Researchers from Nokia and GFiber Labs (the experimental arm of Google Fiber) successfully achieved 41.89 Gbps download speeds on a live Google Fiber network. This marks the first time that Nokia’s 50G PON (passive optical network) technology has been used on a Google-owned network, and its one of the only examples of live 50 Gig networking in the United States.

110 points

Can we work on expanding existing fiber so most places get at least a single gig fiber first?

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54 points

I have a feeling the people making fiber internet faster aren’t the same people installing it in neighborhoods.

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16 points

Google also isn’t the people making fiber faster. It’s scientists in labs

https://www.popsci.com/technology/fiber-optic-wavelength-record/

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1 point

So you are proving their point, not to be a dick, but theyre the ones financing both so I agree with who you responded to that they shiuld allocate their investments into expanding their customer base before improving it for the existing customer base.

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24 points

Google basically gave up because even with their bankroll, dealing with the regulatory bullshit monopolies current providers had a lot of places was prohibitive.

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10 points

We don’t have to make everything perfect everywhere before we make improvements to something.

We have more than enough resources to increase availability, and to improve existing connections.

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8 points
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This wouldn’t be for a single customer. It’s 50 gig PON, which would serve 32-64 different customers. I’m not an engineer, but I’m assuming it will pave the way for 2.5-5 Gbps services.

Most companies are currently switching from GPON (2.5 gig shared 32 ways), to XGSPON (10 Gbps split between 32-64 customers).

The company I work for has been deploying XGSPON on Nokia transport for a few years now. It’s very nice.

Edit: I wasn’t real specific on how it’s split. So that 50 Gbps feed is sent down a single fiber to a splitter, which is often in the field in an AP cabinet. From there fiber that actually goes to the customer’s premise gets connected. It feels a little dirty splitting like some sort of old coax system, but it makes rolling out fiber to the home much, much quicker.

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3 points

There is already some news about it, but I don’t think you will like it. Link to post

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46 points

I’m shocked that Google Fiber hasn’t yet been added to the list of services they’ve shut down because they got bored of them.

Maybe that’s still to come.

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21 points

I thought most of the google fiber rollouts where constantly stuck in legal battles with the telecoms. I know here in my state, att basically blocked it constantly by claiming they didn’t have the resources to move their wires to another spot on the public poles.

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5 points

Well, you have to see, but Google Fiber is a division of Alphabet. Although the closest thing to that was in 2016 when it halted its expansion plans.

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2 points
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You can collect a lot of data about someone, and then send them a lot of ads at 50Gbps.

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33 points

In a stunning turn of events, Google killed the project because it was boring and wasn’t Search.

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5 points

Not before they embed chat into it.

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1 point

You mean AI.

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16 points

Man… I wish. My area still doesn’t even have symmetric gigabit speeds. I’m on a 300mbps package currently with uploads peaking at ~25mbps.

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2 points

The old cable companies are clinging to their coax! Let DOCSIS die!

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1 point

Every few months I check to see if anyone’s built fiber to my area or if I’m still stuck with the choice between shit tier cable marketed as 1.2gbit (but rarely even gets halfway there, often below a tenth of that), something else that’s barely better than what we had twenty years ago, and wireless claiming to be 5G but performs like crap for everyone I know who’s tried it

I’ve only been looking for the last dozen or so years…

So damned sick of the bureaucratic bullshit

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13 points

Meanwhile the fiber rollout isn’t going well here because the bottom price sub-subcontractors f-ed up driveways and sidewalks so much they’re no longer allowed to install fiber in places.

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