(sorry about lack of threading etc, I clipped the text out of the web-based archive) Jonathan wrote:
David Robinson wrote:
"For a start, it takes more than two fibre cuts in the
North Island to
disrupt us"
And also remember back early in the year when one slip on the Hutt motorway took out all services in Wellington.
What is so wrong with Telstra's network that single events can affect so many people, when supposable it takes more than two fibre cuts to disrupt them?
This post you've quoted was related to the core network - i.e. the bits that connect Wellington to Auckland etc. This is a fault in the access network i.e. the bit that connects Mary and Bob (or in this case Kandallah) to the core network. NO operator has full redundancy in the access network for residential services.
What amazes me is that Telstra maintain that a truck hitting a pole was a *completely* unforseeable event and that even in retrospect they could not have been expected to have forseen that *one* *day* a truck would hit a 'single-point-of-failure pole' and that they could not have been expected to have planned for it. I ask you, is that really reasonable? I thought that engineers were the types of folk would look at diagrams of such a network and say: "well this pole is a single point of failure and its right by a road. Sooner or later its going to get hit by something, we'd better plan for that". I don't get the feeling that TC *had* planned for it... though maybe they did and if they hadn't planned for it we'd be disconnected till the new year... Insights anyone? Also, is there anywhere which keeps a log of outages experienced by NZ ISP's, how long they last etc? Thanks