Why most of the UK doesn't [back then] have True Fibre Optic Broadband

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 407

  • @gregodianne
    @gregodianne Před 5 lety +113

    I worked for BT for 42 years, latterly on the superfast roll out. This video is spot on correct. well done

    • @nzrdb6
      @nzrdb6 Před 5 lety +3

      Would you recommend youngsters to join the BT telecomms apprentice scheme?

    • @haroonq2456
      @haroonq2456 Před 5 lety +2

      damn grandpa u put in in dem powers

    • @thpxs0554
      @thpxs0554 Před 4 lety +2

      Max Heidcase ... I worked for them for 30 years and I’d recommend the apprenticeship. They get the pick of the cream jobs after completion,unlike us old engineers who were largely stuck where we we were.

    • @Smith6265
      @Smith6265 Před 4 lety +2

      Wow you know my grandad Howard 😀One of the top engineers he was a fault finder😉
      Worked in the basement in London.
      Please get back to me if you know him and I will pass the message on.
      And the things I remember are The snooker room the canteen room & long stairs that went down & down Felt like they never ended,That’s where he worked .
      I remember seeing the BT Motherboard in the basements , I remember him saying no one ever gets to see this,wow Brings back memories now.

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 4 lety +3

      Thank you

  • @baileyderks4087
    @baileyderks4087 Před 6 lety +19

    Really dig this format learned a lot, thanks!

  • @umartdagnir
    @umartdagnir Před 3 lety +10

    Now I understand why there are such massive differences between upload and download speed in the UK. Thanks.

    • @rmccombs66
      @rmccombs66 Před 3 lety

      It's basically the same in the US unless you want to pay a lot of money.

    • @checksum00
      @checksum00 Před 3 lety

      @@rmccombs66 For DSL/DOCSIS (cable): It's a technological limitations. A lot more frequencies are allocated to the download side rather than the upload side as it is the side that concerns 95% of the subscribers (I know, annoying for the like of us that upload large files frequently).
      For FTTH: It is a manufactured limitation by ISP because they believe people will host servers or commercial stuff on their symmetrical connections. It's an outdated fear and is retarded. In Canada on Bell FTTH, we get symmetrical connections up to 940mbps in download (meaning it is not symmetrical anymore on 1gbps and 1.5gbps download speed). The reason they stop being symmetrical is that the modem ONT (the optical emitter in the modem) isn't strong/good enough to go reliably beyond 940mbps, while the central office equivalent has no issue pushing much faster speed. The reason is simple, it would be cost prohibitive to put the kind of equipment capable of going over 940mbps in a residential ONT (the "modem") that is treated like a throw away equipment. Want 500/500mbps or 1gbps/940mbps and want to pay 100$ a month for it like me? Knock yourself out with it!

    • @harryjohnson615
      @harryjohnson615 Před 3 lety

      @@checksum00 *"....outdated fear..."*
      Absolutely isn't, you will change your view on that if you're unfortunate enough to have people move in on your node that kill it dead by streaming data up and down 24/7

  • @thpxs0554
    @thpxs0554 Před 4 lety +5

    I worked for them 30 years, from before the privatisation, great video. I’ll add to it a little bit. For the vast majority of people the fttc is perfectly adequate, if it doesn’t buffer then that’s good enough. We have thousands of estates where the cables are buried direct in ground, just below the tarmac, the joints outside each house where the house lead-in comes from are called tee-offs, even now in 2020 there could be hundreds of thousands of them that are simply twisted wires with a Vaseline sleeve and then taped up with self amalgamating tape. The cables are often soaked with water which gets in through all sorts of access points from leaky joints to cable damage from spade cuts, and the water capillaries down and fills up the joints. I spent years measuring these faults and getting them dug out, a tee off dig could cost £600 if no extra work was required. So a line bringing in just a few pounds a month in rental to Openreach could cost decades worth of rental just for a single repair to cables 40/50/ years old . The cost to benefit on ducting these estates makes it not viable. It would cost literally billions and billions to do, there’s wayleave issues, council permissions, and then each house wanting fibre would need the garden or drive dug up, just to get a faster ADSL.. BT exists solely to make profit for shareholders and this would be a disaster financially, renting out a fibre for literally pennies each to the service providers, which cost thousands to put in is madness. But they are putting fibre to the poles, so if you’re currently fed overhead then eventually you’ll get a fibre option, probably just as some wireless technology takes over and the whole solid infrastructure becomes obsolete. They are currently planning to get rid of all the thousands of exchanges and have just 6 for the whole country, because they can now get rid of the copper E sides and use VOIP for telephony. It’s changing faster than you can imagine. I was putting in 5meg circuits which got upgraded to say 19 then 37 on the 21CN network which was immediately obsolete as fttc came in. We did that many times, we installed line sharing systems called DACS. Tens of thousands of them to give speech service over full up cables, then as soon as ADSL came in we took them all out, cost millions and millions, the tech moves much faster than the outside infrastructure.in addition people obsess endlessly about the speed, even if there’s no issues with buffering, all playing games and video streaming together they’ll still complain they’re short on the speed, often just having measured it from an iPad wirelessly. Which is totally inaccurate for speed testing, you need a dedicated tester not even a speed test site and using a cable is accurate

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 4 lety +2

      The figures I can recall to do full FTTH in the UK was 36 Billion pounds. Adequate is not something the UK should aspire to:)

    • @karamjitdedyal752
      @karamjitdedyal752 Před 2 lety

      I do hope Starlink (satellite) Kills off Openreach and the normal ISP's as they have gotten too used to being rude, arrogant, lazy and mostly ignorant to the paying customer. My service is FTTC and the speeds keep dropping and the service keeps dropping out. I have asked for when they plan to roll out FTTP and all they say is you are not in the plans. What a load of crap. Openreach is a joke of an organisation and since they have a monopoly they do not have to care. I hope starlink makes them care when they run them out of business in the next decade. As you say the outside infrastructure will never keep up with satellite.

    • @wiziek
      @wiziek Před rokem +1

      @@karamjitdedyal752 why are you so ingorant? starlink as wireless can't kill wired broadband.

