I don't have any particular insights for Telus, but there is a huge thread
about bypassing Bell ONTs on DSLReports:
https://www.dslreports.com/forum/r32230041-Internet-Bypassing-the-HH3K-up-to-2-5Gbps-using-a-BCM57810S-NIC
Cheers,
Eric
On Oct 13 2020, at 9:38 pm, Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> With the growth of gigabit class single fiber GPON last mile services, I
> imagine a number of people reading the list must have subscribed to such by
> now.
>
> Something that I have observed, and shared observations with a number of
> colleagues, is that very often a person who works for ($someAS) lives in a
> location where you are effectively singlehomed to ($someotherAS). Maybe you
> bought your house before you got a job with your current employer, or maybe
> the network you work for doesn't do residential last mile service at all.
> Perhaps you work remotely for a regional sized entity that's a long distance
> away from where you live.
>
> Therefore necessitating a choice of service from whatever facilities based
> consumer-facing ISP happens to service your home.
>
> For example, in Seattle, a number of people discovered that they could keep
> the Centurylink GPON ONT, and remove the centurylink-provided router/modem
> combo device. Provided that they were able to configure their own router
> (small vyatta, pfsense box, mikrotik, whatever) to speak a certain VLAN tag
> on its WAN interface and be a normal PPPoE / DHCP client.
>
> I'm sure there are a lot of people who prefer to run their own home router
> and wifi devices, and not rely upon a ($big_residential_isp) provided
> all-in-one router/nat/wifi box with opaque configuration parameters, or no
> ability to change configuration at all.
>
> Any insights as to what the configuration of the Telus AS852 GPON network
> looks would be helpful. Or other observations in general on
> technically-oriented persons who are doing similar with other ILECs.