[Starlink] On FiWi
David Fernández
davidfdzp at gmail.com
Wed Mar 15 17:48:14 EDT 2023
+1 "don't mandate a specific technology, mandate paths for that
technology to use."
In practice, the technology mandated forces the available room.
Clearly, the room left for telephone cables is not enough for coaxial.
I experienced that issue. Retrofitting is hard and expensive, yes.
"wireless mesh can work, but only if you use a different band for the
uplink communication between nodes than you use for your endpoint
devices to communicate to the nodes. People try to use the same band
for both and it just doesn't work."
The wireless mesh network I setup, given by the ISP to extend coverage
in the house, comes with an app that does not offer you any option to
select any band. It is automagically setup. The maximum you can do is
to give a name to each router.
Regards,
David
> Date: Wed, 15 Mar 2023 12:15:29 -0700 (PDT)
> From: David Lang <david at lang.hm>
> To: David Fernández <davidfdzp at gmail.com>
> Cc: starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net
> Subject: Re: [Starlink] On FiWi
> Message-ID: <7n37s8o0-6q13-2qrs-qo84-2oo3o88o9r8r at ynat.uz>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"; Format="flowed"
>
> On Wed, 15 Mar 2023, David Fernández via Starlink wrote:
>
>> I am afraid this is also true: any communications infrastructure that
>> you do not mandate to get built into new buildings will never make it
>> into them afterwards.
>
> don't mandate a specific technology, mandate paths for that technology to
> use.
>
> If a building was built with wire chases for Cat 5 cable, it's usable for a
> lot
> of different things, and it's then easier to upgrade that cat5 to some new
> cables.
>
> But if it wasn't even wired for telephone or electricity (think big stone
> castles), retrofitting it in is very hard.
>
> It will happen if people want it enough, but it helps if there is provision
> for
> wiring to happen.
>
> And the provision should be to each room if possible, not just to each
> floor/apartment (think early telephones where there was one per house)
>
>> So, we end up having things like IAB (Integrated Access and Backhaul)
>> defined to extend 5G coverage to downtown areas, where buildings
>> cannot be touched for historical/artistic reasons (extreme case).
>
> it's more a case that the 5G band requires a huge number of nodes to
> operate.
>
>> Some time ago I tried to install coaxial in a flat that had only
>> copper wiring. It was impossible. Coaxial was too thick to pass
>> through the hole reserved for copper telephone cable (even removing
>> old cables), so I stayed with DSL. It is important that architects
>> consider the cabling needs of homes, not only for electricity. I have
>> used PLC (Power Line Comms) to extend Wi-Fi coverage at multiple floor
>> homes, but it is not perfect solution. I would not recommend it.
>> Wireless mesh repeaters are worst, to my experience.
>
> wireless mesh can work, but only if you use a different band for the uplink
> communication between nodes than you use for your endpoint devices to
> communicate to the nodes. People try to use the same band for both and it
> just
> doesn't work.
>
> David Lang
>
>> Regards,
>>
>> David
>>
>>> Date: Tue, 14 Mar 2023 11:37:21 -0700 (PDT)
>>> From: David Lang <david at lang.hm>
>>> To: David Fernández <davidfdzp at gmail.com>
>>> Cc: starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net
>>> Subject: Re: [Starlink] On FiWi
>>> Message-ID: <8qq0r5n2-s836-1080-3362-2o8nr3qn1044 at ynat.uz>
>>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"; Format="flowed"
>>>
>>> any communications infrastructure that you mandate get built into new
>>> buildings
>>> is going to be obsolete long before the building is (especially radio
>>> equipment)
>>>
>>> I am a big fan of using wire (or fiber) directly to equipment when you
>>> can.
>>> wifi
>>> is sexy and 'easy' to setup, but there is only so much airtime available,
>>> and
>>> your radio footprint where you produce intereference to other equipment
>>> is
>>> much
>>> larger than the usable footprint (let alone what your requirements are),
>>> so
>>> it
>>> is far more work to share reasonably. You also are sending a lot of power
>>> places
>>> where it's not useful, so you are wasting energy compared to having
>>> somethign
>>> hard-wired.
>>>
>>> There are times when you need the mobility that radio gives you, and
>>> times
>>> where
>>> it's advantages outweigh the disadvantages, but please don't fall into
>>> the
>>> trap
>>> of thinking that wires are obsolete and should be discouraged, it's
>>> exactly
>>> the
>>> opposite, the more we can hard-wire, the better the mobile devices that
>>> can't be
>>> hard wired can perform.