  • @Salticidaee
    @Salticidaee Před 5 lety +23

    Great in another 20 years I'll have my fibre to the home broadband

    • @abstract447
      @abstract447 Před 5 lety +1

      LMAO

    • @dannycostello
      @dannycostello Před 4 lety +1

      They are ramping up fibre rollout in the UK at a tremendous rate we have gone from 3% coverage to 10% in little over 2 years and apparently the ISP's still aren't at full rollout Speed yet because they are developing new ways of installing plus they have a shortage of engineers

    • @steelsilence19
      @steelsilence19 Před 3 lety

      Yes my area is in the plans on bt full fiber finally looked up my old address just to see if it says it for everyone and it doesn't old address isent in plans yay now hope it won't take 5 years lol

    • @benwiddop7128
      @benwiddop7128 Před 3 lety

      @@dannycostello mines been cancelled and predicted 6 years to get the upgrade yet the areas around us got £40 as part of a rollout plan

  • @TalentSpotter83
    @TalentSpotter83 Před 3 lety +4

    Very informative video, I'll definitely be sharing. It is a joke how in the UK much of the country (especially rural areas) still struggle to get even 10Mbps connection. Thank you!

  • @TheRealBleach
    @TheRealBleach Před 5 lety +13

    I saw a couple of hyperoptic vans doing stuff in our area. I think they are installing their network in my area. Exciting!

    • @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe
      @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe Před 5 lety +1

      The Real Bleach yep ur gonna be able to get gigabit

    • @lespaul2000
      @lespaul2000 Před 5 lety +2

      They also lie. They offer fibre to the basement and then cat5e into the house.

    • @jacobhinchliffe6237
      @jacobhinchliffe6237 Před 4 lety

      @@lespaul2000 so much for gigabit speeds

    • @AbsoluteTVYT
      @AbsoluteTVYT Před 4 lety +1

      @@jacobhinchliffe6237 You do realise CAT5e cable *is* gigabit.

    • @Dimitrivv007
      @Dimitrivv007 Před 4 lety +2

      I hate about the fact they install fibre to really uncommon places and not like well known towns. I've been waiting for my town to have fibre for so long!

  • @alistairgrantham9314
    @alistairgrantham9314 Před 5 lety +11

    I work for virgin media installing fibre to the premises now so we are catching up with the world slowly just put you straight about one thing tho coaxial cable is a lot faster than the openreach network and we are getting 350 meg to the home on a standard coaxial cable no other operator will offer you that apart from gigaclear which is only in certain areas

    • @murrmack
      @murrmack Před 5 lety +4

      Have a look at hyperoptic - fibre to the premises 1G/b down and up (symmetric) it’s fantastic! All that for cheaper than BT dsl 17M/b

    • @justinabbottabbott7892
      @justinabbottabbott7892 Před 5 lety +1

      News to me that we install fibre to the house I've worked for virgin 25 years on install and service everyday,in house btw not a contractor

    • @Patrickwaustin
      @Patrickwaustin Před 5 lety +1

      justin Abbott abbott , it’s only fibre to the property in certain areas, so it depends where you work!

    • @phil1ddon
      @phil1ddon Před 5 lety +1

      Sorry mate, you're wrong. Gfast is advertised as 330 down however I've seen with my own eyes numerous 500 down using new fibre to Gfast pod and twisted pair there after. It's using higher frequency that aren't effected by ADSL crosstalk.

    • @physis8981
      @physis8981 Před 5 lety +1

      Yes and only 20 upload UK companies are shit except Hyperoptic and Gigaclear..

  • @TastyPC
    @TastyPC Před 3 lety +9

    I’ve never personally had an issue with both FTTC and FTTP being called "Fibre". As that’s literally what the F stands for in either. As long as it’s easy to find out if the connection is FTTC or FTTP and your expected upload and download speeds (which it is) then you know exactly what you’re getting and there is no confusion

    • @HtheKing
      @HtheKing Před 3 lety

      So is FTTC and FTTP the same thing?

    • @TastyPC
      @TastyPC Před 3 lety +2

      @@HtheKing No, they're not.

    • @VanillaVictini
      @VanillaVictini Před 3 lety +4

      @@HtheKing With FTTC, the fibre runs from your town's telephone exchange to a nearby street cabinet, and then you get your standard copper phone line to your house from the cabinet. FTTP is true fibre all the way from your phone exchange to your house.

    • @tonyapanari3164
      @tonyapanari3164 Před 3 lety +1

      @@VanillaVictini Exactly. Look at it from this persepective - If you're still paying for line rental, then you'll most likely be getting your internet via a copper line from the street cabinet.

    • @VanillaVictini
      @VanillaVictini Před 3 lety +1

      @@tonyapanari3164 That's an excellent way of summarising it.

  • @tateybread
    @tateybread Před 3 lety +2

    Brill vid. V informative and clear. Getting "Full Fibre" from BT next week, which I am hoping is proper FTTH. We'll see how that goes lol. Thanks for making the effort to do the vid - still useful 2 years down the line.

  • @matthewmajor3927
    @matthewmajor3927 Před 3 lety +3

    Great video, nice research and presentation. Impressive work.

  • @mkleng
    @mkleng Před 2 lety +1

    Superb content. Finally answered my tech gap. Thank you, Tom Holland.

  • @chrismay115
    @chrismay115 Před 2 lety +1

    Not a bad video - couple of points. Thatcher wanted Mercury Communications fibre network to compete with BT’s monopoly which subsequently involved BT selling its world beating fibre technology to NEC of Japan. The equipment was shipped from BT’s development labs in Ipswich and used by the Japanese. Interestingly enough average download speeds in Japan are not hugely faster than the UK currently and the competition of alternative networks in the UK could lead to lower pricing overall. Of course, speeds in the UK can go up to 3 Gbps and 10 Gbps which shows how fast the market has developed, although Openreach on their older GPON tech doesn’t offer symmetric speeds yet and is limited to 900 Mbps.

