makes a difference to me. I grant that I'm not Joe Typical by
any means, but the number of people who aren't Joe Typical isn't zero -- not
by a good bit. 

-- 
Mike Andrews, W5EGO
mi...@mikea.ath.cx
Tired old sysadmin 


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Mike Hammett
Some of those are why would one EVER need more than X, while others are why 
would one NOW need more than X. Big difference. Simple fact that there is no 
residential application that needs more than even 50 megabit much less 10,000 
megabit. 




- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 



Midwest Internet Exchange 
http://www.midwest-ix.com 


- Original Message -

From: Randy Bush ra...@psg.com 
To: Rafael Possamai raf...@gav.ufsc.br 
Cc: NANOG nanog@nanog.org 
Sent: Friday, June 26, 2015 3:57:29 PM 
Subject: Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland 

 How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? 

we once asked how a home user would use 56kb, how anyone needed more 
than 640k in a pee cee, how we would need more than 32 bits in an 
address. 

the only thing not rising is water levels. except the ocean, that is. 

randy 



Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Mark Tinka


On 26/Jun/15 23:11, mikea wrote:
 Define need. On the average, I probably don't need more than 56 KBaud,
 integrated over all the years I've been linked to the 'Net from home. Would I
 be willing to put up with it? Hell, no! Would I be willing to put up with 10
 Gig to the house for what I'm paying now? Emphatically yes.

 Ditto 1 Gig. What I'm getting isn't more than 10 megabit down and 2.5 up, so a
 fatter pipe would be very welcome. At the same price, or even another 
 $50/month.

 But I don't need it in the sense that I'll lose money or customers if I don't
 have it.

Assuming a service provider is looking to stay in business by delivering
more services on top of your garden variety Net, then considering the
quality of the pipe coming into the home is the first thing.

If I built an FTTH network (which would be Active-E, in my case), I'd
deliver 1Gbps to every home. This does not mean I am going to sell 1Gbps
of Internet access bandwidth to that home. It just means I have 1Gbps of
bandwidth into the home. And what can I do with that?

- I can sell classic Net.
- I can sell classic Voice.
- I can sell classic Tv.
- I can sell Streaming Tv.
- I can sell VoD.
- e.t.c.

When I market to my customers, I don't market You have 1Gbps in your
home. Now go make babies. I market the services I will be able to
deliver over that bandwidth. If an ISP can deliver 1Gbps into the home,
why limit thinking to conventions around bandwidth? Customers only care
about bandwidth if it's getting in the way. Otherwise, all they want to
know is how many VoD streams they can enjoy in 1080p, how many
concurrent iPads and laptops in the house they can download a full movie
on in 5 minutes, how many sports channels come in the Tv package, and
whether they get flat-rate for international voice calls.

The bandwidth - well, that is a given. You have to deliver all those
services somehow... 1Gbps is just a port on a switch; it's not that big
a deal.

Mark.



Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Andy Ringsmuth


 On Jun 26, 2015, at 4:01 PM, Mike Hammett na...@ics-il.net wrote:
 
 Some of those are why would one EVER need more than X, while others are why 
 would one NOW need more than X. Big difference. Simple fact that there is no 
 residential application that needs more than even 50 megabit much less 10,000 
 megabit. 


Oh sure there is. What happens when you use Carbonite or one of the other 
online backup services and needed a full restore? I bet the average home user, 
considering one to three or four PCs, could easily have a few terabytes of 
data. A 500G disk dies and you restore a backup. Bingo, you’re pegging the 
meter for quite a while.

Or even routine backups. On my Mac, after an average day at the office, my Time 
Machine backup runs anywhere from 1 to 10 gigabytes. If I were to run a 
Carbonite-type backup when I got home, that’s a substantial chunk.



-Andy


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Suresh Ramasubramanian
Parkinson's law of sorts? Use expanding to fill the bandwidth available

One kid with a torrent downloading random stuff, streaming hd and music off the 
internet etc and a family of four can make decent inroads into gigabit or so I 
would have thought 

Don't even start counting say a gb here and several mb there in software, os 
etc upgrades across a variety of devices.

Exrtrapolating from current usage levels on comparatively lower speed broadband 
doesn't quite make sense to me

--srs

 On 27-Jun-2015, at 12:09 am, Rafael Possamai raf...@gav.ufsc.br wrote:
 
 How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person
 it is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics,
 going from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average
 transfer rate, at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to
 comment? Just really curious, as to me it's more of a marketing push than
 anything else, even though gigabit to the home sounds really cool.
 
