Google Fiber starts with a connection speed 100 times faster than today's average broadband.
fiber.google.com
I wonder how long it will take for it to come to Australia (if it ever will).
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Google Fiber starts with a connection speed 100 times faster than today's average broadband.


jambo wrote:At the moment it's only in Kansas City, so it'll be a long time before it ever comes to Australia.
Plus with the NBN, they probably won't even bother.
jambo wrote:Plus with the NBN, they probably won't even bother.
Canguro wrote:how are they actually going to make money from this?
BorisBC wrote:Pro tip - if you have to spew in a car, spew down the (inside) front of your shirt. Trust me, it's a lot easier to clean spew off yourself than the interior of a car.
The technology being used in the FTTH portion of the NBN is GPON, gigabit passive optical networking. In GPON a single fibre pair carries 2.4Gbps to an optical splitter, the node that splits this signal into a number of individual fibres, one pair per home. If there are no more than 24 homes served by that node you can absolutely guarantee that they could all get 100Mbps simultaneously, if there were sufficient capacity in the backhaul.
Once you go above 24 your theoretical maximum drops below 100Mbps but also you have to share the optical power among ever more fibres and that limits the distance over which you serve homes from that node.
However, and this is the key point, the nature of the technology is such that the full 2.4Gbps of bandwidth is available on each and every one of those fibre pairs. No matter how many of them there are. They just cannot all get 1Gbps at the same time.
(...)
With only 2.4Gbps in the shared fibre only two users on the node would be able to get the full 1Gpbs simultaneously. However in practice it would be very unlikely that every user with a one gig service would demand the full bandwidth. "the chances of this happening by the millisecond are very small," Brooks said.. "And by that stage you'd be limited by backhaul capacity."
He added that if demand warranted it would be a simple matter to install another splitter in the node and connect another fibre pair into the backhaul network "They don't make cables with one one fibre pair."
http://www.itwire.com/opinion-and-analy ... on?start=1
Yurtles wrote:Labor party stays in power next federal election.
BorisBC wrote:Pro tip - if you have to spew in a car, spew down the (inside) front of your shirt. Trust me, it's a lot easier to clean spew off yourself than the interior of a car.
exe3 wrote:jambo wrote:At the moment it's only in Kansas City, so it'll be a long time before it ever comes to Australia.
Plus with the NBN, they probably won't even bother.
Unless Liberal get in. :dodgy:

Yurtles wrote:Oh please. Our political parties are like comparing apples with the exact same apples only with a different sticker on them. It's not like one party plans to adopt communism while the other wants to invade New Zealand.
The NBN is something real rather than the usual "less taxes and better roads" spiel. There isn't a (good) reason in the world to not support the party wanting to build it.
BorisBC wrote:Pro tip - if you have to spew in a car, spew down the (inside) front of your shirt. Trust me, it's a lot easier to clean spew off yourself than the interior of a car.
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