  • @CoverageAwarenessStudio
    @CoverageAwarenessStudio Před 3 lety +2

    I live in the USA and I am the only residential in my town that has 100% fiber... It's actually called DARK FIBER and it is expensive as hell but totally worth it!

  • @Beaker4Remps
    @Beaker4Remps Před 6 lety +7

    Thank you.Very clearly explained.

  • @twatcrash1595
    @twatcrash1595 Před 5 lety +19

    Usual Margaret Thatcher to be honest...she messed up more than just the broadband.

    • @stubones
      @stubones Před 4 lety +2

      She didn't mess up as much of those retarded labour fkwits that's for sure.

    • @MrAmericaninUK
      @MrAmericaninUK Před 4 lety +3

      @@stubones SHE messed up more then labour

  • @KT-it3jh
    @KT-it3jh Před 5 lety +1

    Very well made video answered all my questions, many thanks!
    I've subscribed.

    • @mikiali8319
      @mikiali8319 Před 5 lety

      I’m still on ADSL and it gives me 2 mbps and I live in the uk. So I don’t know what to do

  • @overpad1
    @overpad1 Před 3 lety +7

    I feel very sad for you guys in the UK that you had the chance for a Fiber infrastructure but got cancelled. We do have 1000 Mbps Internet or at least 500 Mpbs offers in the top 10 cities of Bulgaria.

    • @TheIshikawaRin
      @TheIshikawaRin Před 2 lety +2

      Another reason to hate Margaret Thatcher.

    • @edc1569
      @edc1569 Před 2 lety

      There's plenty of buildings with gigabit fibre services, whats being discussed here is the universal nationwide system.

  • @mahammad
    @mahammad Před 4 lety +41

    You look like Tom Holland lol

  • @kctyphoon
    @kctyphoon Před 3 lety

    Basically every service is using copper lines at some point - the big difference is how close to your home the fiber gets. FFTH / FTTP uses fiber literally from their central office to your house - and its at that point where the service transitions. Most other companies only use fiber to span long distances outside - and your service will transition somewhere ‘near’ your house. The further away you are from that transition, the slower your service will get. So even though your FFTP/FTTH providers network, and their SERVICE LINE to your house is 100% fiber optic - its still going to use coax inside your home.

  • @samhawkes6597
    @samhawkes6597 Před 4 lety +3

    2 years on from this video and we still don't have fibre available unless we pay thousands for fttp on demand.
    Who knows when it will readily available

    • @Dimitrivv007
      @Dimitrivv007 Před 4 lety

      Yeah the sad thing is that they installed it 15 minutes away from me last year so hopefully they install it to my area this year

    • @askeladd958
      @askeladd958 Před 3 lety

      @@Dimitrivv007 any luck yet

  • @whosyagamer
    @whosyagamer Před 4 lety +4

    BT had very similar technology 25 years before Openreach rolled out FTTC and actually started to install VDSL2 cabinets in 2009. In London in 1985 the Westminster Cable TV system was rolled out, which was of a very similar design to FTTC cabinets. Where fibre optic cables were connected from the exchange to a streetside cabinet and then converted in the cabinet from an optical to electrical signal and then sent over copper cabling to peoples homes. Here is a 22 minute video all about it and they talk about the cabinets around the 11 minute mark. czcams.com/video/-1AiM1S8MGk/video.html

  • @florichi
    @florichi Před 3 lety +2

    A1 (former state owned telecom), the largest ISP in Austria advertises and advertised even their 8mbit connection as "glasfaser power"-> "fiberoptic power", although the fiber only goes to the exchange. I live in the second largest city in Austria and can book 20Mbit for 25€, but only 8 reach me, because my exchange is 900m away. You would assume that at least the cities have a good connection, but even Vienna has areas where only >10Mbit exist. Politics wanted to push the FTTH and FTTC deployment and formed a fund with 1billion € that came from the 5G frequency auction, but they limited it to rural areas. So you can have 1gbit in towns with 50 people, but have a very poor connection in cities. I mean, as an ISP, would you upgrade in cities for you own money, when you can do it in rural areas where you are heavily subsidized?
    Yes, we have more households connected via FTTH, but the average speed is higher in the UK, because the cable network is more widly adopted.
    And the same situation fiber vs copper happened in germany, because a dude in politics was friends with copper cable companies. So he pushed the 2 wire telephone wire, not fiber.

  • @katakisLives
    @katakisLives Před 4 lety +3

    So yet another thing we can blame thatcher for

  • @LilUziDirt
    @LilUziDirt Před 6 lety +4

    Yeah hyperoptic and community fibre is working on getting the UK full Fibre! BT, talk talk, sky all use old cables. Thats why they go up to 76mpbs. But Virgin media goes up to 350mbps and hyperoptic goes up to 1000mbps download and upload which is FULL fibre.

    • @jacobhinchliffe6237
      @jacobhinchliffe6237 Před 4 lety

      Yes but Hyperoptic runs cat 5e into the home

    • @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe
      @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe Před 3 lety

      @@jacobhinchliffe6237 yes they run fibre to the building or home then cat 5e inside. A few metres of which can fully support gigabit.

  • @theryanthomas
    @theryanthomas Před 4 lety +2

    Great video - Fantastically presented and brilliantly researched. However, BT has offered FTTH for 5+ years. I know this because I had it installed when moving into my current home in 2014 and have now been 'soft' upgraded to their new 950/150mbps package with a simple unlock. No extra hardware needed. For reference, I'm in mid-Cornwall.

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 4 lety +2

      Thank you very much. I am aware that BT does have FTTH deployments going back to 2009 (and even earlier than that). My cousin has it:) I remember when I did research originally back in 2015 I knew that Cornwall was fortunate to get actual fibre broadband.
      BT did quietly drop their ambitious FTTH target and switched gears to FTTC/VDSL deployments.
      As I'm sure you'll appreciate for the sake of time I have kept some of these other bits out.

    • @theryanthomas
      @theryanthomas Před 4 lety

      TheOpticalNetworker Fair enough bud. Great video!