 
 
 On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 1:13 PM, Eric Dugas edu...@zerofail.com wrote:
 
 Nice try Bell.. So-Net did it two years ago, 2Gbps FTTH in Japan.
 
 Article: http://bgr.com/2013/06/13/so-net-nuro-2gbps-fiber-service/
 
 If you read Japanese: http://www.nuro.jp/hikari/
 
 Eric
 
 -Original Message-
 From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Hank Disuko
 Sent: June 26, 2015 2:04 PM
 To: NANOG
 Subject: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland
 
 Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of Toronto
 with the World's Fastest Internet™.
 
 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html
 
 
 


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Stephen Satchell

On 06/26/2015 12:03 PM, Paul Stewart wrote:

Personally I think it's pure marketing ... something I think we all
know...

I seen a few years back a FTTH development get completed using GPON -
everything in the area got Full Gig Internet.  Speedtest while I
was onsite showed about 900Mb/s download so pretty darn close (before
they fully deployed).

The interesting part was that the development consisted of 4400
active users the last time I heard but the bandwidth to upstream
provider was still only a single GigE and was not hitting serious
saturation levels most of the time.


I have worked on server room networking, and found that it takes quite a 
bit of tweaking of the interfaces and the TCP stack to get things up to 
80 percent usage of a gigabit link.  Both ends.  So your side can go 
like the wind, but your data source may not be able to fill the pipe. 
So I agree that, for most people, this will be pure marketing hype.


As for the 4400 users, that's the classical oversubscription model.


RE: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread A MEKKAOUI
Your right. Actually, Bell knows that home does not need that much BW, Bell 
size their network for much less than that. However, from a marketing 
perspective, when Bell says to a client I am offering you 1G at $100 and 
competition are offering you 30M at $60, some clients likes that because they 
ignore that 1G will not make a difference compared to 30M.

Also Bell is currently using ADSL technology to provide internet service which 
is a dead technology. So, Bell has no choice but to move to fiber if they want 
to stay on the market.

KARIM M.


-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Rafael Possamai
Sent: 26 juin 2015 14:39
To: Eric Dugas
Cc: NANOG
Subject: Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person it 
is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics, going 
from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average transfer rate, 
at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to comment? Just really 
curious, as to me it's more of a marketing push than anything else, even though 
gigabit to the home sounds really cool.



On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 1:13 PM, Eric Dugas edu...@zerofail.com wrote:

 Nice try Bell.. So-Net did it two years ago, 2Gbps FTTH in Japan.

 Article: http://bgr.com/2013/06/13/so-net-nuro-2gbps-fiber-service/

 If you read Japanese: http://www.nuro.jp/hikari/

 Eric

 -Original Message-
 From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Hank Disuko
 Sent: June 26, 2015 2:04 PM
 To: NANOG
 Subject: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

 Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of 
 Toronto with the World's Fastest Internet™.

 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-t
 oronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html






Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread mikea
On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 01:06:26PM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:
 
  On Jun 26, 2015, at 13:02 , Karl Auer ka...@biplane.com.au wrote:
  
  On Fri, 2015-06-26 at 13:39 -0500, Rafael Possamai wrote:
  How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person
  it is overkill.
  
  This sentiment keeps popping up. It's a failure of vision. To suggest
  that single people or ordinary people or any other set of presumably
  average and uninteresting people will never be able to fully utilise the
  amazing properties of X, and that they can and should be satisfied with
  some limited version of X or the even more limited alternative Y, is to
  completely miss the point. And to actually provide no more than that is
  to build a self-fulfilling prophecy.
 
 I see a potential market for perhaps hundreds of aircraft in the coming 
 century.

And just possibly for more than seven computers on the continent. 
*Any* continent.

-- 
Mike Andrews, W5EGO
mi...@mikea.ath.cx
Tired old sysadmin 


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Randy Bush
 How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use?

we once asked how a home user would use 56kb, how anyone needed more
than 640k in a pee cee, how we would need more than 32 bits in an
address.

the only thing not rising is water levels.  except the ocean, that is.

randy


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Clayton Zekelman


We recently had to pull some year over year statistics on consumption 
for a regulatory filing.


In 2009, our average customer used 11G of data.  This year it is 
85G.   In 5 years it could be 400G or more.


