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High Speed Internet in the State of Washington

High Speed Internet in the State of Washington. Presented by: Mary Retka July 21, 2005. Data Modem 2005. Quote from the President.

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High Speed Internet in the State of Washington

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  1. High Speed Internet in theState of Washington Presented by: Mary Retka July 21, 2005

  2. Data Modem 2005

  3. Quote from the President “This country needs a national goal for broadband technology, for the spread of broadband technology. We ought to have a universal, affordable access for broadband technology by the year 2007, and then we ought to make sure as soon as possible thereafter, (that) consumers have got plenty of choices when it comes to purchasing the broadband carrier.” George W. Bush 3/26/04 Speech in Farmington, N.M.

  4. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION RELEASES DATA ON HIGH-SPEED SERVICES FOR INTERNET ACCESS • FCC’s 7/7/05 Report on high-speed connections to the Internet in the United States where facilities-based broadband providers report the number of high-speed connections (FCC Form 477). • “During the year 2004, high-speed lines serving residential, small business, larger business, and other subscribers increased by 34%, to 37.9 million lines.”

  5. ISPs High Speed Internet Service To Neighborhoods Served Directly from the Central Office • Architecture Qwest CO Voice -To Main Frame Data DS1s DSLAM ATM Switch Customers Analysis • DSLAM in the Central Office serving customers in existing neighborhoods. • Existing facilities are used which are connected to the Qwest Central Office.

  6. ISPs High Speed Internet Service To Existing Neighborhood Locations • Architecture Qwest CO x Data DS1s Remote DSLAM FDI Voice – To Main Frame ATM Switch Customers Analysis • Remote DSLAM is added to existing neighborhoods. • When the customer orders High Speed Internet Service, jumpers are placed in the cross-box to run the voice line through the DSLAM. • The DSLAM equipment accesses the voice line and electrically combines it with the DSL signal – the result is a single line from the DSLAM to the cross-box that carries a combined voice/data signal. • Another jumper is made at the cross-box to connect this new line to the customer's distribution portion of the loop.

  7. ISPs CLEC DSL on Unbundled Loops Unbundled Loop • Architecture Qwest CO x DSLAM FDI CLEC Collocation Space CLEC Customers MDF Analysis • When the CLEC orders an ADSL-capable Unbundled Loop, jumpers are placed in the Central Office to run the CLEC’s DSL to the Main Distribution Frame to connect to an Unbundled Loop. • The DSLAM equipment is located in the CLEC’s Collocation space in the Central Office – the result is a single line from the DSLAM to the end user that carries a data signal.

  8. Qwest High Speed InternetDeployment Statistics: • Of the 112 Qwest Wire Centers in Washington, 90 have High Speed Internet capabilities. • Within the 90 Wire Centers, Qwest offers High Speed Internet service capabilities to 1022 locations, with 357 locations in the Seattle/Tacoma area, 118 locations in the Spokane area, 145 locations in the Vancouver/Longview area and 402 in the rest of the state. Each location provides service to multiple customers. • Central Office Based and Remote Terminal Based High Speed Internet Available in Washington: • In 2001, 241 locations had High Speed Internet available. • By 2004, 973 locations had been equipped to provide the service. • In 2005, 49 more locations have been added to date with 312 more disclosed planned locations by the end of the year.

  9. Qwest High Speed Internet Statistics (continued) • Qwest has invested approximately $300 million over the last two years to expand the offering of High Speed Internet service across its region. As a result, the company can now offer high-speed Internet access to about 68 percent of the households within Qwest’s 14-state local service area. • Qwest has 182,288 Washington State subscribers of High Speed Internet service to date. • Qwest also provides for the resale of Qwest’s High Speed Internet service through a third party. • Qwest also offers the capability to select from multiple Internet Service Providers.

  10. Network Architectures used by Qwest in Washington to Deliver High Speed Internet: • Central Office based • Remote Terminal based • Stand Alone • Provided through a CLEC on Qwest facilities • Unbundled Loop • Resale

  11. Speeds Available: 256kb/256kb 640kb/256kb 640kb/640kb 1.5Mb/896kb 3Mb/640kb 5Mb/896kb 7Mb/896kb 3 “Pro Speed” Choices: 1Mb/1Mb 4Mb/4Mb 7Mb/7Mb High Speed Internet Service Speeds: Products listed are “up to” downstream speed/ “up to” upstream speed. All speeds are available with Qwest voice service. Standalone High Speed Internet is available at all speeds of 1.5Mb or faster. Availability is based on loop qualification criteria.

  12. Future Deployment • Qwest remains active in the FCC’s Network Reliability Interoperability Council VII Focus Group 4 working on Broadband Increased deployment of high speed residential Internet Access service. • Qwest continues to be a participant in the Industry Forums on DSL and ATM. • Qwest continues to track the Industry trends for High Speed Internet access deployment changes and innovations. • Qwest will continue to look at the most economical ways to deploy High Speed Internet access in the state of Washington.

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