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 4 lety

      @@theryanthomas Thanks man

  • @jahedur
    @jahedur Před 5 lety +3

    Where can I see your older video from 2016 please? This was very informative thank you.

  • @User-wt5wb
    @User-wt5wb Před 5 lety

    Thanks. Ive been looking for this type of video for ages!

  • @richardgomes5420
    @richardgomes5420 Před 3 lety

    A friend of mine lives on a relatively small city in a relatively poor province in Brazil. He has 100Mbps symmetric with support for IPv6 connectivity.

  • @brentsummers7377
    @brentsummers7377 Před 2 lety

    Real fibre is crazy fast to install once all the underground ducts are installed. It took two guys literally 5 minutes to set up their gear & blow the fibre through to my place - about 80 metres. And about 40 minutes to install the ETP and ONT & do the connections.

  • @joemaldonado3
    @joemaldonado3 Před 2 lety

    here in the USA I just got fiber in January 2022.... My sister got hers on Candlemas Day 2022 in the Alabama countryside... Not too shab but about time...!

  • @bonesawarm6987
    @bonesawarm6987 Před 4 lety +1

    Can get virgin where I am but every other provider with fibre is not in my area and are not planning to

  • @whyzen2081
    @whyzen2081 Před 3 lety

    Virgin does FTTH now too, but the fibre terminates at the customer's wall plate, and gets converted into RFoG and a coaxial cable so that it's compatible with older hardware and the whole VM ecosystem (DOCSIS 3.0/3.1). My entire town was just connected up with VM FTTH, with fibre blown from cabinets to termination points at the top of BT telegraph poles, then another length of fibre pushed to the customer's wall. Their new rollout (project lightning) is future proofed, but it seems kind of pointless while they're still using coaxial for the last metre to the modem, and using DOCSIS.

    • @djdanny9000
      @djdanny9000 Před rokem

      Yes True for year they do use HFC aka hybrid fibre coaxial they use fibre optic cables to the cabinet and from cabinet the last mile is HFC. You said RFoG aka Radio frequency over glass they bring the fibre optic cables even closer like outside your house stopping at the side of your house were it currently enters then it’s back to good old HFC. That’s what RFoG is.

  • @Fmf6832
    @Fmf6832 Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks for the video, quite interesting. Do you have a sense of how much the finer optic installation cost per km is?

  • @alextrex3975
    @alextrex3975 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for the background, now I know to avoid most major broadband providers in the UK

  • @pianoman6639
    @pianoman6639 Před 3 měsíci

    Love this video explained it all so well

  • @katakisLives
    @katakisLives Před 4 lety +1

    Fibre broadband is just too expensive right now. I'd only upgrade once its on price parity with conventional broadband

  • @uK8cvPAq
    @uK8cvPAq Před 4 lety +1

    It's because the British network is ancient whilst other countries are building their first ever networks.

  • @pulsenetwork1796
    @pulsenetwork1796 Před 4 lety +1

    My mobile phone network speed is faster than my fibre speed which is connected in my house. So basically mobile phone networks use antennas for you to receive faster internet speeds .so how comes when it's directly connected in house via broadband its slower yet it's WiFi . So from my house to the outside cabinet it's copper then from cabinet to another cabinet it's fibre attached .so if if they removed the copper from my house replaced it with fibre to cabinet i bet I would get super speeds .just a thought .

  • @silverismoney
    @silverismoney Před 3 lety

    There's G.Fast as well (330mbit DSL). Fortunately things are getting better and we've got dozens of proper fibre ISPs now. I should get it in 2021 if openreach and their contractors keep to their schedule.

  • @Sidg2
    @Sidg2 Před 5 lety +3

    Suppose if a big Tier-1 broadband company have to launch a FTTH service in few states in which there are 100s of large and small cities and towns. They need a fiber Central office or called exchange office same like old copper telephone exchange office but with greater range upto 25km in radius. Right?
    But if a city is very large in area then do broadband company need to make multiple Central offices/fiber exchange offices in a city or town?

    • @RicardoMusch
      @RicardoMusch Před 5 lety

      The nice thing about fibre is that it is very thin, fast (speed of light) and can transport signal over a way larger distance than Coax or copper can (before it needs to be fed into a signal booster or exchange).

    • @boldswede1280
      @boldswede1280 Před 5 lety

      all the cabs are linked via fibre back to the dslam (the exchange). it's only the customer end which has the copper cable. In the UK speeds of 330mbps are achievable over copper but only up to 500 metres. I think the usa are the same but you're a rich country so probably have better connectivity than most. You're not the leaders though. The best are fttp connections which in theory are limitless. The UK never invested in this tech in the 90's and still use the copper cable from the 60's!

    • @remusvaduva3463
      @remusvaduva3463 Před 5 lety

      For a big city it's enoungh just 1 central office becouse the signal is splited by spliters like 1x2,1x8,1x12or 1x16 and like that you can make multiple customers.

    • @remusvaduva3463
      @remusvaduva3463 Před 5 lety

      And we have 1gb speed on fiber, surprise it really work

  • @fuzzperoni
    @fuzzperoni Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent video. Thank you.

  • @tartertime89
    @tartertime89 Před 5 lety

    I have Gigafast Cityfibre here at 1 GBPS and couldn't be happier. The video was very informative though because I never realised how the older fibre worked.

    • @stadia8k732
      @stadia8k732 Před 5 lety

      Were u from to get gigafast from vodafone

  • @jonmac3995
    @jonmac3995 Před 4 lety

    Where I live in Greater Manchester, we have 4 choices for Broadband, ADSL, Fibre to the cabinet, Virgin fibre to the home and BT fibre to the home.

  • @QuantumBraced
    @QuantumBraced Před 3 lety +3

    Yeah calling VDSL and DOCSIS fiber is absurd. You can call it FTTC, but you can't just call it fiber.

