Which is clearly in their favour not those customers who are unduly affected by it, all the more reaon for an opt out from DLM to be provided
Who is the "they" that this is in favour of? Certainly there are benefits to end-users, Openreach, Wholesale, ISP and the internet at large.
The only dis-benefit to most end-users is when they don't have a tip-top speed that gives them bragging rights. Some end-users get hit a little heavily - and here I agree that BT have a tendency to rely on DLM rather than fix the line - but it is a small number of users, and certainly not worth cutting off your nose to spite your face.
DLM is a part of the advanced tech that wrings more & more speed out of our copper infrastructure. The next type of advanced technology in the DLM school is known as vectoring, which ought to put back the speed that is otherwise lost from crosstalk. I'd expect that to have direct effects on both aspects contributing to lower speeds: higher SNRM values *and* less need for FEC.
And IMO a vaild reason not to bother with FFTC If you are unlucky enough to have a problematic D' side pair be it affected at times by an outside source or even a developing line fault & several weeks is a too long,
You really do want to chop that nose off, don't you?
The advantage of cabinet-based FTTC here is that it automatically reduces the amount of line that needs to be trouble-shooted to find the problem. The means it ought to be easier to locate than with an exchange-based solution... provided you can get an engineer onto the problem in the first place.
I thought this FTTC malarky was supposed to be advaced tech?
There's always an element of the community that will regard *any* advanced tech as suspicious and worthy of criticism, no matter what good it brings. And not just in telecoms.
In this case, why blame the advanced tech of FTTC when the issue you have is with the planning & operational rules of a telcom company?