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#21
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Dave Butler wrote:
NorthNet http://www.ntd.net/internet.htm claims to offer DSL. In nearly all of the U.S., the internet providers are running on lines that they've taken over from the local Bell company. The lines are still provisioned by the local baby Bell. If the local Bell says that they can't give you DSL at your location, nobody else can either. That doesn't stop the internet service companies from claiming they can. I think the baby Bell in that area is Ameritec? Here, Earthlink was claiming that they could provide me DSL for two years before my line could actually support it. Verizon had to condition the line for DSL before anyone could provide service on it. In order to handle DSL, the service address must be pretty close to the central office (IIRC, 5,000'). The entire cable must also be free of load coils. Most ISPs simply check the distance but have no way of knowing if coils are on the cable. George Patterson There's plenty of room for all of God's creatures. Right next to the mashed potatoes. |
#22
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I don't promise what I am not absolutely SURE of delivering, but it is these
little amenities that a friendly person on the EAA Board of Directors might be able to bring to pass. Just a thought, mindya. Jim |
#23
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("RST Engineering" wrote)
I don't promise what I am not absolutely SURE of delivering, but it is these little amenities that a friendly person on the EAA Board of Directors might be able to bring to pass. A broadband in every po(r)t? Montblack |
#24
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On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 21:39:57 GMT, George Patterson
wrote: Dave Butler wrote: NorthNet http://www.ntd.net/internet.htm claims to offer DSL. In nearly all of the U.S., the internet providers are running on lines that they've taken over from the local Bell company. The lines are still provisioned by the local baby Bell. If the local Bell says that they can't give you DSL at your location, nobody else can either. That doesn't stop the internet service companies from claiming they can. I think the baby Bell in that area is Ameritec? Here, Earthlink was claiming that they could provide me DSL for two years before my line could actually support it. Verizon had to condition the line for DSL before anyone could provide service on it. In order to handle DSL, the service address must be pretty close to the central office (IIRC, 5,000'). The entire cable must also be free of load coils. Most ISPs simply check the distance but have no way of knowing if coils are on the cable. thread drift warning (you have been warned) Contacted the local telco (brand V) several years ago concerning my new residential service. It was a line running in a ditch for about 3/8 of a mile from the neighbor's junction box and literally duct-taped to the poles to cross the road to my house. Got passed around for awhile, and ended up with the engineer responsible for jobs in my area. My primary concern was garbage coming in from the street goofing up my brand new wired network in the house (half telco/half LAN). Had no idea if it would be an issue-that's why I was asking. He assured me that the job would be completed by the end of the week (it was) and asked me if I had ever considered DSL. Told him all the contacts with the "sales team" told me that it was not available in my area. He mashed a couple buttons on his keyboard, came up with my location, and asked me how far away I was from the "box". Turns out I was 8,200' of wire away. He did a "line test", and put me in contact with a person within the company (not related to the sales team) that had me hooked up within 2 weeks. The company has since made a nationally advertised plan available in my area. I knew it was going to be a PITA, but I switched to save $25 a month. Took about three days on the phone to convince them that I had existing fixed IP DSL and get signed up for an annual contract. Took another week on the phone to get the info I needed to get hooked up/swapped over to the telco ISP. Initially, my existing service was cut off, and I was told again that DSL wasn't available in my area, and that I never should have been offered/sold service. Long story short, have talked to other locals (a lot closer than my 8200') who were sold "self-install" kits and contracts from the sales team and found out from the same engineer that their lines were not suitable/compatible. Cable is not a available option for me, but if the cable companies offer any customer service at all, it's no surprise that they are kicking the phone company's collective asses. TC |
#25
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George Patterson wrote:
In order to handle DSL, the service address must be pretty close to the central office (IIRC, 5,000'). The entire cable must also be free of load coils. Most ISPs simply check the distance but have no way of knowing if coils are on the cable. My ISDN line (128k) back in the mid 90's was over 40 miles long. My DSL line(s) today are under 18,000 foot. Even with 3 DSLs and a cablemodem connection, I'm still saving money over what I used to pay... |
#26
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As long as someone wants to line Poberesny's pocket, he can come to
AirVenture. Doesn't matter if he's selling WiFi or pussy. On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 09:34:10 -0400, Dave Butler wrote: On a related note: there was a thread here earlier about wireless access at Oshkosh. IIRC the sad conclusion was that there was no access very nearby. I wonder whether anyone has contacted EAA and requested that they get on the stick and provide WiFi on the North 40. Is there any chance EAA would do something like that? Any idea how to approach EAA or whom to contact about it? How about some entrepreneur/vendor/display booth setting up an access point on the grounds, either for a fee or as a public service for the advertising value? Dave |
#27
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I'll vote for the misguided Jim Weir. Hey, if can't make California
governor, then EAA director is just as good. I know he'll be just as aggravated serving either one. On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 16:05:23 -0700, "RST Engineering" wrote: I don't promise what I am not absolutely SURE of delivering, but it is these little amenities that a friendly person on the EAA Board of Directors might be able to bring to pass. Just a thought, mindya. Jim |
#28
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Yes...
Free, for last 3 years... (CYFC) Covers the"Public area" of the terminal, but "leaks" substantially into other areas... Intended for business travellers... About 30% of our city (Fredericton, NB, Canada) is covered with free (Really!) wi-Fi.....installed by the city & partners..... And the footprint is growing rapidly, - 40% this year... The city is ringed with "dark fiber" , so now it is easy... Dave On Tue, 26 Apr 2005 20:40:13 GMT, john smith wrote: I just added a wireless networking card to my laptop. I am now spoiled! The airport I fly out of (KOSU/Don Scott Field, Columbus OH) provides free wireless internet access in the terminal and restaurant. It is nice to relax and eat breakfast, pull up all the pertinent weather, discuss it with the the other pilots before getting in the airplane and committing aviation. I have been searching several websites for listing of other GA airports that offer this service, but find mostly aircarrier sources. How about your airport? What kind of range have you seen? Can you get it in your hangar? Maybe we can even get AOPA to include this as a resource in future Airport Directories. |
#29
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#30
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"Dave Butler" wrote in message
news:1114630866.771623@sj-nntpcache-3... Juan Jimenez wrote: The fastest connection you can get at AirVenture, because of its distance from the nearest facility, appears to be ISDN. I'm not sure there's no DSL, you could be right. DSL advertisers are notorious liars. Also, there's satellite. If the bandwidth can't support the demand, the number could be restricted to some arbitrary number of simultaneous users, first-come first-served. Better than nothing. If you think about it, the area where the show takes place is well separated from the rest of civilization. For DSL to work you have to be a certain distance from the closest telco facility, due to limitations of POTS wire. There's no DSL, that I know of, or anything faster. ANN sets up WiFi but encrypted for use by the staff and stringers. It would be ridiculously easy to slow down an ISDN to a crawl if it was opened up. ISDN is not a practical solution. In order to handle the traffic for so many people at the show EAA would probably have to temporarily setup multiple T-1's, and that costs a lot of money for just one week of the show... I'd be willing to pay for access if there were an on-field provider. I suspect I'm not alone. There is. If you can use a cellphone, you can probably use one of their PCMCIA access cards and hook up that way. If you can rent cellphones, why not the cards? There's a business opportunity for ya. Pitch it to EAA. ![]() Juan |
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