  • @markportch
    @markportch Před 3 lety

    There was huge new flat/house building's in city of BATH,IN MY big building built 5 years ago on new Riverside estate ,I have NEW BT FIBER FROM FLAT TO exchange. I have now changed it to Hyperoptic that's due to fit new fiber cable of there own next month

  • @TheDangermouse999
    @TheDangermouse999 Před 2 lety +1

    we only just now getting FTTP to Worcester uk in 2022

  • @wvziccardi
    @wvziccardi Před 3 lety

    I recall when BT infinity was rolling out in 2010 they said the cost to do FTTC was £5bn and FTTP/H was £15bn. Have to admit, it seems stupid they're going over past work to add further upgrades adding to the overall buildout cost than it would have been to just get it done then.

    • @jean-lucpicard5510
      @jean-lucpicard5510 Před 2 lety

      Same here, they installed fibre to the cabinet here in West Yorkshire in 2012, ten years later they are installing fttp, but only up to the telegraph poles, the rest is copper, all I can say is thank F#ck for Virgin media, 530 download, 36 up. BT really love to drag their feet.

  • @johno4521
    @johno4521 Před 4 lety

    The main part of the extra cost for fibre broadband is your provider paying BT to go into the exchange and hooking your line up to the fibre optics, then at the box in your street,right? So what if, after your first contract was up, you told your provider you wanted to go back to your old wired tarriff to save costs? It's unlikely they'd bother paying BT again to change your connection back to old technology so the fibre would probably be left in place, at copper wire costs? At the very least it should be a good bargaining tool when negotiating your next contract.

  • @martynbush
    @martynbush Před 5 lety +1

    Very informative video. Thanks.

  • @Guiny
    @Guiny Před 5 lety +8

    56 down and 25 up here with 4G broadbnand ;P

    • @boldswede1280
      @boldswede1280 Před 5 lety

      EE offer 4g plus. Even faster! 300mbps.

    • @Guiny
      @Guiny Před 5 lety

      boldswede yeah.getting 83 down and 20 up now after some tower upgrades close to our area

    • @birdpee8699
      @birdpee8699 Před 5 lety

      Yes mobile broadband 5g will run BT out

    • @polla2256
      @polla2256 Před 4 lety

      350mb being installed next week - the line will also be upto 1Gb by 2021 ; )

    • @Dimitrivv007
      @Dimitrivv007 Před 4 lety

      12 down and 0.6 up with bt coz there's no fiber yayyy

  • @rmccombs66
    @rmccombs66 Před 3 lety

    In the US they call it fiber so much, but back in the 1990's that in exchange for tax breaks that fiber be to the home would be available everywhere but it mostly has not happened. In small towns you usually have a choice between the phone company or the cable company.

  • @gamingtimeiv7919
    @gamingtimeiv7919 Před 3 lety +1

    There's also another type of problem with BT which everyone thinks they have copper from the cabinet to the house this is not true in most cases there is also aluminium wiring along the way and also if you tried to talk to any BT engineer or anyone on the phone about fibre to the house they dodge the question I was once told over the phone buy BT that I was not allowed to ask about it and they simply hung up but not to worry starlink is now what I'm waiting for

  • @UsmanX
    @UsmanX Před 4 lety +1

    Jesus Christ, bloody thatcher not wanting to build fibre because bt would have an unfair advantage. In the end, what happened is BT still licensed the lines to ISPs.
    Sure we have Hyperoptic and Community Fibre etc, but only in specific areas and buildings. What's better, fibre to every home or fibre to some homes?

  • @toddbod94
    @toddbod94 Před 3 lety

    FTTP because the endpoint may not be a home. Or may be multiple homes(a block of flats)

  • @sorrycase
    @sorrycase Před 4 lety +1

    It’s called FTTP in the US as well

  • @AlifAmzariAzamee
    @AlifAmzariAzamee Před 2 lety

    Spiderman - Fiber to the home.

  • @louispaquet8185
    @louispaquet8185 Před 3 lety

    DOCSIS 3.1 standard supports up to 10 Gbps download and 1 Gbps upload speeds

  • @CamelCasee
    @CamelCasee Před měsícem

    It's Spiderman!

  • @guillaume8954
    @guillaume8954 Před 4 lety

    In France, the only cable provider called it fiber for many year and now they can’t

  • @iman80skid91
    @iman80skid91 Před 4 lety +1

    I've driven down that road in Johannesburg
    .

  • @Borex2
    @Borex2 Před 2 lety

    Thanks this helped me how broadband work

  • @McRambro
    @McRambro Před 5 lety +2

    Hyperoptic is the UK's upcoming 1GB broadband provider, now that's true fiber speed not the shitty 30mbps that BT/EE/Talk talk offer.

    • @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe
      @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe Před 5 lety

      Mc Rambro yep I only have 80/20 internet from bt. Wish there was more options

    • @kentonian
      @kentonian Před 4 lety

      Easy to be fast when you can cherry pick easy to install locations only. How many farms do they supply to?

    • @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe
      @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe Před 4 lety +1

      Jevon Frost theyre only in massive flat blocks in big cities. In Rural wales we had adsl up until 2013 or 2014 then it’s been 80 download maximum ever since. I dare say 5G will reach us before proper fibre ever does

    • @toddbod94
      @toddbod94 Před 3 lety

      It's a joke that the fastest speed bt (and those using their infrastructure) can offer is

  • @djordjeblaga7815
    @djordjeblaga7815 Před 3 lety

    The german Telekom uses this same kind of advertising: Big banners on the cabinets promising "We're working with highspeed on your highspeed" or "Fiber optic is coming!" when it's actually just FTTC in reality.
    I am in the fortunate position to actually work for the company thats currently building a brand new FTTH network in my hometown(State funded project to meet EU regulations) and still the Telekom chimes in at the exact same time and avertises their crappy FTTC (they're currently building it/upgrading the existing network) all over the place.

  • @nicholasr39
    @nicholasr39 Před 3 lety

    Margaret thatcher wasn't prime minister in the 90s......she placed a ban on BT from offering TV and fibre in 1984.
    BT still had Cable TV franchises in the UK such as Westminster,Milton Keynes and Barbican Estate, BT sold the customer base off to NTL/Virgin Media and Virgin Media leased the franchises and network from BT, it offered analogue cable TV and in Westminster it was part upgraded to offer Cable Broadband. Virgin Media finally pulled out in these areas between 2012 and 2014

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 2 lety

      I am aware that she wasn't prime minister in the 90's. Not sure the relevance?

