Fiber to the X
My ISP is Novus. Novus is a downtown-only service provider, with a fiber network. Fiber to the x (FTTX) is a generic term for any network architecture that uses optical fiber to replace all or part of the usual copper local loop used for telecommunications. The four technologies, in order of an increasingly longer fiber loop are:
- Fiber to the node / neighborhood (FTTN) / Fiber to the cabinet (FTTCab)
- Fiber to the curb (FTTC) / Fibre to the kerb (FTTK)[1]
- Fiber to the building (FTTB)
- Fiber to the home (FTTH)
I have FTTH - Fiber to the home. Not many people in the world have this level of residential service. If fiber is used at all, the common end-point is the node/cabinet/curb. This means that existing coaxial or twisted pair infrastructure to provide last mile service. Because I have a "direct" connection to the fiber, I have ridiculous bandwidth. I mean REALLY ridiculous. Here's a quick look at various connection options, and their relative speeds:
- Dial up - 53.3 Kb/s (up and down)
- xDSL - 6100 Kb/s (Max. Typical measured speeds are ~1000 Kb/s down and 512 Kb/s up)
- ADSL - 6100 Kb/s down and 640 Kbps up
- CABLE - varies... "Good" service is around 4000 Kbps down (Comcast, Cox) and between 384-512 Kbps up. *
- T3 - 43,000 Kbps up and down. A T3 line costs about $3000 per month.
- FTTH - My fiber connection is quoted at 30,000 Kbps up and down. I measured it today between Vancouver and San Jose. The results are below (20,514 down and 29,779 up). And, I only pay $170 a month for this!
I love bandwidth. And, the part I really love is the symmetrical bandwidth. I run several web sites, an FTP site, a mail server, and other various services that I have written. Huge upstream bandwidth is tough to get... So, I'm loving it.
*Disclaimer: some cable companies are testing very high bandwidth (50,000 Kbps down and 2,000 Kbps up) in selected markets.
London in Sixty
I'm in London on business. You are welcome to follow my photo-journey here. No real attempt at art - just a bunch of snapshots.

Crytek GmbH
Snapshot with my friends, the developers of Crysis.

Left to right: Martin Mittring (Lead Graphics Engineer), Carsten Wenzel (Senior R&D Engineer), Me, Michael Endres (Art Manager), and Chris Evans (Technical Art Lead).
SIGGRAPH 07
Keynote
Eve on the "big screen" during Glenn's great Keynote.

SIGGRAPH 07, Final Asset
San Diego
Eve and I made it to San Diego. In the final hours, we finished off her clothing and gave her an animation pose. Using my networked-camera plugin, we created camera paths in Maya - and just played them back on the 360. This output was recorded (720p) and cut into the final video. The video is one (of several) that Glenn Entis will be showing during his Keynote today at 1:30.
Brought to You by the Number 4
Server Upgrade
I upgraded (one) of my servers yesterday to the Intel quad core. The CPU combines two Conroe dual-core chips, known collectively as Clovertown (so, technically, it's a "dual-dual-core"). It's a nice compliment to my quad core G5 - which serves the streaming music, and a few other ports. Anyway, each cpu on the quad is a 2.40 GHz part, sharing 8mb of L2 (2x4MB), and a front side bus at 1066MHz. I caught day 1 of the massive price cut. It also includes a digital thermal sensor, which continuously monitors the temperature of each core - and enables the system fans to only spin as fast as needed to cool things down. (This requires variable speed fans of course). Also, my total drive space is now 3.5 terabytes. Muhahahaha
|
![]() |
Nordpol+HamburgMy first real media-job was as an offline video editor for an advertising agency (GSD&M). This was back in the glory-days of advertising and I followed the production house "Propaganda Films" like a religion. At that time, Propaganda included commercial directors: David Fincher, Michael Bay, Spike Jonze, Michel Gondry, Mark Romanek, Alex Proyas and others. Obviously, those names have moved to feature films - and Propaganda Films was gone before I was old enough to submit an application (I was 16 at the time). Nostalgia aside, I still follow the industry - the directors, the agencies, and the spots. In my searching, I found this, and would like to share it. I don't want to give anything away (revealing the title would ruin it), so this is the only introduction I'll give: On June 29th, this spot created by Nordpol+Hamburg (regarded as one of the most creative agencies worldwide) won the Golden Lion at the International Advertising Festival in Cannes. It's as beautiful as it is brilliant. Play |
Afternoon Armageddon
Rain, or An Apocalyptic Catastrophe?I caught this awesome sky last week. This combination of the sky and sun was visible for about 15 minutes, so I had time to grab my camera. Click the here for the HD version. The image looks edited, but it isn't. (Ok, I warmed up the sun color a tiny bit, fixed some lens distortion, and some sharpening - but that's it). The image is cool because it ACTUALLY LOOKED LIKE THAT. (Extra reflections killed in-camera with a circular polarizer).
The sixth angel poured his bowl on the great river Euphrates, and its water was dried up in order to prepare the way for the kings from the east. And I saw three foul spirits like frogs coming from the mouth of the dragon, from the mouth of the beast, and from the mouth of the false prophet. These are demonic spirits, performing signs, who go abroad to the kings of the whole world, to assemble them for battle on the great day of God the Almighty. And they assembled them at the place that in Hebrew is called Harmagedon.
Revelation 16:12-16
Live From Yaletown
Yes, yes... I started a live webcam. This is a live image over the harbor of False Creek. Unlike the picture above (which I took with my Canon 5D), this is a 1.3 Megapixel image - generated with a standard webcam by Creative. It updates every minute. Go have a look: Live If you would like to link directly to the page, the URL is: http://www.hejl.com/media/live
|
Who Are You?
So, I started recording traffic on this site using Google Analytics. It's a cool, free service. Anyway, here is a map of visitors over the past month (the dot size is proportional to the number of visitors). And here is a (partial) list of connecting domains. Total page views over this period was 2,958 - or about 100 per day. I recognized an interesting correlation between my distribution of visitors, and the population density over the same area. This image is a comparison between a satellite image of the US at night, and my dots. "The dots awaken a certain reverence, because though always present, they are inaccessible." |
![]() |
|---|


