[kwlug-disc] Cable internet providers
unsolicited
unsolicited at swiz.ca
Wed Jun 4 23:12:21 EDT 2014
IIRC, much like DHCP static IP request - anyone using this IP, yes, try
another, keep going 'til you get enough channels.
It is all Rogers from home to their building, so they know what channels
are in use. And it's all their equipment. (Which is why only Roger's
approved modems can be used, by any supplier - their equipment has to
grant access. i.e. Understand the schema in use / approve the MAC
addresses for connection.)
Only difference beyond that is whether Rogers connects your endpoint to
their internet PoP, or a 3rd party's on Rogers (Grand Cresr) premises.
Think if you were on Front St whether you back end connect to ... names
are escaping me - Bell, Sprint, AT&T?, Rogers, Canarie, Uni<something>.
Throw cable one way or another depending on which back end you
contracted with. And likely more than one for redundancy. (Let alone,
don't all their feeds come from Chicago?)
IIRC (year or two back), Acanac was starved to be able to add more
subscribers in this area because the reseller side of the Grand Crest
Place / Kitchener facility was maxed out. And it was Rogers that had to
build out more capacity from Grand Crest to the next hop out. I -think-
at the same time to other provider endpoints in the area too, but that
doesn't really matter, here.
(So, there was no capacity issue between here and Grand Crest - i.e. no
lack of Rogers channels / frequencies.)
Rogers eventually built out more capacity - Acanac was able to then
accept more subscribers.
I didn't put this together with, later, noticing that there were now
more cable internet offerings. e.g. vmedia. 'til a few weeks back.
[Seems to me this Roger's capacity / build out issues spanned a fair
portion of Ontario, and was equally hitting Tek Savvy, Distributel,
Acanac, each in their own respective geographic areas, at the time.
Rogers had to hook up more fibre between their own distribution centres?]
Pity the resellers, whatever Rogers puts them through, Bell is also
putting them through, but likely in their own unique ways. How they're
not driven mad / retain their sanity, I don't know. Guess that's why we
need the CRTC.
On 14-06-04 10:43 PM, Andrew Kohlsmith (mailing lists account) wrote:
> On Jun 4, 2014, at 10:37 PM, Khalid Baheyeldin <kb at 2bits.com> wrote:
>> I understand that. If you look at specs for modems they list the
>> maximum up/down theoretical speed using N bonded channels.
>>
>> But my question is if you have two modems at home, on the same
>> cable, one from each provider, then how would one modem know not to
>> use the channels that the other modem uses?
>>
>> For example: Does each modem pick certain unique channels at link
>> negotiation time, that are unused by anyone else on the segment?
>
> It doesn’t work like that to my knowledge. Think of the old 10base2
> networks; DOCSIS isn’t far off from that. All the modems on a segment
> share the same channels (although there are likely multiple bonding
> groups which are automatically negotiated between the head end and
> your modem). Your neighbours probably use the same channel bonding
> that you have. I don’t believe that different providers get different
> cable data channels; the head end is the same physical device and
> you’re on the same physical segment no matter who your provider is.
>
> I’m afraid you’ve quickly hit the limit of my DOCSIS knowledge. I was
> mildly interested in this a number of years back but age and other
> information pushing what I did know out have left me with what I’ve
> now shared with you.
>
> -A.
>
>
>
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