In NZ, Sharing Ethernet With A Whole CIty 282
ryuko writes: "Normally LANs are used by a single organization at best, but Wellington's 13-square-mile LAN comprises many of the city's businesses. The city council garnered a UNESCO Digital Access Award in recognition of its achievement in installing the 1,000 Mbps network.
The full article is here on ZDNet. Drool ... gigabit internet ..."
Correction (Score:2, Informative)
Citylink runs at Fast Ethernet speeds of up to 1,000Mbps, about 65 times faster than a T1 line.
Isn't a T1 1.544Mbps? If so then 1Gbps is 647x faster. However the following sentence is a bit silly:
Considering that many U.S. organizations use T1 lines to connect to faster Internet backbone providers, Citylink is offering speeds generally unmatched here.
The Gbps is extremely nice, but it's silly to presume that everyone in North America is using a T1 : Hell most home users are using cable high speed running at 2Mbps downstream.
Re:Correction (Score:1)
Re:Correction (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah but the point is that many US organizations can afford, and do afford, a lot more than a T1. Wiring a city solves the last mile problem, but 9 times out of ten the organizations that a company wants to video or audio teleconference isn't conveniently in the same town.
The article seems to be full of errors. Firstly they say that it's 1,000 Mbps, but then call it Fast Ethernet (which is 100Mbps), and then state that it's 67x faster than a T1 (which would imply 100Mbps). Later in the article they say "With 100 Mbps of capacity, businesses can easily implement video conferencing and voice over IP (VoIP)." 1000, 100, Fast Ethernet, 67x T1...blah.
Re:Correction (Score:1)
Are T1 lines even remotely cost-effective anymore? I was under the impression that business-class cable or DSL lines could provide similiar speeds at a fraction of the price.
Re:Correction (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Correction (Score:3, Interesting)
Now its back to the old days, SBC/Ameritech is the monopoly again, and things are going down hill, all over again, due to corporate greed, and monopolization.
--Mike--
Re:Correction (Score:2)
And then it says they use Cisco 3524, 3508, and 2912 (!) switches. The 3524 is Fast Ethernet with a couple of gigabit ports, the 3508 is a gigabit-only switch, and the 2912 is the lowest end of the 29xx Fast Ethernet switch line, so they've either had those a long time or gotten them used cheap. Which means that they have a gigabit core and Fast Ethernet access. So those "cheap routers" only have to handle 100 mbit, and as access routers the latency of store-and-forward isn't so much of a problem. It's the core that needs cut-through switching.
For gigabit, the 32/33 PCI bus of an average PC would indeed be saturated, but the point of gigabit these days is more to aggregate bandwidth than to have single servers delivering 100 MBytes/sec.
Re:Correction (Score:2)
Re:Correction (Score:1)
Re:Correction (Score:1)
Re:Correction (Score:1)
Re:Correction (Score:1)
Re:Correction (Score:1)
Re:Correction (Score:2, Funny)
I just did, and now no longer have an appetite.
thanks
D
Re:Correction (Score:2)
Re:Correction (Score:3, Informative)
You can also get a 2 megabit wireless citylink connection, which has a larger coverage area than the faster wired connections.
Re:Correction (Score:2)
The typical connection time to CityLink is a few days, compared to the 2-6 weeks it takes to get a line out of any NZ telco, and outages are resolved in less time than it takes to make a telco admit they have a problem with their network.
As opposed to Auckland (Score:2, Funny)
Am I in charge of my portion of the network? (Score:2)
I dont see why not. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Am I in charge of my portion of the network? (Score:3, Informative)
Too much money makes Jack a dull boy (Score:5, Informative)
So in other words, all of the people elsewhere with massive budgets have been conned into buying large amounts of expensive kit to get less for their money than these guys.
Brains 1 - Suits 0
The most impressive thing about this is the simplicity of it. This isn't next gen tech or anything this is just someone who had the smarts to think
"Hang on we supply electricity via a distributed network rather than Point 2 Point, why can't we do the same with the internet... hang on its cheaper as well"
Real issue here though is that the City backed up the smart guy rather than getting CorporationX to do it, had then gone for the latter route they would be right where the rest of us are with our T1s to the Telco backbones.
I predict this won't happen in big cities because they have too much money to be sensible.
"The Internet" as a government program. (Score:2, Interesting)
However, taking you at face value, I would remind you that it was only after 1992, when the US Government stopped trying to control the routing tables, that what YOU know as "the internet" actually took off.
