Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Fiber optic cable linking Cuba to Jamaica active

Posted on Tuesday, 05.21.13

Fiber optic cable linking Cuba to Jamaica active
By Juan O. Tamayo
jtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com

Cuba has activated a branch of its submarine fiber optic cable that connects to Jamaica, giving it greater bandwidth and a backup in case the main leg to Venezuela is not available, according to a U.S. company that monitors global Internet traffic.

Doug Madory, senior analyst at Renesys in Maine, said that on May 13 the company noticed that ETECSA, the Cuban government’s telecommunications monopoly, had started to receive international Internet service through Cable & Wireless Jamaica.

That shows Havana is now using the Jamaica branch of the ALBA-1 submarine cable that connects Venezuela and Cuba, Madory noted. Cuba just started carrying Internet traffic on the main Venezuela leg in January, although the cable was finished two years ago.

Madory said the Jamaica link gives Havana greater bandwidth for its international Internet connections, as well as a backup in case the leg of ALBA-1 to Venezuela is interrupted.

Until January, ETECSA was routing all Internet traffic through three satellites, which have much slower and expensive Internet connections. U.S. traffic to Cuba, for instance, had to travel about 43,000 miles — up to the satellites and then back down.

The 1,000-mile-long Cuba-Venezuela cable began carrying voice traffic for international calls last August, according to a Jan. 24 note by ETECSA, officially the Cuban Telecommunications Enterprise.

But on Jan. 10, ETECSA technicians “began to carry out quality tests on Internet traffic,” the note added. “These are being carried out using real traffic from and to Cuba, with the goal of normalizing this communication.”

The note added that even after the cable is fully operational, Cubans will not get increased or cheaper access to the Internet because the overall network on the island still requires improvements.

Cuba has one of the lowest Internet connectivity rates in the Western Hemisphere.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/05/21/3409338/fiber-optic-cable-linking-cuba.html#storylink=cpy

No comments: