business-class fiber to the home [closed]

Suppose you're some sort of crazy nerd fellow and you live in an area that's absolutely covered in fiber optics and network facilities. What kind of cost / infrastructure would be needed to hook in somewhere and get you're internet connection directly from a local datacenter?


What you're looking for is called "dry" fiber, and the likelihood that someone will sell it to you is pretty much nil. Evem of you did get it, you'd need to crossconnect it inside the data center into some form of uplink/peering, which ain't cheap (a few hundred dollars a month for the crossconnect alone isn't at all atypical). Basically, you'd be better off doing almost any other connection method through a traditional ISP; the only time going this way might make sense is if you need insane speeds, or if you are pooling multiple neighbors' connections together (at which point you're an ISP yourself).

Now, going the "wet" route--that is, using fiber already provisioned with IP and the like--is comparatively-cheap (again, for reasonable speeds; for ultra-fast connections, the dry fiber option might be better). For that, just ask a few of the telcos in your area; they'll happily sell you an OC-192 if you want to pay the astronomical fees for it, but that covers the cost of quite literally ripping a hole in the ground and dragging the cable to you.

As a last option, as Borealid mentioned, there are services like FiOS that literally do bring the fiber to your door. But this doesn't seem to be what you're looking for; you want a piece of fiber you can physically plug into a router, and for that, the two options above are what you're looking at.


You need to talk to a local ISP and get a quote on a high-end connection. They can tell you how much it'll cost to get set up.

Lot of times your regular "consumer" ISPs have high end data plans available, in which case the cost would probably be minimal. Cable and DSL use pretty much the same equipment for home/business connections. I have a satellite office that gets it's internet from a local cable company (Cox) and we get 15/3 for about what a T1 would cost (though it's less reliable).


If you didn't know the carrier and had no discount structure in place then I'd suggest that simply running shielded good high performance (OM3) bare fibre from their switches to your home would cost in the tens of thousands of dollars, perhaps as much as $50,000-$75,000. Then you'd have to pay for the SFP/SFP+ (or Xenpak/X2), which are at least $1,000 each end for medium range transceivers, plus a fraction of a switch line card, say $2,000. You'd also need an SFP/SFP+ capable switch/router at your end, say $2,000-$5,000 or more. Then we get into the heavy cost, the actual carrier and support costs, which would be well into five figure per year. There would also be engineering and project management costs too.

So to recap, I'd suggest between $25,000 and $150,000-$250,000 depending on carrier, location, service level and speed.

Fast downloads though...


Move.

Move either to someplace with Verizon FIOS service, or close to someplace where you can just throw it over the fence. Some guy's grandmother had 40Gbps three years ago that way. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/07/12/swedish_woman_has_fastest_internet_connection/

Just how fat a pipe do you need? Point to point wireless can offer good service up to 15Mbps, and of course there are various "normal" wired options.