You might be surprised to know there was a time when it was illegal to use "the internet" for commercial purposes.
Many thousands of private individuals who worked on, contributed to, and built what you know as "the internet" didn't work for any government.
I recomend you read a book next time before posting.
Bob-
open source too (Score:4, Insightful)
that is pretty cool. lots of other juicy details in there as well.
Re:open source too (Score:1)
Re:open source too (Score:1)
This company makes routers That is more powerfull then they LinkSys and not as much as the Cisco. Or mabey it is just as good as Cisco but bosses want a name brand and a company they know and have a lot of stock in.
Re:open source too (Score:2)
Re:open source too (Score:2)
In a lot of situations, an old PC with a bunch of ethernet cards, GNU/Linux, and Zebra [zebra.org] would be perfectly fine for a router. Memory is cheeper, and it's probably faster (though a Cisco 2500 is still plenty powerful enough for the task). A PC also is quite a bit more flexible. Further, in the case of Zebra, the syntax used is very similar to Cisco's IOS, so there is a smaller learning curve for those who are used to IOS already.
However, one drawback is security. On a Cisco router, you only have to worry about someone breaking the IOS system; with Zebra, you have to worry about someone breaking the underlieing OS AND Zebra itself. Breaking either gives you access to the router itself. Further, IOS has been around for years and has been throughly debugged. Zebra is not quite in a 1.0 release. Plus there are features; Zebra won't have support for multicast routing protocols until 2.0.
You basically have to decide if the extra expense of a Cisco router is worth whatever reduction in secuiry and stability. And you can't go the Zebra if you need multicast (like for streaming videos, game servers, whatever).
Re:open source too (Score:2)
The reasons people buy Cisco are:
1/ Support.
2/ Everyone else does.
Re:open source too (Score:2)
Is IOS entirely monolithic anyway.
Breaking either gives you access to the router itself.
Even if this is running a general purpose operating system does not mean that every single application that OS can run will be installed.
Further, IOS has been around for years and has been throughly debugged.
Wern't their problems with Cisco routers and Code Red HTTP probing. Dosn't sound that throughly debugged. Also you are comparing closed source with open source...
Zebra is not quite in a 1.0 release. Plus there are features; Zebra won't have support for multicast routing protocols until 2.0.
This is more a matter of being "feature complete" than "debugged". Do Cisco routers support IP v6 yet?
Thank God for Microsoft... (Score:1)
"As another cost-cutting measure, Citylink uses a generic computer..."
Generic? I'm guessing they mean a WinTel box, with the "Win" bit replaced.
If Microsoft hadn't decided to go into the OS commodity business, we wouldn't today have a commodity hardware business.
Eat your heart out, Apple.
Re:Thank God for Microsoft... (Score:1)
Re:Thank God for Microsoft... (Score:1)
Whoah!!!! (Score:1)
I mean, the 4004, 8008, 8080 were out there way before the 6502 (if that's where you're going).
In any case, even were I to accept your proposition, Apple dropepd the ball long ago.
Re:Whoah!!!! (Score:1)
Hello! Remember IBM? (Score:3, Insightful)
Those three letters were magic. At the time, computing was dominated by big expensive mainframes, and IBM had no less than 90% of that market. They were, in other words, the Microsoft of the 60s and 70s. To survive, your product had to be compatible with the IBM PC at every level. IBM itself took a long time to see this, and came out with non-compatible systems like the PCjr and the PS/2. Which is why the "IBM-compatible" market isn't dominated by IBM.
The one way Microsoft helped out was by providing a crappy operating system -- actually more like a glorified program loader. Since MS-DOS did such a lousy job of insulating applications from the hardware, apps had to incorporate a lot of hardware-specific functionality. Which forced IBM's competitors to emulate the PC at a very low level.
Everybody engineering to the same specs created opportunities for commodity manufacturers -- and created the "generic" computer. Which still has basic design features that totally suck -- like that big heat-generating internal power supply.
Perhaps if Microsoft had hired somebody who knew Jack Shit about re-entrant code or how to write a scheduler, we'd all still be using proprietary architectures. Kind of ironic.
Re:Hello! Remember IBM? (Score:2)
Business people were buying Apples & Kaypros and Osbornes, and IBM wanted to get a piece of that market, though they were as supprised as anyone by the sucess of the IBM PC. They opted for a 8088 based system, and that's when Microsoft got into the OS business.