What's worse is, OTT video means that consumption is more than likely 
going to be at peak hours, driving capacity issues.


The average multi device household streaming HD video and gaming, and 
whatever else comes along will drive usage.


I honestly don't care what people do with their Internet 
connection.  I just know that I need to find ways to deliver more, 
because they're going to want it - even if they don't need it.



At 05:01 PM 26/06/2015, Mike Hammett wrote:
Some of those are why would one EVER need more than X, while others 
are why would one NOW need more than X. Big difference. Simple fact 
that there is no residential application that needs more than even 
50 megabit much less 10,000 megabit.





-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com





---

Clayton Zekelman
Managed Network Systems Inc. (MNSi)
3363 Tecumseh Rd. E
Windsor, Ontario
N8W 1H4

tel. 519-985-8410
fax. 519-985-8409



Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread mikea
On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 04:01:38PM -0500, Mike Hammett wrote:
 Some of those are why would one EVER need more than X, while others are why
 would one NOW need more than X. Big difference. Simple fact that there is
 no residential application that needs more than even 50 megabit much less
 10,000 megabit.

Define need. On the average, I probably don't need more than 56 KBaud,
integrated over all the years I've been linked to the 'Net from home. Would I
be willing to put up with it? Hell, no! Would I be willing to put up with 10
Gig to the house for what I'm paying now? Emphatically yes.

Ditto 1 Gig. What I'm getting isn't more than 10 megabit down and 2.5 up, so a
fatter pipe would be very welcome. At the same price, or even another $50/month.

But I don't need it in the sense that I'll lose money or customers if I don't
have it.

-- 
Mike Andrews, W5EGO
mi...@mikea.ath.cx
Tired old sysadmin 


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Suresh Ramasubramanian
Like Peter Lothberg's mother's home :)

--srs

 On 27-Jun-2015, at 12:22 am, Mikael Abrahamsson swm...@swm.pp.se wrote:
 
 And yes, fastest Internet in the world is pure BS, gigabit ethernet access 
 to peoples homes have been around for years in other places


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Constantine A. Murenin
On 26 June 2015 at 11:04, Hank Disuko gourmetci...@hotmail.com wrote:
 Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of Toronto 
 with the World's Fastest Internet™.
 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html

Only 1Gbps?!

LOL, but US Internet offers 10Gbps!

http://fiber.usinternet.com/plans-and-prices/


https://lobste.rs/s/mv7bzs/us_internet_to_offer_higher-speed_10gbps_connections_in_minneapolis_for_400_usd

Yes, residential; yes, 1Mbps; yes, only 399,00 USD/mo, which
amounts to 39 bucks per gigabit.

Bell's 1Gbps is by no means the world's fastest internet.

Not even in Canada:


http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/small-alberta-town-gets-massive-1-000-mbps-broadband-boost-1.1382428


http://montrealgazette.com/technology/canada-can-learn-from-olds-ab-the-city-with-the-fastest-internet-speed

 While homes in cities like Vancouver, Montreal, and Toronto are toiling 
 with maximum speeds only up to 100 megabits per second, in Olds Alberta – 
 90 kilometres north of Calgary – they have access to one Gigabit per 
 second connections, and at the bargain basement rate of $57 per month, 
 with no data caps.

Also, is Bell any different from ATT and Verizon in that it doesn't
peer with like anyone?  Will most Canadian traffic still go through
Chicago or New York?

C.


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Brandon Ross

On Fri, 26 Jun 2015, Rafael Possamai wrote:


How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person
it is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics,
going from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average
transfer rate, at least I don't think it would for me.


Why would you use average transfer rate as the metric for user experience 
quality?


Most users don't care about their long term bandwidth average, they care 
about getting that movie playing _right_now_, or HD video calls with all 
the grandchildren, all at once.  Heck, they care more about web pages 
showing up on the screen nice and fast more than average download speed.


--
Brandon Ross  Yahoo  AIM:  BrandonNRoss
+1-404-635-6667ICQ:  2269442
 Skype:  brandonross
Schedule a meeting:  http://www.doodle.com/bross


RE: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Paul Stewart
Personally I think it's pure marketing ... something I think we all know...

I seen a few years back a FTTH development get completed using GPON - 
everything in the area got Full Gig Internet.  Speedtest while I was onsite 
showed about 900Mb/s download so pretty darn close (before they fully deployed).

