- New BT Activation Criteria
- Posted by Bill on August 13th, 2004
Checking out the UK ADSL league table:
http://www.samknows.com/broadband/league.php
I was surprised to see the the number of pre-registrations on 'unviable'
exchanges to those on exchanges given a 'ready for service date'.
For example Madderty (personal interest here !) has 39 preregistrations
and is 51st on the table of unviables but there are 180 exchanges with
less preregistrations that have been given service dates, including many
with less than 10 preregistered users !
How does this come about ? Are BT using reasons other than the simple
cost of ADSL provision here, ie they do not want to have to update
ancient exchanges or other systems ?
Great if you are one of the 4 people in Kielder, but not the 122 in Schivas.
Is the trigger level still 100 but unadvertised ? Anyone heard of
places actually doing Exchange Activate ?
Bill
- Posted by :::Jerry:::: on August 13th, 2004
"Bill" <ngaccount@genLUNCHEONMEATBANsheet.co.uk> wrote in message
news:cfh30i$7cv$1@ngspool-d02.news.aol.com...
<snip>
Perhaps it the older exchanges that need to have work done that are jumping
up the list, if equipment is going to be renewed BT might as well go the
whole mile IYSWIM ?
- Posted by Sunil Sood on August 13th, 2004
"Bill" <ngaccount@genLUNCHEONMEATBANsheet.co.uk> wrote in message
news:cfh30i$7cv$1@ngspool-d02.news.aol.com...
If BT have to update other parts of the exchange/their core network to
provide ADSL then that also comes under the "cost of ADSL provision"
I believe all the exchanges without trigger levels are now "small" ones -
(<300 customers) with 10 of them having less than 10 customers each.
The biggest cost of supplying ADSL is normally laying fibre to the
exchange.. so I guess many of these 300 aare in pretty remote locations.
No and I don't think it has ever been.
No..
Regards
Sunil
- Posted by Chris Jones on August 13th, 2004
Some regional development agencies, for example in the North East and in
Northern Ireland, have paid BT to enable all the exchanges in their region,
which is why some commercially unviable ones have service dates.
- Posted by Jonathan Buzzard on August 13th, 2004
On Fri, 13 Aug 2004 19:14:39 +0100, Chris Jones wrote:
Which is why Kielder is being activated. Further immediately after the
announcement that all exchanges in the North East where going to be
activated it became pointless to pre-register.
What surprises me is that in this list are an exchange in fairly central
London Docklands Zone Two, one in central Leeds Leeds/westgate Dxa,
and one in central Dundee, Dundee Tay. What is the score with these?
JAB.
--
Jonathan A. Buzzard Email: jonathan (at) buzzard.me.uk
Northumberland, United Kingdom. Tel: +44 1661-832195
- Posted by Stephen Wray on August 14th, 2004
"Gareth Babb" <hick.usereplyto@localhost.gink.org> wrote in message
news:slrnchrdr3.uv6.hick.usereplyto@stum.gink.org. ..
Basinghall"
Leeds Westgate telephone exchange is just to the left of the A58M, whereas
Leeds Eastgate exchange is to the right on the same road.
All three exhanges are ADSL enabled.
Stephen
- Posted by Bill on August 16th, 2004
Sunil Sood wrote:
The one of particular interest to me is 6 miles from its' parent (01xxx)
exchange on a microwave link to a building about 10 foot square. 200 or
300 subscribers is probably right, 39 ADSL regs putting it at 51 on the
list. Exchange Activate reads as if someone did raise the £25k BT would
do it, despite any other issues. I assume the microwave link is a big
problem ?
I had seen a number of exchanges with activation targets of 100, so
thought that the target for all the small ones might be the same.
Bill