    • @nicholasr39
      @nicholasr39 Před 2 lety

      @@TheOpticalNetworker the ban was set to last until 2001, that's what was relevant about it, also by 2001, all the telecoms companies were collapsing because of the dot com bubble, BT had no money at the time which is why they demerged BT wireless, there international mobile network now known as O2, 2001 was a tough time for all Telecom companies

  • @blakebedford-palmer6676

    Vodafone in New Zealand got in trouble for calling their DOCSIS service FibreX, now they call it UltraFast HFC. They've upgraded it to DOCSIS 3.1 (and Distributed CMTS which is the equivalent of a DSLAM in the streets instead of the exchange) for speeds of up to gigabit down, and 100 upload.

  • @Atomheart1972
    @Atomheart1972 Před rokem

    The reason it's called FTTP in the UK is because it's to the premises not just the home. What is full fiber to a factory for example called internationally?

    • @chrisross1703
      @chrisross1703 Před rokem

      Yes that's what I didn't understand about this claim.

    • @Atomheart1972
      @Atomheart1972 Před rokem

      @@chrisross1703 The way he said "I'll call it FTTH because that's what's it's called internationally" annoyed me. He's talking nonsense and suggesting the UK has got it wrong.

  • @robhingston
    @robhingston Před 4 lety +1

    What’s the point in having fibre-optic if it’s going to be slowed down by copper it’s ridiculous it’s a mishmash,
    I was briefly in South Korea teaching in 2008 and back then the minimum speed was 50 mb and the price was 9000.00 Korean won that’s about £6 a month and even then 90% of the population at fibre-optic and the U.K. AS 8% fibre-optic in 2020,
    you can say well the UK it’s got an old infrastructure with copper wiring, yes but you must remember Japan had a Old infrastructure and they removed it all and are now pushing out 90% of the population with pure fibre optic. Even Spain as 70%,

  • @SJR275
    @SJR275 Před 4 lety

    I typed out a whole long comment of how disappointed I am with Britain. This summarises. 1. I pay line rental for the upkeep and upgrade of infrastructure. 2. They claim that they don't have the money to facilitate an upgrade. 3. They lay the cables anyway without any issues. 4. They try to charge me extra to use the extra bandwidth that sits there unused by anyone.
    Especially now that the Internet is a necessity rather than a commodity makes it worse than ever

    • @jacob8949
      @jacob8949 Před 4 lety +1

      Exactly why it shouldn't have been privatised

  • @gingerbadger
    @gingerbadger Před 5 lety +1

    I love that you're not from, or in the UK. I might do a video on car-jacking

  • @jayzonmeztdagh
    @jayzonmeztdagh Před 3 lety +1

    Bell (Canada) used to bafflingly advertise fiber (fibe tv, fibe 15/25/50/100 internet) despite obviously not being fully FTTH. They have since started using the term hybrid fiber network.
    Sneaky, sneaky.

  • @FlameReturns
    @FlameReturns Před 6 lety +4

    how about hyperoptic?

    • @LilUziDirt
      @LilUziDirt Před 5 lety +2

      Flame Returns yes hyperoptic is true fibre optic so you will have the best connection.

    • @boldswede1280
      @boldswede1280 Před 5 lety

      same tech just a different supplier.

    • @lespaul2000
      @lespaul2000 Před 5 lety

      Hyper Optic use a cat 5 cable to your house, again it's not true fibre. Check out a company called Community Fibre they are true FTTH.

  • @BLX187
    @BLX187 Před 3 lety +1

    Good video

  • @1xXDarkDemonXx1
    @1xXDarkDemonXx1 Před 4 lety +1

    Obviously margret thatcher had to fuck up everything

  • @vibrantszn9633
    @vibrantszn9633 Před 4 lety

    there’s a fibre cabinet across the road from my house but I still can’t get any fibre I’ve literally searched up every network . SOME
    ONE HELPPPP🤷🥺

  • @user-jt1jv8vl9r
    @user-jt1jv8vl9r Před 3 lety +1

    I get 50Mbps download and 20Mbps upload with BT. Good enough.

    • @b3njys235
      @b3njys235 Před 3 lety

      Fake copper shit

    • @wunsen95
      @wunsen95 Před 3 lety

      does your wifes boyfriend pay the bill?

  • @hawk_ness
    @hawk_ness Před 4 lety +4

    Virgin Media are installing FTTP in their new roll out areas. :)

  • @bigchew3149
    @bigchew3149 Před 4 lety +1

    I Would Imagine They are Mostly Just Fiber Fed & Not In Home Fiber ! as in the Thair Main Hubs Are Fiber Fed But Mostly Just Copper To Most Homes !

  • @alfreddesouza542
    @alfreddesouza542 Před 4 lety +9

    Tom Holland?

  • @piotrzet7447
    @piotrzet7447 Před 5 lety +1

    Check Irish market - they also call VDSL a Fiber Broadband.

  • @bigmanminivan840
    @bigmanminivan840 Před 5 lety +1

    Vodafone just put fibre optics connection at the end of my drive can’t wait to be connected

    • @shaunadamson9836
      @shaunadamson9836 Před 4 lety

      Been installing this for Cityfibre and Vodafone in Stirling and Aberdeen into the end user. Speeds of upto 945mbps download and upload.

  • @skitteryoh9949
    @skitteryoh9949 Před 3 lety

    This is a great vid thanks

  • @anthonyglee1710
    @anthonyglee1710 Před 3 lety

    I’ve got FTTC. FTTH for me would involve digging up a private car park about 100 metres in length, crossing a field and my little track, about 200 metres long for one house. I’m cool with my FTTC to be fair. I really don’t notice much difference between my old ADSL 30meg and 90meg. Comparing the UK with Singapore or Japan is totally different where many people live in modern properties and apartments. I’ve live in a 16th century house - similar to many others who aren’t in an urban sprawl.
    What about the South African slums, do they all get fibre broadband when there’s often not even sanitation or basic services?