Re:Hello! Remember IBM? (Score:2)
Which only reinforces my point -- that Microsoft didn't create this technology or the market. They just used the PC to dominate it. Or rather, they stumbled into a dominate role -- thanks to their relationship with IBM.
Thanks for reminding me of CP/M -- a real OS that was the obvious choice for IBM to bundle with the PC. If IBM had come to terms with Digital Research, the implications are mind-boggling. It's a minor detail that Mister Bill wouldn't be rich. As you say, CP/M allows apps to be hardware independent. So other vendors wouldn't have had to copy the PC so closely.
This would have had a big plus and a big minus. The big plus would be that machines would work a lot better than they do -- better OS architecture, and hardware vendors could have concentrated on improving performance, rather than slavishly copying the PC. The big minus is that all the standardized hardware we now have wouldn't exist -- no commodity systems, and thus no $400 routers in Wellington.
Re:Hello! Remember IBM? (Score:2)
However QDOS (which Microsoft bought) was a clone of CP/M. There are plenty of bits in MS DOS which are very CP/M like indeed.
Re:Hello! Remember IBM? (Score:2)
Re:Hello! Remember IBM? (Score:2)
I'm not even going near your other fantasies.
Re:Hello! Remember IBM? (Score:2)
It's perfectly true that before 1981, IBM had no role at all in the desktop computer market -- but in 1981, desktops represented only a small percentage of money spent on hardware. IBM had a lot of clout, and they thought they would dominate the desktop market too. Most of their competitors thought they were right, and rushed to produce hardware that could run the same software.
They were all proven wrong, of course. But not before "IBM compatible" became synonymous with "generic".
Re:Hello! Remember IBM? (Score:2)
Scaleable? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Scaleable? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Scaleable? (Score:1)
Re:Scaleable? (Score:2, Interesting)
Onto the point I was going to make...I remember a few years ago they were talking about taking out all the trolley buses because the buses were in need of replacement and it would be too expensive to replace them - normal buses were the desired replacement. Bit of a bummer for CityLink if they did tear down all the wires.
I hope they keep the buses, because it would seem that lots of other cities ripped up this kind of network in the 70s and 80s only to start regretting it later.
Re:Scaleable? (Score:2)
Alternativly you could lease some space from LRT. The oldest tube lines were constricted by "cut and cover" under roads.
Re:Scaleable? (Score:1)
Right... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Right... (Score:2)
Kiwi's with a supa fast MAN? (Score:3, Informative)
It's bloomin' rad is what it is. It's actually nice when a city provides, what's seen as, neccessary infrastructure to the businesses in the city.
But, uhhhh... think of all the sheep porn going over those cables, man! The amount of sick, New Zealand sheep porn you can get on the internet will increase a billion fold once they get all 1000 Kiwi's on the network.
New Zealand - Where men are men and sheep are nervous.
Re:Kiwi's with a supa fast MAN? (Score:2, Funny)
Australians say that New Zealanders sleep with sheep.
New Zealanders say Australians sleep with sheep.
Sounds to me like the sheep are the only ones getting any action!
Re:Kiwi's with a supa fast MAN? (Score:2)
None of which detracts from Richard's accomplishments, of course.
And the Council still own a chunk.
Very, very nice (Score:2)
Although I do wonder how much the service costs, and what other costs would the locals need to budget for to get running on the network?
Also, who is in charge of the Linux firewall boxes - someone inside the companies I'd hope, but what if the company doesn't have someone to run the machine?
I'd love to hear more about this system - and see the details in how it was built.
Re:Very, very nice (Score:3, Insightful)
It states clearly that "It's a normal LAN with client-owned routers at the edge. Clients implement their own firewall protection"
The costs will probably be very low... using opensource and all their overhead will be at a minimum. The costs a company makes is nothing more then they normally would have to pay for materials like a router and firewall.. it can be whatever they want..
What i am interested in is if this scheme would work in rural area's. What would be it's breakeven point....?
"Socialist!" (Score:3, Insightful)
Or not????
Better to s**t on everyone else, eh?
If the raw paranoiac/Hobbesian profit motive isn't behind it, most folks areound here would never go for it. Damn the benefits. Who knows? Maybe in 2050, members of Congress will be saying, "If we vote for legislation X, then we might catch up with New Zealand's GDP."