The interesting part was that the development consisted of 4400 active users 
the last time I heard but the bandwidth to upstream provider was still only a 
single GigE and was not hitting serious saturation levels most of the time.

Paul

-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Rafael Possamai
Sent: Friday, June 26, 2015 2:39 PM
To: Eric Dugas
Cc: NANOG
Subject: Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person it 
is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics, going 
from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average transfer rate, 
at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to comment? Just really 
curious, as to me it's more of a marketing push than anything else, even though 
gigabit to the home sounds really cool.



On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 1:13 PM, Eric Dugas edu...@zerofail.com wrote:

 Nice try Bell.. So-Net did it two years ago, 2Gbps FTTH in Japan.

 Article: http://bgr.com/2013/06/13/so-net-nuro-2gbps-fiber-service/

 If you read Japanese: http://www.nuro.jp/hikari/

 Eric

 -Original Message-
 From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Hank Disuko
 Sent: June 26, 2015 2:04 PM
 To: NANOG
 Subject: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

 Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of 
 Toronto with the World's Fastest Internet™.

 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-t
 oronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html






Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Karl Auer
On Fri, 2015-06-26 at 13:39 -0500, Rafael Possamai wrote:
 How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person
 it is overkill.

This sentiment keeps popping up. It's a failure of vision. To suggest
that single people or ordinary people or any other set of presumably
average and uninteresting people will never be able to fully utilise the
amazing properties of X, and that they can and should be satisfied with
some limited version of X or the even more limited alternative Y, is to
completely miss the point. And to actually provide no more than that is
to build a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Look at pretty much any modern technology and you can be sure that when
it was first invented someone wearing the then equivalent of a brown
cardigan said yes, that's all very well, but what use will ordinary
people ever have for it?.

When the first little fire sputtered into life in some Neanderthal cave
you can bet that some troglodyte said no point make bigger, me warm
enough, more hot waste of effort, but of course he hadn't thought of
bronze, iron, steel, glass, welding or rocketry. Or the steam engine or
the internal combustion engine. What luck that his kids ignored him, eh?

As William Gibson wrote, the street finds its uses for things.

I can't think of anything I would or could do with a terabit Internet
link - but it's not me who needs it. It's the kids now in school who
will build it, and their kids will think it commonplace. And they will
look back at you and me and think how did our grandparents ever manage
with only a couple of gigabits? How limiting! And while they are
thinking that, some bright young things will report that they think
they've got a primitive exabit link working...

Regards, K.

PS: There are only three real values for network speeds, just as there
are only three values for amount of personal fortune, RAM, disk space
and CPU speed. The three values are not enough, enough and I don't
know. Always aspire to I don't know.