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 2 lety +1

      Yes for you, not for most of the UK because much of BT's access network is aerially deployed. You don't get ADSL beyond 20mb/s. There is a massive expansion on FTTP networks in the UK and BT Openreach is moving forward with their "Fibre First" strategy.
      The issue isn't about speed it's about misleading (if not fraudulent) marketing. If you're happy with VDSL fine but don't call it fibre. Clearly you were not paying attention to the substance of the video and instead decided to go off on a tangent on what works for you as if that applies to everyone in the UK - which it does not.
      Just curious have you worked on fibre networks? Seeing as you know better than I do would please give me your telecoms experience?
      Your last statement is a red herring.

  • @astonmartin2727
    @astonmartin2727 Před 3 lety

    Our Government also messed up here in South Africa too.

  • @Pwnedby
    @Pwnedby Před 4 lety +1

    I’m lucky I have fibre

  • @type2diabeticfree428
    @type2diabeticfree428 Před 4 lety

    Thanks so informative. So now I know why I cannot get broadband any faster than 8Mbps in my new build home/estate- the cabinet is not and will not be enabled.

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 4 lety +1

      It's only a pleasure, glad I had the intended effect.

    • @type2diabeticfree428
      @type2diabeticfree428 Před 4 lety

      @@TheOpticalNetworker.... by way of an update... BT Openreach have not and will not upgrade their cabinet, however, there is another company (Glide) who basically serve industrial estates and University halls of residence. My cabinet is one that serves an industrial estate and a few houses of which mine is one. Glide have brought their own fibre to the industrial estate and have their own smaller cabinet next to the BT one. Fortunately for me Glide offer FTTC to my home so now I am buzzing along at 80/20. Only downside is the price which is an eye watering £60 GBP per month for broadand + £18 GBP for line rental. But I am not complaining too much as the service is fast and reliable 24/7

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 4 lety

      @@type2diabeticfree428 Yeah the pricing is a bit rough. I pay about 45 GBP for 100mb/s FTTH in South Africa.
      At least you have broadband though:)

  • @harshavardhan8206
    @harshavardhan8206 Před 6 lety +4

    Does fibre to home a good idea???Which is best???

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 6 lety +3

      Yes it is the best way to have an internet connection and the "best" depends on where you live.

    • @harshavardhan8206
      @harshavardhan8206 Před 6 lety

      TheOpticalNetworker thanks for the reply

    • @boldswede1280
      @boldswede1280 Před 5 lety

      yes as you have a fibre link to the exchange. limitless speeds in theory.

  • @niallackroyd7210
    @niallackroyd7210 Před 4 lety

    At my old house we didnt even have FTTC, we were on an old copper connection so the max speed we could get was 2.3mbps, called BT time after time asking when we were being included in the rollout, they just said "soon", then it pissed me off even more when they were sending leaflets through mail saying we could get fiber optic, when I rang to check they said we couldn't and that it was sent by mistake, we kept getting them and I kept ringing asking if it was correct, every time it wasn't, so I got angry with the person on the other end of the phone, probably shouldn't have as it wasn't their fault, but when you primarily game on PC 2.3mbps isn't acceptable, waiting days just for a game to download in 2015 just wasn't acceptable. I was curious to see if my old house was connected so I checked the openreach website... it still isn't, its 2020 and people are still on 2mbps copper connections, it isn't acceptable

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 4 lety

      Yes and that's why I wanted to make this video. The whole broadband debate in the UK misses the fundamentals of what is being offered. Most people don't truly understand what I'm getting.

    • @Dimitrivv007
      @Dimitrivv007 Před 4 lety

      I'm in the same situation don't worry. I'm meant to get 17mbps but sometimes I get 3! And o upload speed. The maximum download speed in my area is 17 and I live in a very well developed town.the thing that frustrates me is the fact that they install fiber to the most pointless and remote places. They should install to busy towns first smh.

  • @johanrijhkelaar3627
    @johanrijhkelaar3627 Před 3 lety

    At least in London we are bringing optic fibre to numerous areas ( Camden,Twickenham,East London,Brent etc.) I’ve been working for Community Fibre for over 2 years and things will improve drastically in the next couple of years

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 2 lety +1

      Yes I am aware. I'm working on a video of that:)

    • @jean-lucpicard5510
      @jean-lucpicard5510 Před 2 lety

      Oh yippee for London.

    • @Moshimulations
      @Moshimulations Před rokem

      I live in London, in one of the boroughs you mentioned.
      Although I do have access to fibre, all I get is 73mbps down and like 20 up.
      Surprising using Mobile data on Virgin Media, I get higher speed than what I got via Wifi. ( I use 5G )
      If I do a speedtest everything buffers out and fixes up weirdly, but I get about 100+ Mbps Down and about 20-30mbps up.
      Though I did have to do a little DIY in my case to get that speed.

  • @olibarrett4283
    @olibarrett4283 Před 2 lety

    Man looks like a darksouls character

  • @nodrog1061
    @nodrog1061 Před 4 lety

    You forget to mention kcom there there standard fibre offering it to the door and is for some including me the only company wee can get for a large area of hull meaning that bt is no available to us .

  • @MooreMoDz
    @MooreMoDz Před 5 lety +3

    I'm with Virgin and they are amazing! :)

  • @brianholding4357
    @brianholding4357 Před 3 lety +1

    South Africa?

  • @rxss6154
    @rxss6154 Před 3 lety

    FTTP (FTTH) is getting there... the new estate i’m moving too all the homes on the estate and surrounding houses are all FTTP. Packages up to 900mbps with BT.
    The estate i’m currently living on now is Virgin media M600 (tho, being upgraded to 1Gig soon) however, there services are down pretty much every other day. Have no option to switch to say BT because they don’t even have FTTC here. we was getting 0.5 upload and 1mbps download with BT here🙃

    • @florichi
      @florichi Před 3 lety +1

      Do you know if in the UK new houses must have FTTH installed or at least have ductwork to pull in fibers? In Austria the majority of new houses are still built with copper wires and no empty ducts to pull fiber. So if FTTH is finally installed you have to tear up your garden and walls. Politics don't do anything, so there is still no mandatory fiber installtion.