"Capitalist" too. This is not a unique application (Score:2)
To counter the "socialist" arguments, lots of places I've lived have private water suppliers who always provide cleaner water than the "city" supply. Yes, even through their own pipes in the ground.
Metropolitan area fiber providers exist and are flourishing, selling LAN like speeds across town and further. there are lots of companies selling this kind of equipment [atrica.com] from the startups to Lucent, the company formerly known as Bell Labs.
There are styles for wiring your own little community together on the cheap [terawave.com], then providing ISP service through something like the Linux router mentioned in this article.
The only "unique" feature to this project is its starting as a "community" project. However, since no one is forced to pay for it, no one is forced to use it, it's hardly "socialist".
I applaud the for-thinking of the design engineers. This might as well be called an "open source" project all by itself! Vivat!
Bob-
LAN Party? (Score:2, Funny)
Hum... out of the percentage of the population here, how many of them are online gamers? In opinion, that is one nice LAN party going on!
Re:LAN Party? (Score:1)
any mirrors please? (Score:1)
soup
I think the real question is (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I think the real question is (Score:2)
Power over Fibre Optics ?? (Score:2)
"We needed to balance the loads by connecting them," Naylor says. So he ran a fiber optic cable between the plants, allowing them to compensate by sharing power when one was hit by a shortage.
Distributing power over fibre optics, and already in the eighties ?? That's very advanced.
Mirror (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Have no fear! George W is on the case! (Score:2, Insightful)
And there you have it. The internet will just become an enhancement to cable TV.
What we need is deregulation of the Cable internet access, like there is with DSL.
Re:Have no fear! George W is on the case! (Score:2)
WAN, not LAN, and other inconsistencies.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Normally LANs are used by a single organization at best true, but for a good reason. LANs that span multiple buildings are technically refferred to as WANs, regardless of the underlying technology.
And the 2.5k$ gigabit router? Not. A commodity PC cannot even reach maximum throughput on a single gigabit NIC, nevermind routing between them. The only way to do this would be to use a decent server-class M/B with 64bit/66MHz PCI bus - which would take the total system cost above 2.5k$. A more moderate PC could indeed be used for residential/small business gateways, but you would not get gigabit throughput.
Just my 2c worth...
-justin
Re:WAN, not LAN, and other inconsistencies.... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:WAN, not LAN, and other inconsistencies.... (Score:1, Insightful)
was that businesses had access to 1Gbps,
do you really think that this is actually the
case?
I think it is more probable that each
business is running 100Mbps locally,
so saturating 1Gbps is a problem
they aren't interested in.
They are interested in cheap uplink to a fat
pipe, and that's what they have
for $2.5k instead of a cisco.
I agree that if they get to the point
where a business-to-business connection
actually wants 1Gbps, they are fucked.
Re:WAN, not LAN, and other inconsistencies.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Isn't the term for the type of network they're creating a "MAN", or Metropolitan Area Network? There was a big push for these several years ago. Indeed, and I'm not diminishing the accomplishment involved in getting this done in NZ, I know of several towns in Southern Ontario that outfitted their entire town with fiber optics for control systems (because of attenuation problems/distance they couldn't use copper), and they offered businesses internet access at least 3 years ago: I think this is a pretty common thing for `hydro' (which is what we call combo electricity/water companies here) to do. Now they don't sign everyone up for free, nor do I think they should: Why should the city foot a giant bill because a guy is hosting a mega porn server when the next business is using it to check hotmail once a day?
Re:WAN, not LAN, and other inconsistencies.... (Score:3, Informative)
Over $2.5K?
PriceWatch lists motherboards with those specs for $260US...
Re:WAN, not LAN, and other inconsistencies.... (Score:2)
And the 2.5k$ gigabit router? Not. A commodity PC cannot even reach maximum throughput on a single gigabit NIC, nevermind routing between them. The only way to do this would be to use a decent server-class M/B with 64bit/66MHz PCI bus - which would take the total system cost above 2.5k$
Show your work.
I routinely build sub-$2k machines with 64-bit/66MHz GigE NICs. Server-class Mobos are only $500, and if you use copper, you can get NICs for $200. The LX NICs will be more, but still sub-$500 in small quantities. So that leave the rest of the PC, which is less than $1k.
Where's the pr0n (Score:1)
It has been done before (Score:2, Interesting)
Västerås Sweden has built there redundant Gigabit backbone. They are working on connecting the companies and households.
