• @[email protected]
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    2 days ago

    We already have private 100gbps in Australia and our public network just trialled it last year so rollout is expected this year there as well.

    Why is anyone celebrating 50gbps? I can’t imagine Australia is anywhere near leading here.

    • Nfamwap
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      61 day ago

      This is for PON technology. 1 fibre can be split 32-ways to feed, you guessed it, 32 customers. 50g over a fibre that is split 32-ways with a minimum of 15db loss is impressive.

      I guarantee those 100gbps circuits are a single fibre all the way from the provider to the customer. And they are expensive, very expensive.

      • @[email protected]
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        113 hours ago

        I wonder if they use semiconductor optical amplifiers in the receivers, or if they can make do with avalanche photodiodes.

        The 100G stuff I’m looking at has 18.5 dB budget with APDs, that seems rough considering you want a few kilometers of fiber, a few splices and a few connectors (probably LC/APC) as well.

        • Nfamwap
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          19 hours ago

          I work on PON and XGPON. Officially we work on a -25dB maximum, but I’ve seen circuits stable at around 30dB.

          It’s surprising how many bad splices you can ignore before it gets problematic.

          -18.5dB is going to limit you to either a really good fibre path, or a really short one. Unless you have options with long-range SFPs? The constant progress keeps my job interesting at least.

          • @[email protected]
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            17 hours ago

            I’m working on long range stuff so I’m not so familiar with PON specifically. Maybe I made some bad assumptions. Stable at -30 dBm receive sounds really impressive.

            The one I was talking about is this, with 18.5 dB total budget, that is, min +4.5 dBm transmit, and min -14 dBm receive. This one is built with an APD.

            In my kind of application, without splitter, this will get you about 30-40 km. We’ve got one of a slightly older type with 18 dB budget running between Fribourg and Bern for example.

            I realize that PON stuff is quite different with the time slitting and I think wavelenght splitting too, at least in XGS-PON, but I was thinking the pure laser and diode physics would need to be the same.

            For -25 dBm minimum the most similar of the ones we currently have would be this one which manages -26.9 dBm and is one of the ones with a SOA built in, or for the 10G stuff this one, which manages min -23 dBm but with only an APD and no SOA.

            I’m thinking their 50G stuff must be closer to 100G than 10G transceiver design. So I wonder if they manage to make it without SOA.

    • @[email protected]
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      122 days ago

      Come on mate, internet in Australia is pretty shit after the NBN fiasco. Let me know when any of those those 100gbps lines reach 1gbps xD.

        • subignition
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          142 days ago

          The article you linked describes plans reaching up to 1000Mbps (1Gbps).

          That’s only 2% of the speed of the theoretical 50Gbps maximum OP’s article discusses (and 10% of the 10Gbps real-world speeds currently available in China according to the same article). I think you have your units mixed up.

          • @[email protected]
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            12 days ago

            Let me know when any of those those 100gbps lines reach 1gbps xD.

            It was in direct relation to 1gbps.

            • ddh
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              2 days ago

              I think you may be confused? 1Gbps is about as good as it gets in Australia.

              • @[email protected]
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                2 days ago

                You are the confused one mate.

                The user that I gave the link showing our 1gbps plan commented as if we did not already have 1gbps, hence me showing them that we already have it.

                The link was not in relation to 100gbps and was purely a response to the 1gbps comment.

            • subignition
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              22 days ago

              Then I guess it’s my bad thinking you were trying to show 100 gigabit plans

              None of those plans actually do reach 1gbps though, you kinda proved their point with your link

              • @[email protected]
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                22 days ago

                Those plans do not reach 1gbps at 7pm when every family in the neighbourhood is online, that is to be expected.

                Under ideal situations proximity and network congestion they are capable of hitting the full 1gbps.

                • @[email protected]
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                  1 day ago

                  Right, so your first mentioned 100gbps will reach what then, 2gbps?

                  Not sure if youre trolling or just really daft at this point.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    1 day ago

                    I’m not sure if you’re trolling or just IT illiterate, but do you hit 100% of your plans speed 24/7?

                    Because most people do not, that’s not how it works.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 days ago

      This would be for a business, surely? I can’t imagine any individual having a use case for those speeds.

      I can get 8 gigabit symmetrical if I want to, but I don’t.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 days ago

        It’s up to the ISPs what plans they sell. But cost wise it would be so prohibitive that only a business would buy it for the first few years for sure.

            • @[email protected]
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              32 days ago

              Who would have a server like that actually in their house?

              Linus Tech Tips, a company that films multiple hours of 4k or higher content every day, which is uploaded to an offsite backup, as well as uploading edited videos to multiple platforms, made a big deal about having a 10 gigabit Internet connection.

              • @[email protected]
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                42 days ago

                LTT are also a bunch of loonie toon characters cosplaying as techies who lost all their data multiple times to malpractice. I’d hardly uplift them as a banner case.