I had to fight 'em a little, but I got my place cabled. 12 Drops (including kitchen, balcony, garage, bathrooms & -some- closets), two UTP ("level 7" - Cat 6 wasn't ratified), 2 RG6 Quad shield Coax, and four strands of 62.5/126 MM fiber (most places) + two runs of each to the attic, and two runs of each to the outside (the NID and cable junction).
It all comes back to my utility room, where I also had a dedicated dual 20 amp double-duplex power plate installed (two 20 A circuits to two double outlets). SInce I had it laying around, I also had some 6ga copper run to the service panel for an EIA/TIA 568a spec grounding system (a big ol' copper plate with lots of tapped holes for a good single point ground). I also made sure there was an air conditioning vent in the utility space.
When it was all done, I had enough to fill two 24 port copper panels (one for UTP, one for coax), and two 24 port fiber WICs/panels. I use the Leviton phone bridge to break out the two phone pair, provide an RJ31x jack for the alarm, and the previous and possible future ISDN and/or DSL lines.
I got all the copper for free (Lucent Gigaspeed from the Cabling Lab) I think I paid ~500.00 for the 1000 ft spool of fiber. The info outlets and inserts were given to me by the Ortronics Rep for helping them out on a project. The fiber trays were removed from our old Lab when we moved to a new building (they were dumpster-bound). I have my own fiber termination kit and 'scope, but I had to buy the connectors.
I almost put in a hybrid fiber: MM and single mode ... just to be "future proof"....but I dislike doing single mode termination more than I dislike doing stranded UTP termination (I'd eat a pound of liver first....ugh).
I use the system to move s-video and composite (both with audio)around the house; I used to use it for serial connection, and of course....data (10/100 and GigE).
I had to let "Ted the Wire guy" (the Builder's Vice President's Husband) do the pulling, but I spot checked him, and did a cert scan (to Cat5e) on the system before the drywall went up. The only thing he messed up was that the cables exit from the wall, not the ceiling ... so instead of a nice loom coming down the wall, it all exits from a duplex mud ring and loops back to the panels. He blames the drywallers (but he's the one that put in the mud ring after I left).
Structured Cabling is a Good Thing.
FWIW
Scott