motz

EuroTreaty

title xii, trans-european networks maastricht treaty, 1991

... It shall take account in particular of the need to link island, landlocked and peripheral regions with the central regions of the Community.

this lead to collaboration and call for candidates to "validate the technical feasibility and economic viability of advanced communication.

trials include: - citizen network (health care, social services, transport, education/training, telecommunication
- network of competence and science (including high performance computing)
- industry network (addressing the needs of service industries with particular reference of the needs of equal access to services throughout europe)
- administrative network (providing for the provision of cost-effective administrative services to the citizens and business throughout europe
- media network (providing for the development of general purpose dial-up video services and interactive multimedia services based on digital video)

call for proposals launched: august 1993. as result 14 proposals received in total. (a number a lot of applicants would love to deal with today) exercise done solely for developing guidelines for the future, and as done in the 80s and 70s, to build relationships and to get known each other.

- develop ibc trial specifications, establish and run common interest groups (cig) for assessing their specifications with end-users feedback, building up relationships with the network operators, assess cost/benefits for the end-users, ... | interoperability in broadband networks ...

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ccTLDs

880120 AT-DOM | whois by date

done by walter kunft in the name of verein aconet. if there is still a chance to find the original e-mail to john postel needs to be seen. it might be in a box in mountain view, ca. but someone has to take a look ...

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telcos versus costs for society

carrier and wireless p3k set the pointer to an article that carriers are the biggest thread to innovation: today phone companies cling to carrier's coat-tails, "developing what they ask for instead of taking risks and testing new concepts in the marketplace" (McRae, Vizio, link above).

anyhow, some companies as google are already investing in new satellite projects: o3b estimated start: 2013. another project in the pipeline is msci's commstellation, a canadian endeavor, scheduled for 2015.

carriers and fibre to the home (ftth) another never ending carrier story is "fibre to the home". in the uk farmer's lady chris conder and her team of b4rn are celebrated heroes by uk ispa's recent event. they entered the provider business and dig up the last mile by themselves. they are farmers, so they know how to dig, (guess, that was a quote. yet as i don't have the source by hand, i don't label it as such for the time being.)

telcos themselves have done a lot of studies in the 1970s already. they even organized a whole track dedicated to optical communication systems back in 1975 at their "world telecommunication forum". charles k. kao gave a speech at this event. in 2009 he received the noble prize in physics, but even that didn't itch national operating telcos aka ptts up to today.

..The substance of the paper was presented at an IEE meeting on January 27, 1966. Most of the world did not take notice – except for the British Post Office (BPO) and the U.K. Ministry of Defence, who immediately launched major research programs. By the end of 1966, three groups in the U.K. were studying the various issues involved: I myself at STL; Roberts at BPO; Gambling at Southampton in collaboration with Williams at the Ministry of Defence Laboratory.

... Since the deployment of the first-generation, 45 Mb/s fiber optic communication system in 1976, the transmission capacity in a single fiber has rapidly increased: we now talk about terabits per second. In order to understand the fundamental limits of fiber-optic communication, the Terabit per Second Optoelectronic Project was launched during 1982–85, involving ten research organizations. The target technology, three orders of magnitude higher than the then state-of-the-art, was considered impossible at the time. | kao's noble prize lecture, 2009

astonishingly c. kao predicted 1975 the deployment of fibre the other way around: first – he thought – short-haul will be provided, long-haul will follow. well in hindsight we know it happened the other way around. we have long-haul and despite testcases as @21 districts in cities, which were funded by the eu+nation state, not many last miles are lit. however, on the 6th of october 1975, the fibre optic world looked promising:

... despite the greater economic benefits of very high capacity systems, it is probably that lower capacity systems, say 2.048, 8.448 or 34.304 Mb/s, may be introduced into heavily loaded parts of junction networks before long-haul high capacity systems. short-haul video links are a likely candidate for early introduction also.

various specialised non-PTT applications are already well advanced and will precede PTT applications, including aircraft, ships, high voltage electricity-generating and industrial sites, etc. bearing in mind the experience soon to be gained from these, and the demonstrably excellent economics, introduction of fibre optic systems in PTT networks may confidently be expected by the early 1980s. | k.c.kao, m.e. collier, fibre-optic systems in future telecommunication networks, 1975

economics of fibre-optics as seen in 1975

- the normal trend for decreasing cost per circuit with increasing capacity becomes even more marked with fibre optics, because cable costs do not increase greatly and repeater spacing reduced only slightly with increasing capacity.
  • fibre optic systems appear more economical than coaxial cable systems over the entire range, but may not compete with low capacity systems on VF-type pair cable.

moreover, the small size and light weight could revolutionised installation techniques and permit a much greater usage of duct space - areas of very high cost at the present time.

in need for new equations

  1. it should be taken into account, what telco's attitude actually costs the public. what does it cost that they laid out copper instead of fibre to the home for 30 years? at least 30 years, as the success and use of fibre was well proofed as early as 1980s, long-haul provider know well. And, ~18years therefrom as monopolists in most parts of europe.

  2. what are the costs of cable, including power-feeding, repeaters, multiplex equipment costs, and ducts.

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