Online Media - Publish.com
Publish.com Ziff-Davis Enterprise  
SEARCH · ONLINE MEDIA · MOBILE · WEB DESIGN · GRAPHICS TOOLS · PRINTING · PHOTO · TIPS · OPINIONS
Home arrow Online Media arrow Good-bye Cable TV, Hello Fiber
Good-bye Cable TV, Hello Fiber
By Lance Ulanoff

Rate This Article:
Add This Article To:
FiOS TV is loosening cable's hammerlock on the digital television service market—and that's a good thing.

"You've been with us since 1994," the Cablevision operator said, querulously.

"Uh-huh," I replied.

"We hate to lose such a longtime customer," she continued.

She sounded nice, so I assured her that it wasn't her fault that I was dropping Cablevision for my TV service in favor of Verizon's brand new FiOS TV fiber-optic TV service. We chatted a bit longer and then, as I requested, she terminated my cable service.

No going back now.

Not that I would want to go back. Making the move to fiber TV is one of the smartest I've made in my technical life. It was not the easiest decision to make, and getting fiber TV into my home was a bit more complicated than I anticipated. Of course, I'd been warned—by Verizon, no less. I'd made the decision to go all-fiber a few weeks earlier, and during the call, the Verizon rep told me the installation could take 6 hours. The first part of it (discussed in my "Long Live Fiber" column), where they ran fiber from the pole to my house, had taken only around 4 hours, so I figured this was an exaggeration.

Even so, I set aside a whole day and worked at home, so I could be there if the Verizon tech needed me—and to supervise and document the job. It was after noon when the technician finally arrived. Apparently, he'd been double-booked and had just completed an installation in a neighboring town (demand for FiOS TV in my area is incredibly high). I let him in and gave him the grand tour, showing him all the TVs that would be getting boxes (without a box, you get only 49 or so channels), the FiOS termination box on the outside of my house, and the D-Link router and UPS the last technician had installed. The tech looked pleased with what he saw.

When it was time to test the analog and digital video signals coming out of my fiber termination box, though, the system failed the digital test. A few more tests—revealing more line errors—and phone calls to Verizon headquarters later, and the tech made the seemingly radical decision to replace the termination box. The thing was barely six months old, and already it was being put out to pasture. But before I could get all weepy, the tech unpacked a spanking-new, smaller, and more color-coordinated white box, complete with a modular, upgradeable interior. Nice.

Problem solved. It was time to run a coax line. I asked the tech if he needed to drill a second hole to run the coax out from the box into my house. "Not really," he said, and he went on to tell me that they could use my existing coax network. I then watched as the tech disconnected the Cablevision coax line from a small link that ran from the utility pole to my house. He capped the end going back to the pole and took the now-exposed end of the cable that ran into my house, replaced the connector, and screwed it on to the coax-out port in the new termination box.

I chuckled a bit to myself. After all these years of the phone company having to lease out and let competitors use its phone lines and utility poles, Verizon was using a competitor's wiring (and the work they did to run it into my house). Sorry, Cablevision.—next: A Messy Nest of Wires >

A Messy Nest of Wires

The job was cruising along. In just a few hours, we had a live FiOS TV connection. Now all the tech had to do was test my in-house coax lines to make sure they were all up to snuff. The seemingly minor task was nearly my Waterloo. The more the tech looked, the more he—and I—discovered the truly byzantine nature of my coax network. There were more than half a dozen splitters throughout my home, and the wiring ranged from new and pristine to something resembling half-chewed spaghetti that's been run over by a tractor trailer. The tech tested the signal coming through some of my cable feeds. He looked at me and with a slow shake of the head gave me the bad news: Verizon wants these installations to be trouble-free. He'd have to replace some of the wiring and remove or replace many of these splitters.

Over the next 3 hours, he reran two dozen or so feet of cabling and bypassed nearly half of the splitters. He also replaced several with new ones and replaced the connectors on the coax wiring he left. I pitched in where I could, helping him feed wires and even removing part of my basement's drop ceiling to help him run a new line. Finally, the tech was satisfied with the line readings he was getting at all critical ports. It was time to install the new router.

Easily three times the size of the D-Link Wireless-G router Verizon provided during the first install, the new MOCA-ready Actiontec M1424WR router adds a coax-out line. When I saw it integrated into my home television network, I worried that if the router went off-line or was accidentally turned off, I'd lose television reception. But I had misinterpreted the router's role. It simply took video-on-demand and the programming-guide information from the Web and passed it via coax out to my new television "network."

We have three main televisions in my house: one in the guest room, one in my bedroom, and my new HDTV in the den. I'd ordered two standard boxes (at $3.95 a month) for the CRTs and one HD DVR (at $12.95 a month) for the HD set. The tech unpacked all three boxes and started attaching them to each of my sets. Before installing each one, he measured the line signal. If he was happy with the strength, he'd install the box and move on. In the den, he found the signal was so strong that he had to put a 3-decibel attenuator on the line. Apparently, this isn't unusual for fiber TV; a too-powerful, undamped signal can actually burn out a fiber box.

