@gundi No, Swisscom is not a state-owned company. Swisscom is a completely normal stock corporation with many different shareholders (owners). One of these owners is the federal government, which holds 51%. But the federal government cannot do what it wants with this, because there are also minority rights, among other things.
Anything that is not visible in the checker has no hold. So stop asking around, because all the planning data is in the checker. And if there is no date, then nothing is planned for this year and even if a community is planned for 2024 in the feeder migration, that does not mean that it will also be possible at the specific address. It’s interesting how you can drive yourself crazy about “wanting to have” 😁
Roger G.
Swisscom (Schweiz) AG, Product Manager Wireline Access
@gundi wrote:
Where can I order this? And how is this supposed to work? In our case the fiber is laid down to the basement and then… what happens next. Doesn’t the SC have to do this right up to the apartment?
Thanks for the answers
For n posts it has been shown here why this doesn’t work. You have no choice but to wait until it is possible to tighten the feeder for the entire community. And that will simply take a long time, because a large part of it is connected to FTTS/B, but where you live, FTTS was no longer built due to the introduction of xgsPON. The fibers were pulled in, but we know the rest.
And when a community is quite large, everyone understands that it takes more effort to tighten the cables. Simply calculated, 1 or 2 fibers per household and in (almost) every corner of the community. Those in the development near you (e.g. same street name, House 33) were stuck and got FTTH as a new building because copper was no longer being used.
So, checking once a month to see if anything is happening is enough.
Roger G.
Swisscom (Schweiz) AG, Product Manager Wireline Access
Hello together
We live in an apartment block and own a flat. We will have fibre optics from March (see screenshot).
Now to my question:
Will the cable be pulled all the way to the flat or only to the distributor in the apartment block?
If it doesn’t go all the way to the flat, do I have to contact Swisscom?
And finally, are there any costs involved? I’ve read that Swisscom takes care of this, is that the case?
Many thanks in advance.
Greetings
steff
In apartment blocks (whether rented or owned), Swisscom normally installs one OTO socket per flat directly in the flat free of charge.
As the date approaches, you will be contacted by the installation company to determine the date and possible installation location.
Hobby-Nerd ohne wirtschaftliche Abhängigkeiten zur Swisscom
steff Is the cable pulled all the way into the flat or only to the distributor in the apartment block?
Only up to the distributor (no full connection)
@“steff ”#p865822If it doesn’t go all the way to the flat, do I have to contact Swisscom?
If the 10G is available, you can initiate the switch in mySwisscom. If the landlord doesn’t put any obstacles in the way, the fibre optic cable will be pulled into the flat and the socket installed.
steff And finally, are there any costs involved? I’ve read that Swisscom will take care of this, is that the case?
It’s free of charge for you. But if, for whatever reason, you want the fibre optic socket in a different location to the one specified by the landlord, then you pay for the conversion yourself
steff Many thanks in advance.
Always happy to help 🙂
Roger G.
Swisscom (Schweiz) AG, Product Manager Wireline Access
Werner As the date approaches, you will be contacted by the installation company to finalise the date and possible installation location.
No, the installation location of the OTO is agreed with the owner/landlord during the planning and on-site inspection. The tenant has no say in this.
Roger G.
Swisscom (Schweiz) AG, Product Manager Wireline Access
Roger G No, the installation location of the OTO is agreed with the owner/landlord during the planning and on-site inspection. The tenant has no say in this.
Of course, you are always right about Access questions, and this also applies here, but @steff’s question was not about a rented flat, but explicitly about a condominium, so you just got the wrong answer 🙂
Hobby-Nerd ohne wirtschaftliche Abhängigkeiten zur Swisscom