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thedaly | 2 years ago
You’ll see numerous COs in a big city, but they are also pretty widely dispersed throughout the suburbs and rural areas.
thedaly | 2 years ago
You’ll see numerous COs in a big city, but they are also pretty widely dispersed throughout the suburbs and rural areas.
jsjohnst|2 years ago
In towns, we generally tried to keep loop lengths under 30k feet, but in rural areas that simply wasn’t possible. You’d often find remnants of party line systems in those areas and definitely load coils out the wazzoo. It was “fun” unwinding all that crap to install ISDN circuits and later DSL.
I remember the old hats at the time laughing about VDSL saying “leave it to the nerds to dream up some unrealistic shit where the loop length can be at most 2k feet, where does that exist!?” not realizing a few years later RTs and DSLAMs would mean a significant portion of city and suburban customers would be.
deelowe|2 years ago
mixdup|2 years ago
I mean COs are integral in AT&T's architecture, it's where every fiber connection lands on an OLT