DSL provider?

I'm interested in how DSL data packets get from the exchange to my provider's autonomous system. I have one and one. How does it work? Is it first fed into the Telekom network via an L2TP tunnel and then transferred from there to the 1&1 network?

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MarSusMar
4 months ago

No then each of us would have to have about 15 different APL with 15 external lines to the telecommunications network. If you want to change, you should use another. Extremely impractical.

Deutsche Telekom is a management company whose lines go to any APL in Germany. 1&1 has, like any other provider, a paper contract with Deutsche Telekom, not its own lines also no cm.

If the net is really so bad (mostly you live too far away from the control cabinet on the road) only helps to move. Switching the provider absolutely NOTS. It’s still the same network.

The only thing that Deutsche Telekom radically differentiates from prices to other providers is the technical service.

1&1 must keep your fault, they can’t see if something’s wrong with you.

With me as Telekom KD, the agent can be on the phone In conversation, my DSL speed was radically sacked. In the (handy) conversation can take the switch cabinet short of the current. Send a technician out. The switch cabinets then “releases” to me sometimes also a problem not reported because a loose cable was screwed. (For me it was the TAE)

However, your disorder works in a list of thousands that need to be processed.

Only cable internet has its own network.

MarSusMar
3 months ago
Reply to  frank824

k.A where you got that. That’s absolutely bullshit. Doesn’t have any logic. I sat on the tech hotline. Directly at 1&1. If there was a 1&1 network, I would know that we do not have to pass on any disruption to Deutsche Telekom. All 1&1 Kd depend on Deutsche Telekom’s APL. It goes directly into the German DSL Netzt. The old fixed network the cables have been replaced, but there is one network that goes to each DSL up to the APL.

How exactly is absolutely irrelevant here.

And again

That’s what you said.

A 1&1 customer has a 1&1 Apl. because only about this is the Internet via the (non-existing 1& network). If the O2, for example, wants to change, the home network must be clamped to the APL of O2, in order to be connected to the (also not existing) O2 network. If he wants to join Telekom he needs an Apl from Telekom to be connected directly to the telecommunications network

MarSusMar
3 months ago

So fast. The tree needed the old Lametta. The candles had to be added dropwise and the web had to be built.

Back to you

Your access data lion any server that belongs to Deutsche Telekom. Partly rented. Therefore, your access data also comes that is the job of Deutsche Telekom to create and release it on the switching day. Because the line itself is in 90% of the cases. Newly built houses with electricity/water wastewater receive an APL connection to Telekom network. If it is.

Speedports can separate this. Have a Led for DSL when the line stands and one for online when the access data is released. Then you get to the internet.

All third-party providers only exist because competition law prevails in Germany and Telekom would otherwise still have the old monopoly.

They have absolutely no access to anything you can touch. No matter who they work on the paper. so peering

What you think is in the mobile field.

for DSL cable internet, D needed new wiring, open every road, place a cable for each third party and also place a lot of APL accordingly.

Absolutely meaningless.

MarSusMar
3 months ago

1&1 Versatel Deutschland GmbH

It’s not a name.

one and one operates for example peering with other netzen

Let’s go. You just don’t get it

MarSusMar
3 months ago

That’s right.