Telephone networks were the first major users of fiber optics. Fiber optic links were used to replace copper or digital radio links between telephone switches, beginning with long distance links, called long lines, where fiber's distance and bandwidth capabilities made fiber significantly more cost effective. Telcos use fiber to connect all their central offices and long distance switches because it has thousands of times the bandwidth of copper wire and can carry signals hundreds of times further before needing a repeater - making the cost of a phone connection over fiber only a few percent of the cost of the same connection on copper. They even use fiber to connect cell phone towers to save limited radio spectrum.
After long distance links were converted to fiber, telcos began replacing shorter links between switches with fiber, for example between switches in the same metropolitan area. Today, practically all the telephone networks have been converted to fiber. Telcos and other groups are now running fiber right to the home, (FTTH) using low cost passive optical network (PON) systems that use splitters to share the cost of some fiber optic components among as many as 32 subscribers. More on FTTH, FTTH PON types and FTTH network architecture.
Even cell phone networks have fiber backbones. It's more efficient and less expensive than using precious wireless bandwidth for backbone connections. Cell phone towers with many antennas will have large cable trays or pedestals where fiber cables connect to the antenna electronics.
December 3, 2011