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posted by janrinok on Wednesday March 05 2014, @04:12PM   Printer-friendly
from the If-you-laid-all-the-cables-end-to-end dept.

dotdotdot writes:

"All of the fiber-optic cables buried in the sea bed are logged by Washington research firm Telegeography in an interactive Submarine Cable Map. The company's research director Alan Mauldin told CNN about the world's underwater networks."

From the interview:

for international communications, over 99% is delivered by undersea cables.

75% of faults are due to external aggression the majority through human activity such as fishing, and ship's anchors.

There are about 13 cables in service across the Atlantic, and less than 20% of potential capacity is what we call "lit" or in service right now.

cables are designed to last for a minimum 25 years.

Once you build a cable the cost of buying capacity incrementally over time is very affordable.

The last cable across the Pacific cost $300 million; one cable that entered service last year in Asia reaching many locations cost $400 million

 
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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by davester666 on Wednesday March 05 2014, @06:33PM

    by davester666 (155) on Wednesday March 05 2014, @06:33PM (#11444)

    The cable itself is relatively cheap [as in, to add more optic cables to the cable is relatively cheap], so you massively over-provision the cable. But you don't light it all up because then there is a glut of bandwidth so the money you get goes down.

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  • (Score: 2) by Open4D on Thursday March 06 2014, @04:26PM

    by Open4D (371) on Thursday March 06 2014, @04:26PM (#12030) Journal

    to add more optic cables to the cable is relatively cheap

    I assume you mean at the time of manufacture. For a second there I had an image of someone in Bude, Cornwall feeding a fibre optic cable through the main outer cable, all the way to Tuckerton, New Jersey - much like me when I have to feed the drawstring back into my tracksuit trousers :)

    P.S. If the name Bude sounds familiar, that's because it ties in with a fairly significant story from last year [theguardian.com].