The diffrent between the two city-LANs is that Gävle includes a Internet-connection as standard. Västerås only sells the fiber within the city. I think Gävle made the best, people don't want to buy cabel and Internet. They just want to surf.
Combine this with former article (Score:2)
Forget this mega-LAN (Score:2, Funny)
s/SMTP/SNMP/ ? (Score:2)
Somehow I don't think they're sending email messages to their routers in order to alter network behaviour.
Until it gets tot he US (Score:3, Funny)
And then when the fiber connection terminates somewhere in the United States we slow it back down so those people down under don't look better then us.
Article inaccuracy? (Score:5, Interesting)
Straight from RFC 2962:
There are currently three versions of SNMP. SNMP version 1 (SNMPv1) protocol is defined in STD 15, RFC 1157. The SNMP version 2c (SNMPv2c) protocol is defined in RFC 1901, RFC 1905 and RFC 1906. Finally, the SNMP version 3 (SNMPv3) protocol is defined in RFC 1905, 1906, RFC 2572 and RFC 2574. See RFC 2570 for a more detailed overview over the SNMP standards.
Re:Article inaccuracy? (Score:3, Informative)
So he ran a fiber optic cable between the plants, allowing them to compensate by sharing power when one was hit by a shortage.
I really doubt that the power plants are sharing power via a fiber optic cable.
Or how about the network speed, is it 100 Mbps (Fast Ethernet) or 1,000 Mbps (Gig Ethernet).
From the article:
Citylink runs at Fast Ethernet speeds of up to 1,000Mbps
This article is so full of errors, I don't know if I should believe it.
Re:Article inaccuracy? (Score:3, Informative)
Its gig ether on a (generally) switched network. You can purchase 10, 100 or gig endpoints from citylink. More details are available on www.citylink.co.nz.
Drool some more (Score:4, Informative)
802.3ae [ieee.org], as the IEEE lovingly calls it, is backed by the 10GEA [10gea.org] (10 Gbps Ethernet Alliance). The founding members of the 10GEA are small companies you might have heard of such as 3Com, Cisco, Intel, Nortel or Sun.
stop drooling (Score:2)
In my tests with `ttcp`, the best I can get is around 32 MByte/s between two PCs plugged together.
To get higher, you need PCI 64/66. The normal PCI bus can carry 4bytes*33 MHz = 133 MB/s (1066 Mb/s) but only during bursts. There is significant setup time, and the bursts are fairly short. Maybe I could get better throughput if I tweak the PCI registers, but I risk starving some other device.
Re:stop drooling (Score:2, Interesting)
I enjoyed two articles on ExtremeTech: High-Performance Buses and Interconnects [extremetech.com] by Leon Erlanger (dated November 8, 2001) and The Interconnect Conundrum [extremetech.com] by Nick Stam (dated January 28, 2002).
Headlines... (Score:2, Funny)
"New report from police shows clan based killing up 500%."
"Three downtown businessmen fragged after work."
"City's parents concerned that 31337 haXor sqillz are not be emphasized enough in school."
"Downtown city celebrates 3rd annual Everquest celebration festival... citizens urged to stay home."
Why Our Tellecomunications Company sux (Score:5, Interesting)
I hope that someday things will change and we can also have a 1000 mbps LAN connecting our cities.
The Citylink website is (Score:3, Informative)
www.citylink.co.nz [citylink.co.nz]
Imagine a beo... (Score:3, Funny)
Nitpick mode on (Score:2)
They have a rather nifty one in Soho in London that servers the film industry there. No, not that sort of film! Media companies usually have prestige offices there. http://www.sohonet.co.uk/ is the link.
Take that, QOS heads! (Score:3, Insightful)
QoS: No worries: Many IT departments say that prioritizing packets is vital if you want to run applications and send important files over the Internet. Because of Citylink's sheer speed and capacity, De Wit says adding quality of service (QoS) features isn't necessary. "QoS is a problem for others because they only have so much space in the pipe," he says. "We can fit all the traffic we want onto our Ethernet, so why do we need to worry about prioritizing?" Also, because of the generous capacity, DeWit says data collisions, which are often a concern on LANs, aren't such an issue with Citylink.
Seriously. QoS is a waste of time if you just have enough capacity.
Addressing Scheme (Score:3, Interesting)
Are they using "real" IP addresses? If so, what class?
