BT Openreach has picked Muswell Hill in London and Whitchurch in South
Glamorgan as the first two sites for a pilot of fibre-to-the-cabinet (FTTC)
beginning in summer 2009.
"This is part of our £1.5bn investment in optical fibre deployments, and the
sites were chosen in consultation with comms providers, ISPs, Regional
Development Associations and because of the topology of the exchange. Basically
they ticked all the right boxes," said a BT spokesman.
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The telco added that a more technically focused trial at Kesgrave's Foxhall
exchange in Suffolk in early 2009 would preface the deployments taking place
during the summer.
Rob Bamforth, principal analyst for communication, collaboration and
convergence at Quocirca, said: "It would have been nice to have seen more than
two pilots, especially as Openreach said that the Regional Development
Associations were involved. I'm concerned that they're not planting enough
seeds."
BT said that the Muswell Hill and Whitchurch pilots will both involve up to
15,000 customer premises and that there would be a certain amount of "digging up
the roads" but that this should not be hugely disruptive.
"Service providers will be out and about trying to get customers interested
and excited about this. It will be the ones you'd expect, like Carphone
Warehouse, Sky, Tiscali and BT Retail," said the BT spokesman.
Optical fibre will be installed to the cabinet from where the standard copper
wiring will connect to residential customers. This will offer "headline speeds
of up to 40Mbit/s", according to BT Openreach.
The amount BT Openreach will charge ISPs for the wholesale service has still
to be determined. "That will be sorted out in discussions with Ofcom and the
rest of the industry," said the spokesman.
David Campbell, next-generation access director at BT Openreach, said that
detailed plans for the initial market deployment of the Openreach product would
be announced in early 2010.
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