>>>
>>> David Lang
>>>
>>> On Tue, 14 Mar 2023, David Fernández via Starlink wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi Bob,
>>>>
>>>> If you want that FiWi infrastructure on buildings, I am afraid that
>>>> you only get it (in the long term) with a law that makes it mandatory
>>>> to make new buildings with that infrastructure for communications.
>>>>
>>>> In Spain, it should be added to this:
>>>> https://avancedigital.mineco.gob.es/Infraestructuras/Paginas/Index.aspx
>>>>
>>>> Regards,
>>>>
>>>> David
>>>>
>>>>> Date: Mon, 13 Mar 2023 21:27:23 -0700
>>>>> From: rjmcmahon <rjmcmahon at rjmcmahon.com>
>>>>> To: Sebastian Moeller <moeller0 at gmx.de>
>>>>> Cc: dan <dandenson at gmail.com>, Jeremy Austin <jeremy at aterlo.com>, Rpm
>>>>> <rpm at lists.bufferbloat.net>, libreqos
>>>>> <libreqos at lists.bufferbloat.net>, Dave Taht via Starlink
>>>>> <starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net>, bloat <bloat at lists.bufferbloat.net>
>>>>> Subject: [Starlink] On FiWi
>>>>> Message-ID: <bc1cfdf998bb6bb246a632f0dc0fe3a8 at rjmcmahon.com>
>>>>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
>>>>>
>>>>> To change the topic - curious to thoughts on FiWi.
>>>>>
>>>>> Imagine a world with no copper cable called FiWi (Fiber,VCSEL/CMOS
>>>>> Radios, Antennas) and which is point to point inside a building
>>>>> connected to virtualized APs fiber hops away. Each remote radio head
>>>>> (RRH) would consume 5W or less and only when active. No need for things
>>>>> like zigbee, or meshes, or threads as each radio has a fiber connection
>>>>> via Corning's actifi or equivalent. Eliminate the AP/Client power
>>>>> imbalance. Plastics also can house smoke or other sensors.
>>>>>
>>>>> Some reminders from Paul Baran in 1994 (and from David Reed)
>>>>>
>>>>> o) Shorter range rf transceivers connected to fiber could produce a
>>>>> significant improvement - - tremendous improvement, really.
>>>>> o) a mixture of terrestrial links plus shorter range radio links has
>>>>> the
>>>>> effect of increasing by orders and orders of magnitude the amount of
>>>>> frequency spectrum that can be made available.
>>>>> o) By authorizing high power to support a few users to reach slightly
>>>>> longer distances we deprive ourselves of the opportunity to serve the
>>>>> many.
>>>>> o) Communications systems can be built with 10dB ratio
>>>>> o) Digital transmission when properly done allows a small signal to
>>>>> noise ratio to be used successfully to retrieve an error free signal.
>>>>> o) And, never forget, any transmission capacity not used is wasted
>>>>> forever, like water over the dam. Not using such techniques represent
>>>>> lost opportunity.
>>>>>
>>>>> And on waveguides:
>>>>>
>>>>> o) "Fiber transmission loss is ~0.5dB/km for single mode fiber,
>>>>> independent of modulation"
>>>>> o) “Copper cables and PCB traces are very frequency dependent. At
>>>>> 100Gb/s, the loss is in dB/inch."
>>>>> o) "Free space: the power density of the radio waves decreases with the
>>>>> square of distance from the transmitting antenna due to spreading of
>>>>> the
>>>>> electromagnetic energy in space according to the inverse square law"
>>>>>
>>>>> The sunk costs & long-lived parts of FiWi are the fiber and the CPE
>>>>> plastics & antennas, as CMOS radios+ & fiber/laser, e.g. VCSEL could be
>>>>> pluggable, allowing for field upgrades. Just like swapping out SFP in a
>>>>> data center.
>>>>>
>>>>> This approach basically drives out WiFi latency by eliminating shared
>>>>> queues and increases capacity by orders of magnitude by leveraging 10dB
>>>>> in the spatial dimension, all of which is achieved by a physical
>>>>> design.
>>>>> Just place enough RRHs as needed (similar to a pop up sprinkler in an
>>>>> irrigation system.)
>>>>>
>>>>> Start and build this for an MDU and the value of the building improves.
>>>>> Sadly, there seems no way to capture that value other than over long
>>>>> term use. It doesn't matter whether the leader of the HOA tries to
>>>>> capture the value or if a last mile provider tries. The value remains
>>>>> sunk or hidden with nothing on the asset side of the balance sheet.
>>>>> We've got a CAPEX spend that has to be made up via "OPEX returns" over
>>>>> years.
>>>>>
>>>>> But the asset is there.
>>>>>
>>>>> How do we do this?
>>>>>
>>>>> Bob
>>>>>
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