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What is FTTH?

Fiber to the home (FTTH) is the delivery of a communications signal over optical fiber from the operator’s switching equipment all the way to a home or business, thereby replacing existing copper infrastructure such as telephone wires and coaxial cable. Fiber to the home is a relatively new and fast growing method of providing vastly higher bandwidth to consumers and businesses, and thereby enabling more robust video, internet and voice services.    

Connecting homes directly to fiber optic cable enables enormous improvements in the bandwidth that can be provided to consumers. Current fiber optic technology can provide two-way transmission speeds of up to 100 megabits per second. Further, as cable modem and DSL providers are struggling to squeeze increments of higher bandwidth out of their technologies, ongoing improvements in fiber optic equipment are constantly increasing available bandwidth without having to change the fiber. That’s why fiber networks are said to be “future proof.”

Related News

Sep 29, 2011 —  All-Fiber Network Deployment Showing New Level of Activity in Canada and Mexico(ORLANDO... Read More >>

Related Resources

Nov 30, 2011 — Some basic facts on fiber to the home. Read More >>
Nov 30, 2011 — Basic questions on FTTH, its capabilities and its deployment are answered in this document. Read More >>
Oct 12, 2011 — The 2011 version of the popular Fiber Primer from Broadband Properties magazine. Read More >>
May 9, 2011 — Fiber to the home first became commercially viable about 13 years ago, and when the Council was... Read More >>
May 31, 2009 — The mission of all the FTTH Councils in North America, Europe and Asia-Pac includes the... Read More >>