we all need more fiber

Specifically, fiber optic cable.

Fiber optic cable is no newcomer to Venice — we’ve had it at home for years now.  But clearly our neighborhood is on track for extreme upgrading to intergalactic ultra-fast ultra-wide broadband.  Venice might give the impression (briefly, from afar, with your eyes half-closed) of a city left adrift in the backwash of the Renaissance.  Yet men have been hard at work these past few days making Venice ever more modern.  And I say thanks, but Venice has always been modern.

Behold the mighty Root Cable 185 from Tratos.  The company’s website says that it has been “specifically designed for network and telecommunications uses, and is characterized by a high transmission velocity and low attenuation, making it ideal for long-distance connections and broadband applications.”  Impressive, but simpler things also impress me, such as the chance (I missed) to watch the procedure of hoisting this monster onto the fondamenta. It does inspire new admiration for the skill and effort that numberless men dedicated to creating Venice (looking at you, Doge’s Palace, belltower of San Marco, etc.).  No motors, hydraulic power, and so on.  Of course, the ancient Egyptians and Greeks and Romans didn’t have them either, and they also managed to build phenomenal things, so let’s get over ourselves.
All this work to install the means by which we can send our million daily messages and memes and photos to everybody we know.  But what I really like right here is how much red is going on.
There’s a lot happening under all that stone.  At this stage it looks like they’re operating on the city’s deviated septum.
Bridges don’t just carry you, they carry cables and wires and ducts.  Keep an eye on that loose slab of stone.
This is a master-class in bridge-building and -repairing in Venice.
Back to the bridge of Sant’Anna.  Those four open canal-side windows belong to a charming little apartment for tourists.  I’m just wondering if the visitors talked about anything else than how their romantic Venetian vacation turned out.  The jackhammers really went at it.
The romantic-apartment front door is on the right, just before the pile of mud.  I mean the bridge.

Today progress in Venice takes so many forms, though by now they’re not what you might call surprising or original.  But over the centuries Venice became rich and powerful in large part because it was alert to innovation of many different sorts.

On the social side, the Venetian government passed a law in 1258 requiring doctors, even the most illustrious, to treat poor patients for free.  Shocking then, perhaps still somewhat startling.  In 1443 the government guaranteed the services of a lawyer to poor defendants at no charge; the lawyer would be chosen by a judge from among the best lawyers in Venice (no fobbing the case off on your newest recruit) and was required to follow the case with maximum care or risk a large fine.  That’s become normal, I think, in concept if not in practice.  I don’t know about fines today, though.

On the commercial side, the Venetians established the Patent Statute on March 19, 1474, now considered the earliest codified patent system in the world.  These patents were granted for “any new and ingenious device, not previously made,” provided it was useful.

However “useful” may have been defined, suddenly useful was everywhere: Between 1500 and 1600 Venice granted 593 patents.  (In the same period the Kingdom of France granted 100.)  By 1788, Venice had certified 1896 patents.

Speaking of useful, pharmacists were forbidden to sell their medicines without a doctor’s prescription.  If this is normal now, credit goes to the old Venetians to whom quality control was an obsession.  Maybe they loved quality for itself, but control ensured that their myriad products were not only good, but reliable, hence valuable.  It was always all about money.

A zecchino minted between 1779 – 1789 for Paolo Renier, the next to last doge of Venice.  (photo seen on eBay, coin for sale by Giamer Antiques and Collectibles)

No, they didn’t invent money.  But the Venetian gold ducat, later called the zecchino, became arguably the closest thing to what you might call a monetary “gold standard” for 500 years.  The coin maintained a consistent weight (approximately 24 carats) and high gold purity (99.7 percent) from 1284 to 1797.  Venice’s strong trading network ensured the zecchino’s circulation throughout the Mediterranean and beyond, from the Netherlands to India.  It is the only coin in the world that retained, for the over five centuries of its uninterrupted existence, the same images, the same epigraphs, the same weight and the same purity of the metal.  I sometimes complain that in Venice money is king, but that’s freaking impressive.

Back to fiber optic cables.  Ninety percent of Venice and its satellite towns and hamlets are served by FTTC connections, while 79 percent has FTTH and the by-now quaint but still serviceable ADSL covers 99 percent.  If you’d like to know more, here’s Open Fiber.

So progress jackhammers on.  The bridge has been left with scars from the intervention, because there are rectangles of cement where stone used to be and I cannot understand it.  We have ultra-fast broadband, but we also still have people who just carry things off, things that aren’t even theirs.  Doesn’t feel like progress to me.

Remember that stone slab that was moved aside to allow access to the innards of the bridge? It, and its companions, are obviously gone.  I have no idea where, or for what reason.  There was stone, now there is only cement.  You might suppose that the supervisors decided it was prudent to make future access simpler/cheaper/faster/easier by not bothering with that pesky stone anymore.  And yet….
And yet, the stones at the summit of the bridge were put back where they belonged.  But the others?
The same fate befell the stones on the Sant’Anna side of the bridge. True, the steps are still uniformly grayish, so it’s not that they draw undue attention to themselves, and yes, the cement on these steps is smoother and looks less homemade than on the other side.  That’s not the point, of course.

I started this post with glowing eyes looking toward the future, and I indulged myself by recalling a smattering of examples of Venetian greatness.  But here we are today.  You’ve got your interstellar communications cables, and you’ve got steps now made of concrete where a week ago there was stone.

It’s easy to see the seam between stone and concrete. Happily for everyone, you can also see that dogs don’t care.  Or was that a lynx?

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7 Comments

  1. Must be the year if the bridges: Murano, Venezia by the Ospedale Civile….and re: ‘lifting’ the stones, on my very first visit here in the early 90´s we stayed in a little hotel near S. Pantalon. The nearby bridge was being worked on and the hotel owner was asking the same question : if these stones have been good for centuries why are they disappearing and being replaced with cement? His theory was that they fetched a good price on the black market.

  2. Always have a look to see if you have put up some news from Venice! I suspect everywhere is suffering from road/pavement/other surfaces being regularly taken up for cables at present! My OH commented “Why don’t they just fit zips?” – so many times the same bit seems to be dug up”
    I suppose it’d not enhance a holiday let in Venice to have destruction/construction noise on your doorstep and in your ears all the day.
    We suffer from old solid pathway paving stones being levered up and stolen at night from church pathways, especially, and also entire drystone walls have been “removed” and stolen. What a world!
    Ella B

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