With all the boxes hooked up, the Verizon tech contacted the home office to activate all of them. Without activation, the boxes go up to only channel 49.—next: HD Content >

It was 7:10 p.m. when the tech finally left my home. By his reckoning, this was about an average installation—neither the easiest nor the worst. He had certainly been in people's homes longer and later. The crazy thing is that the installation and equipment (aside from renting the boxes) is 100 percent free. Don't you just love it when a company tries to make a good impression?

Though I took a quick look at the reception coming in to the standard TVs (which is excellent, by the way), I was most interested in what my HD content would look like. This was the first time I'd had an all-digital feed coming into my set. The Motorola box thankfully, came with HDMI out. Standard TV stations looked good. Then I got into the "800s", where live all the HD channels, including broadcast networks and HD-only stations such as HDNet. The pictures were stunning. The audio was crystal-clear. Oh yes, this was why I bought an HD set.

Gone were the anomalies (pixilation, frozen images, and the like) I'd been seeing on the HD digital channels Cablevision had somehow crammed onto its analog lines (my digital tuner was able to pick them up). My HD DVR is also quite a wonder. It lets me control, record, and play back HD content, and I can easily watch one show while recording another—all with one coax line in. The box has a fast 7,200-rpm, 160GB hard drive, but HD content can eat it up with just 20 hours of programming. This means I'll have to be more judicious in my full-season recording than I've been with my 80-hour TiVo Series2. For now, content stored on the HD DVR cannot be viewed on other connected FiOS TV boxes. Verizon's standard DVR does offer this capability.

I did make a couple of alterations after the tech left. I added back in one high-quality splitter in the den, so that I could still use my old TiVo and even do a boxless feed directly into my HD set coax-in line. Both get up to only channel 49, but that's enough for some of the shows I want to record and play back.

Though the purchase of my first HD set made going digital a necessity, I could have gone with Cablevision's IO Digital Services. Even with the boxes, it's roughly the same price as FiOS, but as I told the Cablevision operator, there was a stronger reason for making the switch:

"Cablevision has—for too long—treated us like the monopolistic service provider it is. I always knew I would jump at the first sign of competition. People need choices. Competition is good," I told her.

"Yes, it is," she agreed.

"It can only make you better."

"That's true," she added, sounding less than convinced.

Discuss this article in the forums.

More Lance Ulanoff:

Get on Lance Ulanoff's RSS Feed





Discuss Good-bye Cable TV, Hello Fiber
 
>>> Be the FIRST to comment on this article!
 

 
 
>>> More Online Media Articles          >>> More By Lance Ulanoff
 


Buyer's Guide
Explore hundreds of products in our Publish.com Buyer's Guide.
Web design
Content management
Graphics Software
Streaming Media
Video
Digital photography
Stock photography
Web development
View all >

ADVERTISEMENT


FREE ZIFF DAVIS ENTERPRISE ESEMINARS AT ESEMINARSLIVE.COM
  • Dec 10, 4 p.m. ET
    Eliminate the Drawbacks of Traditional Backup/Replication for Linux
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by InMage
  • Dec 11, 1 p.m. ET
    Data Modeling and Metadata Management with PowerDesigner
    with Joel Shore. Sponsored by Sybase
  • Dec 12, 12 p.m. ET
    Closing the IT Business Gap: Monitoring the End-User Experience
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by Compuware
  • Dec 12, 2 p.m. ET
    Enabling IT Consolidation
    with Michael Krieger. Sponsored by Riverbed & VMWare
  • VTS
    Join us on Dec. 19 for Discovering Value in Stored Data & Reducing Business Risk. Join this interactive day-long event to learn how your enterprise can cost-effectively manage stored data while keeping it secure, compliant and accessible. Disorganized storage can prevent your enterprise from extracting the maximum value from information assets. Learn how to organize enterprise data so vital information assets can help your business thrive. Explore policies, strategies and tactics from creation through deletion. Attend live or on-demand with complimentary registration!
    FEATURED CONTENT
    IT LINK DISCUSSION - MIGRATION
    A Windows Vista® migration introduces new and unique challenges to any IT organization. It's important to understand early on whether your systems, hardware, applications and end users are ready for the transition.
    Join the discussion today!



    .NAME Charging For Whois
    Whois has always been a free service, but the .NAME registry is trying to change that.
    Read More >>

    Sponsored by Ziff Davis Enterprise Group

    NEW FROM ZIFF DAVIS ENTERPRISE


    Delivering the latest technology news & reviews straight to your handheld device

    Now you can get the latest technology news & reviews from the trusted editors of eWEEK.com on your handheld device
    mobile.eWEEK.com

     


    RSS 2.0 Feed


    internet
    rss graphic Publish.com
    rss graphic Google Watch

    Video Interviews


    streaming video
    Designing Apps for Usability
    DevSource interviews usability pundit Dr. Jakob Nielsen on everything from the proper attitude for programmers to the importance of prototyping in design to the reasons why PDF, Flash and local search engines can hurt more than they help.
    ADVERTISEMENT