-- 
~~~
Karl Auer (ka...@biplane.com.au)
http://www.biplane.com.au/kauer
http://twitter.com/kauer389

GPG fingerprint: 3C41 82BE A9E7 99A1 B931 5AE7 7638 0147 2C3C 2AC4
Old fingerprint: EC67 61E2 C2F6 EB55 884B E129 072B 0AF0 72AA 9882




Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Owen DeLong

 On Jun 26, 2015, at 13:02 , Karl Auer ka...@biplane.com.au wrote:
 
 On Fri, 2015-06-26 at 13:39 -0500, Rafael Possamai wrote:
 How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person
 it is overkill.
 
 This sentiment keeps popping up. It's a failure of vision. To suggest
 that single people or ordinary people or any other set of presumably
 average and uninteresting people will never be able to fully utilise the
 amazing properties of X, and that they can and should be satisfied with
 some limited version of X or the even more limited alternative Y, is to
 completely miss the point. And to actually provide no more than that is
 to build a self-fulfilling prophecy.

I see a potential market for perhaps hundreds of aircraft in the coming century.

lol

Owen



Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Mikael Abrahamsson

On Fri, 26 Jun 2015, jim deleskie wrote:

Its mostly marketing, a number of years ago I worked for a cable co, we 
knew if we increased BW X we'd see a Y speed increase in usage.  We also 
has done the math on several future generations of upgrades, so we'd 
know if phone company increases to A we'd move to B.  I know the guy 
that did the math for us then, he still sits in that job so I assume he 
still does similar I suspect any cable so worth their salt does the 
same.


After you increase the download speed above a certain threshold, it's my 
experience that total data per month doesn't increase more than marginally 
with speed increase. As soon as access speed is high enough so youtube, 
netflix etc automatically goes to the highest resolution immediately, data 
transfered per month is the same even though the access speed goes up.


So when you go from 5 to 10 megabit/s towards the user, yes, data amount 
increases, but when you go from 100 to 250 megabit/s towards the user, not 
so much.


--
Mikael Abrahamssonemail: swm...@swm.pp.se


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Landon Stewart
 On Jun 26, 2015, at 11:40 AM, TR Shaw ts...@oitc.com wrote:
 
 But what about us in Northwestern Ontario who can only get dialup, if that, 
 from Bell?

Seriously - write to your MP and MLA.

Landon Stewart
landonstew...@gmail.com



signature.asc
Description: Message signed with OpenPGP using GPGMail


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Rafael Possamai
That comment was made from a customer perspective (myself) while I wonder
if I ever would wanna pay for it, although it seems like it's pretty cheap
already. As an entrepreneur, business, etc... then yes, I agree. Shoot for
the stars and land on the moon. :)


On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 3:02 PM, Karl Auer ka...@biplane.com.au wrote:

 On Fri, 2015-06-26 at 13:39 -0500, Rafael Possamai wrote:
  How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single
 person
  it is overkill.

 This sentiment keeps popping up. It's a failure of vision. To suggest
 that single people or ordinary people or any other set of presumably
 average and uninteresting people will never be able to fully utilise the
 amazing properties of X, and that they can and should be satisfied with
 some limited version of X or the even more limited alternative Y, is to
 completely miss the point. And to actually provide no more than that is
 to build a self-fulfilling prophecy.

 Look at pretty much any modern technology and you can be sure that when
 it was first invented someone wearing the then equivalent of a brown
 cardigan said yes, that's all very well, but what use will ordinary
 people ever have for it?.

 When the first little fire sputtered into life in some Neanderthal cave
 you can bet that some troglodyte said no point make bigger, me warm
 enough, more hot waste of effort, but of course he hadn't thought of
 bronze, iron, steel, glass, welding or rocketry. Or the steam engine or
 the internal combustion engine. What luck that his kids ignored him, eh?

 As William Gibson wrote, the street finds its uses for things.

 I can't think of anything I would or could do with a terabit Internet
 link - but it's not me who needs it. It's the kids now in school who
 will build it, and their kids will think it commonplace. And they will
 look back at you and me and think how did our grandparents ever manage
 with only a couple of gigabits? How limiting! And while they are
 thinking that, some bright young things will report that they think
 they've got a primitive exabit link working...

 Regards, K.

 PS: There are only three real values for network speeds, just as there
 are only three values for amount of personal fortune, RAM, disk space
 and CPU speed. The three values are not enough, enough and I don't
 know. Always aspire to I don't know.

 --
 ~~~
 Karl Auer (ka...@biplane.com.au)
 http://www.biplane.com.au/kauer
 http://twitter.com/kauer389

 GPG fingerprint: 3C41 82BE A9E7 99A1 B931 5AE7 7638 0147 2C3C 2AC4
 Old fingerprint: EC67 61E2 C2F6 EB55 884B E129 072B 0AF0 72AA 9882





Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Jared Mauch
The issue here is economics.  1G hardware is cheap, as in sub-$100 for
a 1G CPE with SMF in one side and RJ45 out the other.

Even if you decide to limit yourself at 100m or similar, if you build it at the
optics side, it is more expensive than building at 1G.

Because of this, 1G is the most sensible speed/solution.

I believe that many people won’t get a real quantity of usage from their
links because they will be on 2.4ghz wifi regardless.  If you have your
home wired, you might get something faster but the largest users these days
tend to be adaptive streaming video which uses around 16Mb/s for a 4K stream
from Netflix, or software updates from Apple.

Speaking of which, since 8.4 is launching next week and tends to be
one of the larger internet events these days (more so than victoria secret
turned out to be by ratio) I’m awaiting a surge of software updates
for all the iDevices around the world.

- Jared

 On Jun 26, 2015, at 2:39 PM, Rafael Possamai raf...@gav.ufsc.br wrote:
 
 How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person
 it is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics,
 going from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average
 transfer rate, at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to
 comment? Just really curious, as to me it's more of a marketing push than
 anything else, even though gigabit to the home sounds really cool.
 
 
 
 On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 1:13 PM, Eric Dugas edu...@zerofail.com wrote:
 
 Nice try Bell.. So-Net did it two years ago, 2Gbps FTTH in Japan.
 