Or are they using public address (10.0.0.0) with a NAT box to access the internet?
Just wondering.
Re:Addressing Scheme (Score:2)
Re:Addressing Scheme (Score:2, Informative)
Citylink offers two main services. One is a "dark fiber" connection (they put it in, manage it for you) which lets you do whatever you like with it. This is the equivilent of a leased line from a telco between two buildings you own (or you and a client). You can use any addresses, protocols, etc, on that without affecting anyone else.
The other service is their public MAN. All the ISPs in New Zealand (all the significant ones with any presence in Wellington anyway) are connected to this Citylink public MAN. To use it for Internet access you go to one of these ISPs and get some addresses assigned for you to use. Because it's a layer-2 network, all these addresses from different ISPs can be used in parallel without affecting each other. (Just like you can on a LAN segment for testing, etc.)
The really big win of the public MAN and all the ISPs being connected is that changing ISP is pretty easy if you need to -- you just need new IP addresses (for CIDR allocations), or a new set of routing entries (for those with real address space of their own). Makes it a lot cheaper, and easier, than having to get new leased lines run, etc.
Isn't this what AT&T did? (Score:2)
Do you think the government will eventually insist that Citylink open up the network that they created to competitors? Regardless of how good Citylink is, they're still a monopoly, or eventually will be. One can only hope that they'll be a responsible monopoloy.
RP
Optical Power!!! (Score:2, Interesting)
This is one of many strange statements in the article. I'm not the 1st one to point this out, but transmitting POWER over OPTICAL fibre is not really possible (at least outside NZ).
But... (Score:2, Informative)
I understand that this has eased with the introduction of the Southern Cross, which is the new fibre optic channel connecting us to Australia. I'm looking forward to going home soon to see the improvements.
Unfortunately, TelecomNZ charge by volume. Even though I could get 300K/sec, I was only allowed 600MB per month before hitting excess per MB charges. I looked just a few days ago and that's still the situation, I don't know if this is because they're greedy (what, a telco, surely not...) or because they're trying to limit the Southern Cross usage by retail customers.
Ian
Citylink is extremely good (Score:4, Informative)
Recently, we moved premises and because Citylink was available in both locations, i have been able to securely bridge my two locations (using Linux-running routers on both ends) transparently over Citylink, which means the users don't even notice that all the servers and outbound router are still down the road.
LAN traffic averages about 2Mbps across the link, and if we had done this using our link to TelstraSaturn (our ISP) we would have ended up with a bandwith bill of extraordinary proportions.
The link was set up simply by assigning an unused 192.168.x.x address to both ends of the connection, running VTUN across this link and then bridging the virtual interfaces using Linux's bridge-utils.
There is no reason this concept couldn't be expanded to link arbitary numbers of sites into a nice, flat, stable, secure 'WAN'. In fact, this is exactly what i will be doing to fulfil some of my company's disaster-recovery requirements.
I couldn't be happier with the support, stability and speed Citylink provides.
Citylink is good (Score:3, Informative)
Basically we get a full duplex 100Mb Ethernet cable hanging in our machine room, and we can participate on the BGP peering system available on the network.
In New Zealand, ISP tarrif charges can be high (at least, this is the dirty rumour going about). For about, er, NZD$350 per month, we can get all-you-can-eat traffic to any of our peers without crossing an ISP. It's free, and fast.
The slowest access available is 10Mb (Ethernet). So, worst case scenario is that your updates to local servers (like linux.wellington.net.nz, for example) are blazingly fast; 100Mb access to the same server is staggering.
Naylor's vision was extraordinary, and has enabled Wellington to be a wired city in ways most people can only dream about
Unfortunately, it didn't just spring up overnight. I've been working with Citylink connected places for what, about four years now. The network has grown and expanded since then, gaining better core kit and so on. It's amazing now, and promises to get better. What cities need to appreciate is that it won't happen overnight; your network needs to grow organically overnight. Pick a good location for installation, get some interested companies, and be willing to take a little bit of a hit in the first year.
Wellington is kind of unique in that the entire central business district is walking distance from everywhere; you can cover the city on foot in any direction for business purposes in about 45 minutes or so. However, Auckland (a larger city in New Zealand) is starting to get on the ball with their APE (Auckland Peering Exchange). Auckland is a sprawling behemouth that has traffic congestion problems shocking for a city its size. But if they can do it, so can you