While light travels pretty far; it doesn't travel perfectly inside the fiber. So over time you lose all the light.
This can be trivially prevented by have amplifiers (analog) along the long cable so that you boost the signal's light level. However now we introduce another problem where the our nice on-off-on square wave starts to look like a gaussian distribution and as it continues to degrade it becomes hard to determine a 0 from a 1 (or say 00 from 01). So instead of amplifying you have a repeater (digital) that re-transmits the original signal (assuming it can read it correctly).
Why not just plug the amplifiers and repeaters into the grid? They probably do; it's just there isn't a grid underwater.
This can be trivially prevented by have amplifiers (analog) along the long cable so that you boost the signal's light level. However now we introduce another problem where the our nice on-off-on square wave starts to look like a gaussian distribution and as it continues to degrade it becomes hard to determine a 0 from a 1 (or say 00 from 01). So instead of amplifying you have a repeater (digital) that re-transmits the original signal (assuming it can read it correctly).
Why not just plug the amplifiers and repeaters into the grid? They probably do; it's just there isn't a grid underwater.
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