 Article: http://bgr.com/2013/06/13/so-net-nuro-2gbps-fiber-service/
 
 If you read Japanese: http://www.nuro.jp/hikari/
 
 Eric
 
 -Original Message-
 From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Hank Disuko
 Sent: June 26, 2015 2:04 PM
 To: NANOG
 Subject: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland
 
 Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of Toronto
 with the World's Fastest Internet™.
 
 http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html
 
 
 



Re: Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Rafael Possamai
Good points. But just like I won't take more than one shower at a time, I
probably won't watch more than one Netflix stream session at a time
(assuming that for myself only). Downloading a large ISO image in seconds
is definitely a plus, although at the office I never reach a steady 120MB/s
from some Linux mirror out there. I've recently created a Debian mirror and
the 1500GB or so of data came at an average speed of 270mbps using a 1gbps
datacenter link.

I think it will still be a while until we can saturate a 1gbps link inside
the average home. While there are people working hard to deliver 1gbps
FTTH, there are others working equally as hard in developing video
compression algorithms to utilize less bandwidth on the content provider
side.

Not arguing against it, I'm just throwing gas at the fire to see what
different perspectives come out.


On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 4:56 PM, Mark Andrews ma...@isc.org wrote:


 In message 
 cajb2g-h2cccqud7_bhpoydo+beysyzpy+js2p+hj6ruk0qx...@mail.gmail.com
 , Rafael Possamai writes:
  How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single
 person
  it is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics,
  going from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average
  transfer rate, at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to
  comment? Just really curious, as to me it's more of a marketing push than
  anything else, even though gigabit to the home sounds really cool.

 Overkill is good provided it doesn't cost too much more.  You want
 the connection speed to not be a limitation on what you are trying
 to do.  1G does that at a good price point these days.  At some
 point in the future 1G will seem slow and there will be a new speed
 that stops the link speed being the limitation.

 You don't think about the size of power lines coming into a house
 as they are overkill for just about anything you will do in the
 house.

 You don't think about the size of water pipes coming into a house
 as they are overkill for just about anything you will do in the
 house.  Very occasionally you will want to connect directly to the
 mains (filling a pool) but otherwise the pipe is more that sufficient.

 The worry should be over the gigabytes transfered, the kilowatthours
 and the kilolitres consumed which are the actual resources being
 delivered.

 Unfortunately ISP's have made it about link speed rather than what
 it really is about because link speed was the limiting factor.

 Mark
 --
 Mark Andrews, ISC
 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia
 PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: ma...@isc.org



Re: Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Mark Andrews

In message cajb2g-h2cccqud7_bhpoydo+beysyzpy+js2p+hj6ruk0qx...@mail.gmail.com
, Rafael Possamai writes:
 How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? For a single person
 it is overkill. Similar to the concept of price elasticity in economics,
 going from 50mbps to 1gbps doesn't necessarily increase your average
 transfer rate, at least I don't think it would for me. Anyone care to
 comment? Just really curious, as to me it's more of a marketing push than
 anything else, even though gigabit to the home sounds really cool.

Overkill is good provided it doesn't cost too much more.  You want
the connection speed to not be a limitation on what you are trying
to do.  1G does that at a good price point these days.  At some
point in the future 1G will seem slow and there will be a new speed
that stops the link speed being the limitation.

You don't think about the size of power lines coming into a house
as they are overkill for just about anything you will do in the
house.

You don't think about the size of water pipes coming into a house
as they are overkill for just about anything you will do in the
house.  Very occasionally you will want to connect directly to the
mains (filling a pool) but otherwise the pipe is more that sufficient.

The worry should be over the gigabytes transfered, the kilowatthours
and the kilolitres consumed which are the actual resources being
delivered.

Unfortunately ISP's have made it about link speed rather than what
it really is about because link speed was the limiting factor.

Mark
-- 
Mark Andrews, ISC
1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia
PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: ma...@isc.org


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Mark Tinka


On 26/Jun/15 23:56, Mark Andrews wrote:


 Unfortunately ISP's have made it about link speed rather than what
 it really is about because link speed was the limiting factor.

When 1Gbps becomes mainstream to the home, I think it will stop being
about link speed (well, for a while anyway, because who knows...).