    • @rxss6154
      @rxss6154 Před 3 lety

      @@florichi nah, there isn’t a mandatory regulation or law here. They can just supply copper if they wanted to. as well as the duct work, developers can choose to or not but from what i’ve seen 9/10 they do install the duct work, because new builds don’t have any wires showing to and from the property. Developers usually understand that people want fibre and fibre is the future so they sign contracts with the reverent ISPs (ie, Openreach/ BT network, Virgin Media etc) to install the cables. I think the problem is there is way too many variables in the UK with new builds here, if you build a new build where there is no plans for FTTH, you’ll be stuck with copper or FTTC and it depends on the surrounding areas, if the surrounding area is already FTTH (like where I live) you’ll get it and be connected to the existing network if not, then you’ll have exactly whatever the surrounding area has.
      The last new build I lived on signed contracts with Virgin Media (a TV, phone and ISP here, they use their own network instead of using Openreach) but the catch is, Virgin Media doesn’t cover 100% of the country like Openreach/BT does (even if it is copper wires) so they technically say its FTTH when in reality you’re stuck in a monopoly with Virgin Media and all they do is keep raising prices, you couldn’t go anywhere else because all the other providers use Openreach network and are slow af when they’re not FTTC or FTTH.
      In the new build i’m living at now, the agreement was we would sign a contract with BT provider for 2 years as they were the ones who installed FTTH cables on the estate etc but after that we could choose any ISP (expect Virgin Media, as they use their own cable network and haven’t laid any of their cables here).
      It is honestly really surprising how many new builds in the UK don’t have FTTH, they usually opt for FTTC instead which is annoying. If its new you expect the newer technologies

  • @Calfen720
    @Calfen720 Před 5 lety +1

    There's a 3rd technology that isn't really spoken about, G.Fast, G-Fast is similar to FTTC based on the streets in the form of an extension pod onto existing cabinet. With G.Fast you can reach speeds of over 100mbps. However it is even more restricted than FTTC technology as the max length of the line is around 300m. It's mostly used when houses are very close and in large numbers to the cabinets. Source - www.homeandbusiness.openreach.co.uk/fibre-broadband/ultrafast-broadband/ultrafast-fibre-g.fast
    I am also an employee of Openreach.

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 4 lety

      I am aware of this and I will probably make video on this in the next decade or so;)

  • @LKE_Music
    @LKE_Music Před 4 lety

    I fit fttc in pcps (street cabinet) and this guy's spot on

  • @leeiuum-oldchannel2146
    @leeiuum-oldchannel2146 Před 4 lety +1

    Hi pal. Great video. Very educational for me researching about fibre optic broadband.
    In the North East I got a leaflet in the mail for fibre optic broadband by a company called YouFibre (who uses "Netomnia" as their network) offering 1gbps up/down to homes in the area, FTTH, but with almost 0 reputation and OFCOM has given them permission to apply Code powers with their company.
    After thorough research, I found out the CEO of YouFibre is also the CEO of CommunityFibre (based in London) so their services look legitimate. However, since you know more about networking than I do and with people working with BT vouching for your video for correct information, I was wondering what your take was on this?
    Thanks if you can check the comment out, and if you manage to reply, I really appreciate it. Thanks!

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 4 lety +1

      I know there are a lot of alternative FTTH providers in the UK. My advice would be to read on www.ispreview.co.uk they would have up to date relevant information.

    • @leeiuum-oldchannel2146
      @leeiuum-oldchannel2146 Před 4 lety

      @@TheOpticalNetworker Appreciate the quick reply. They've made a couple of articles about CommunityFibre (and even mentioned Netomnia at one point) so it looks legitimate. I didn't know how accurate ispreview.co.uk was because I'm new to how the internet works/networking. So I appreciate the vouch for the website.
      Again - great video. Thanks :)

  • @PWingert1966
    @PWingert1966 Před 4 lety

    I tried to get a fiber to the home line run to my house. my neighbors on either side of me already have fibers off an aerial pole. Turns out there was no more capacity on either of the poles and they would have to run an underground line from the cabinet. They wanted to charge me $USD25,000 for a 14 meter run. I said no. I am using my cell phone at 40Mbps for most internet access.

    • @TheOpticalNetworker
      @TheOpticalNetworker  Před 4 lety

      Wow that's quite heavy. Who is the provider?

    • @PWingert1966
      @PWingert1966 Před 4 lety

      @@TheOpticalNetworker Bell Canada

    • @PWingert1966
      @PWingert1966 Před 4 lety

      The house is in an area with a lot of low income housing and I suspect its jsut not economically feasible to run new fiber in so they jack the price up so that an individual cant afford it. They have since said they have five coming in when the install for two new condos in about 5 years and may be able to peel off a fiber at that time.

  • @DC-fo3bn
    @DC-fo3bn Před 4 lety

    I don't know the South African market, but Openreach have a monopoly here in the UK. They would prefer not to sell wholesale their network, they would prefer everyone use BT, but are made to by law. They have no incentive to roll out FTTP because there is no competition, they own the network. Virgin Media have nowhere near the coverage in the UK, so for them it is a much bigger investment and risk. So as long as BT don't press on with FTTP, neither will Virgin. For them the costs outweigh the benefits. Consumer demand doesn't quite work in a monopoly, only government intervention can direct the market in a monopoly.
    On a side note, had Thatcher not privatised BT, we would all have FTTP decades ago. On a 2nd side note, had people voted Labour in 2019, we would be in the midst of FTTP roll-out and we would all be accessing it free of charge.

    • @jacob8949
      @jacob8949 Před 4 lety

      An obvious incentive that springs to mind is that if Openreach don't roll out full fibre, Ofcom will simply start awarding contracts to other companies. Toob are already supplying Southampton, for example.

  • @user-jt1jv8vl9r
    @user-jt1jv8vl9r Před 3 lety

    What about Starlink Internet? Any thoughts?