Who else can do nothing else but read this in Farnsworth's voice?
Sorry.
Anyhow, it's pretty good news for you. It's sad that ADSL capability isn't yet available everywhere. Let us know how it goes!
Just for interest sake - have you had some digging and stuffs around your area lately? If not, Telkom may have announced the start of optic fiber for your only, meaning it's going to take a while still. The process is something like this:
-RFQ's (request for quote) get issued - contractors are asked to quote for the civil part of the router build.
-RFQ's are either allowed or denied, and a contractor gets the go-ahead.
-Contractor applies for a wayleave at a local wayleave-publishing agency, usually larger companies who work with a lot of public civil builds. Wayleaves indicate boundaries, limits and existing infrastructure - water, electricity, telecomms, fiber, etc. etc. and where you are allowed to build.
-If the wayleaves are granted, the contractor draws up a plan - a rough draft designed around what he finds on site and how he plans to most effectively build the route.
Plan gets handed to Telkom, and Telkom takes a look. If all seems in order, permission to start work is given.
-Work gets started, and depending on how large the route is can take anything from 2 days to 6 months to trench properly. Blown Fiber duct is laid (tubes within tubes) and buried, compacted and a compaction test is performed to ensure reinstatement was done properly to avoid erosion and the trenches falling in during rains.
-If the ground tests are passed, the duct gets tested with high-pressure tests, called DIT's (or Duct Integrity Test), to ensure the ducts are water and airtight and that the optic fiber can be installed properly.
-After all is done an as-built is created, basically stating how the site was built. Telkom does an inspection based on this report and either signs off or corrects the contractor. Corrections mean he has to redo certain parts or clarify certain aspects of the build to Telkom.
-Signoff means the contractor gets his money and Telkom has the green light to install the fiber, after which their splicers are pulled in to do the connection of the 144-core optic fibers. This is a damn awesome progress, took me a day an a half to prepare and splice into a decent Lisa fiber tray a 144-core optic fiber, to connectors and installed in the fiber racks. Experienced splicers can do two 144-cores in a day, but that's a different story.
So, as you can see, it can take some time. Seeing as you are new to ADSL, I'm guessing you'll be lucky if it's completed before the end of the year. I'd rather place expectations for middle to end 2013 if I were you.



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