As others have mentioned, a single device pulling 1Gbps in the home is
asking a lot, even if it were connected to the home router via
copper/fibre. As most devices in the home will be wi-fi-based, 1Gbps is
safe (for now). Of course, more devices in the home will put pressure on
1Gbps, but not before they put pressure on the wi-fi network. So again,
1Gbps is safe, for now.

The wired devices that could draw on that 1Gbps big time will be the
STB's, gaming consoles (even those use wi-fi), home media servers,
e.t.c. Depending on what one does with those, they may or may not draw
much from the 1Gbps fibre coming into the house.

Even if the service provider was dropping a 1080p or 4K IPTv Multicast
stream into 3x STB's in the home (one for the living room, one for the
man-cave and another random one in the house), and each STB had at least
two tuners (watch on one tuner, record from another tuner), you're still
looking at less than 120Mbps for all 3x STB's running + recording
simultaneously, assuming each tuner is pulling 20Mbps when active. Of
course, with 2015 families not glued to their Tv's as much as previous
generations did, that is less demand for classic Tv.

So all in all, with 1Gbps, there is a reasonable chance that, at the
very least, the connection between the home and the nearest service
provider switch will be utilitarian. The problem now is, who gets that
1Gbps link to their house, around the world?

Mark.



Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Owen DeLong
It’s not just about the transfer rate, though.

As has been noted, response times at peak congestion are definitely faster if 
you have more bandwidth.

So if you’ve got 3 kids all wanting to stream different HD5k content, 50Mbits 
is going to get interesting.
100Mbps will probably handle it with enough of a jitter buffer. 10G you can 
probably play instant on
and let the jitter buffer build while playing the first few seconds.

There are a number of other tactics that can improve user experience with more 
bandwidth than is needed
for the long-term average.

Average transfer rate is a silly way to measure anticipated user experience, as 
has been pointed out by
others.

Owen

 On Jun 26, 2015, at 14:01 , Mike Hammett na...@ics-il.net wrote:
 
 Some of those are why would one EVER need more than X, while others are why 
 would one NOW need more than X. Big difference. Simple fact that there is no 
 residential application that needs more than even 50 megabit much less 10,000 
 megabit. 
 
 
 
 
 - 
 Mike Hammett 
 Intelligent Computing Solutions 
 http://www.ics-il.com 
 
 
 
 Midwest Internet Exchange 
 http://www.midwest-ix.com 
 
 
 - Original Message -
 
 From: Randy Bush ra...@psg.com 
 To: Rafael Possamai raf...@gav.ufsc.br 
 Cc: NANOG nanog@nanog.org 
 Sent: Friday, June 26, 2015 3:57:29 PM 
 Subject: Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland 
 
 How does one fully utilize a gigabit link for home use? 
 
 we once asked how a home user would use 56kb, how anyone needed more 
 than 640k in a pee cee, how we would need more than 32 bits in an 
 address. 
 
 the only thing not rising is water levels. except the ocean, that is. 
 
 randy 
 



Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Owen DeLong
10Gbps inside the home at an economical price for the phys means IP Multicast 
can finally be a viable alternative (replacement for) HDMI.

No more will you connect one Blu-Ray player to One Amp to One TV. You’ll just 
connect them all to ethernet.

Amps and TVs will have UIs which allow you to subscribe to streams provided by 
Blu-Rays and other media sources.

Want to watch something on two TVs while listening to the audio through a 
particular amp in the house, no problem. Set up the
stream on the provider device and subscribe on the TVs and the Amp. When it’s 
all set, press play and enjoy. Want to pause
it and move to a third TV and change amps? No problem. Pause, reconfigure the 
subscriptions, and resume.

Of course this will require the RIAA and their friends to either come up with 
new ways to be obnoxious to consumers or
to perform an extraction of their crania from their collective rectums about 
DRM in order to be viable, but I’m sure one or
more of those things will happen eventually.

Owen

 On Jun 26, 2015, at 15:15 , Mark Tinka mark.ti...@seacom.mu wrote:
 
 
 
 On 26/Jun/15 23:56, Mark Andrews wrote:
 
 
 Unfortunately ISP's have made it about link speed rather than what
 it really is about because link speed was the limiting factor.
 
 When 1Gbps becomes mainstream to the home, I think it will stop being
 about link speed (well, for a while anyway, because who knows...).
 
 As others have mentioned, a single device pulling 1Gbps in the home is
 asking a lot, even if it were connected to the home router via
 copper/fibre. As most devices in the home will be wi-fi-based, 1Gbps is
 safe (for now). Of course, more devices in the home will put pressure on
 1Gbps, but not before they put pressure on the wi-fi network. So again,
 1Gbps is safe, for now.
 
 The wired devices that could draw on that 1Gbps big time will be the
 STB's, gaming consoles (even those use wi-fi), home media servers,
 e.t.c. Depending on what one does with those, they may or may not draw
 much from the 1Gbps fibre coming into the house.
 
 Even if the service provider was dropping a 1080p or 4K IPTv Multicast
 stream into 3x STB's in the home (one for the living room, one for the
 man-cave and another random one in the house), and each STB had at least
 two tuners (watch on one tuner, record from another tuner), you're still
 looking at less than 120Mbps for all 3x STB's running + recording
 simultaneously, assuming each tuner is pulling 20Mbps when active. Of
 course, with 2015 families not glued to their Tv's as much as previous
 generations did, that is less demand for classic Tv.
 
 So all in all, with 1Gbps, there is a reasonable chance that, at the
 very least, the connection between the home and the nearest service
 provider switch will be utilitarian. The problem now is, who gets that
 1Gbps link to their house, around the world?
 
 Mark.
 



Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Joe Abley



On 26 Jun 2015, at 15:04, Hank Disuko wrote:

Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of 
Toronto with the World's Fastest Internet™.

http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html


Bell Canada is in the business of defending the current regulatory 
regime from claims that internet speeds are slow, or that investment by 
incumbents in the last mile is lacking, or that it ought to be required 
to share its access network with competitors. Read the press with that 
context in mind.


There's cooperative, rural broadband in the UK [1] that offers 10G 
access to farms at a lower price than Bell charges for some satellite TV 
bundles. I don't think anybody need waste any cycles persuading other 
people here that the fastest internet claims are not aligned precisely 
with the kind reality you find even on this list.



Joe

[1] http://b4rn.org.uk


RE: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Mikael Abrahamsson

On Fri, 26 Jun 2015, Paul Stewart wrote:

The interesting part was that the development consisted of 4400 active 
users the last time I heard but the bandwidth to upstream provider was 
still only a single GigE and was not hitting serious saturation levels 
most of the time.


I'd say for any kind of serious FTTH deployment, peak hour average user 
will be around 0.5 - 2 megabit/s, so if you actually want a user who buys 
100/100 to be able to use that at peak hour, you're looking at an 
oversubscription factor of around 1/10th of the above, ie around 500 
users on a gigabit ethernet uplink.


--
Mikael Abrahamssonemail: swm...@swm.pp.se


Re: World's Fastest Internet™ in Canadaland

2015-06-26 Thread Peter Kristolaitis

On 6/26/2015 7:26 PM, Joe Abley wrote:


On 26 Jun 2015, at 15:04, Hank Disuko wrote:

Bell Canada is apparently gearing up to provide the good people of 
Toronto with the World's Fastest Internet™.
http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/06/25/bell-canada-to-give-toronto-worlds-fastest-internet.html 



Bell Canada is in the business of defending the current regulatory 
regime from claims that internet speeds are slow, or that investment 
by incumbents in the last mile is lacking, or that it ought to be 
required to share its access network with competitors. Read the press 
with that context in mind.


There's cooperative, rural broadband in the UK [1] that offers 10G 
access to farms at a lower price than Bell charges for some satellite 
TV bundles. I don't think anybody need waste any cycles persuading 
other people here that the fastest internet claims are not aligned 
precisely with the kind reality you find even on this list.


Joe

[1] http://b4rn.org.uk


And defend the current regulatory regime well they do.  I live literally 
minutes outside of the Ottawa urban area and I have as choices for 
network connectivity either LoS wireless or satellite. I can, however, 
stand at the end of my driveway and look in EITHER direction to see 
houses that can get cable service, yet none of the incumbents are 
willing to service my little stretch of road (affecting me and ~5 
neighbours).


I'm told by the neighbours (I just moved here) that they've been bugging 
the incumbents for YEARS and getting no traction at all. I'm thinking of 
pricing out a fiber run and running a little local co-op network access 
provider for me and the neighbours, but I suspect that install costs 
might nix that idea.


(For extra fun, I was told by one of the incumbents that my address was 
serviceable with up to 150Mbps cable before I purchased the property.  
Then when I took possession and tried to get service set up -- nope, 
sorry.  But that's a whole other story...)