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#2
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In article .net,
says... The following is from the President's speech in Minneapolis on April 26, 2004. "Now, the use of broadband has tripled since 2000 from 7 million subscriber lines to 24 million. That's good. But that's way short of the goal for 2007. And so -- by the way, we rank 10th amongst the industrialized world in broadband technology and its availability. That's not good enough for America. Tenth is 10 spots too low as far as I'm concerned. (Applause.) Looks like his arithmetic is almost as good as his grammar. He wants us to be 0th? 8^) -- +----------------------------------------------+ | Bob Schreibmaier K3PH | E-mail: | | Kresgeville, PA 18333 | http://www.dxis.org | +----------------------------------------------+ |
#3
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Yes, the technical standards need to be changed to allow BPL: require
all power lines to be shielded. Alan AB2OS On 04/27/04 10:07 am KØHB put fingers to keyboard and launched the following message into cyberspace: The following is from the President's speech in Minneapolis on April 26, 2004. Note the last line of paragraph four. Particularly note the comment "(s)o technical standards need to be changed to encourage that." |
#4
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Bob Schreibmaier wrote:
availability. That's not good enough for America. Tenth is 10 spots too low as far as I'm concerned. (Applause.) Looks like his arithmetic is almost as good as his grammar. He wants us to be 0th? 8^) Well, that could just mean he's been spending his spare time learning how to programgrin... -- Doug Smith W9WI Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66 http://www.w9wi.com |
#5
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![]() "Doug Smith W9WI" wrote in message ... Bob Schreibmaier wrote: availability. That's not good enough for America. Tenth is 10 spots too low as far as I'm concerned. (Applause.) Looks like his arithmetic is almost as good as his grammar. He wants us to be 0th? 8^) Well, that could just mean he's been spending his spare time learning how to programgrin... -- A friend of mine, K0TO, said If this wasn't the same Man who declared that he was going to start a program to go to Mars, the he was going to build an anti-missile system, that he was going to..... he would be more worried. It is an election year(has been for more than 36 months) and the objective is to promise everything and anything in a way the makes some other group of people responsible for its failure, not you. [This is political party independent by the way -- all of them utilize the same methodology]. 73, de Hans, K0HB |
#6
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![]() And so here are some smart things to do: One, increase access to federal land for fiberoptic cables and transmission towers. That makes sense. As you're trying to get broadband spread throughout the company, make sure it's easy to build across federal lands. One sure way to hold things up is that the federal lands say, you can't build on us. Most fibre optic cables use railroad right of ways. The railroad already exists and has direct paths from one city or town to another, and is one entity for the firbre company to lease from. And the railroads like having the extra income. They bury the cable off to one or both sides of the tracks and railroads are used to heavy equipment work being done. Railroads need communications for their signals and keeping track of where the trains are and such anyway. So they throw in extra fibre for that when installing the other fibre. And from those towns fibre is strung along telephone poles to reach that place out in the sticks. Imagine a high speed 'net link to Ted Clampet's shack he had before he got his oil money.... "Wee Doggies, look at this porn"..... :-) So how is some guy in remote Wyoming going to get any broadband technology? Regulatory policy has got to be wise and smart as we encourage the spread of this important technology. There needs to be technical standards to make possible new broadband technologies, such as the use of high-speed communication directly over power lines. Power lines were for electricity; power lines can be used for broadband technology. So the technical standards need to be changed to encourage that. Yeah, BPL serving an entire remote town will give individual users service that will make 300 baud modems seem fast. How much stuff can you multiplex on one set of power cables feeding that town? Else you'd be talking about microwave freqs to get enough bandwidth. And we need to open up more federally controlled wireless spectrum to auction in free public use, to make wireless broadband more accessible, reliable, and affordable. Listen, one of the technologies that's coming is wireless. Then we won't need powerline *wires*..... And if you're living out in -- I should -- I was going to say Crawford, Texas, but it's not -- maybe not nearly as remote. (Laughter.) How about Terlingua, Texas? There's not a lot of wires out there. But wireless technology is going to change all that so long as government policy makes sense. And we're going to continue to support the Federal Communications Commission. Michael Powell -- Chairman Michael Powell, under his leadership, his decision to eliminate burdensome regulations on new broadband networks availability to homes. In other words, clearing out the underbrush of regulation, and we'll get the spread of broadband technology, and America will be better for it. (Applause.) " And make sure we never see another bare breast again at halftime. |
#7
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In (rec.radio.amateur.misc), Robert Casey wrote:
Most fibre optic cables use railroad right of ways. The railroad already exists and has direct paths from one city or town to another, and is one entity for the firbre company to lease from. And the railroads like having the extra income. They bury the cable off to one or both sides of the tracks and railroads are used to heavy equipment work being done. Railroads need communications for their signals and keeping track of where the trains are and such anyway. So they throw in extra fibre for that when installing the other fibre. And from those towns fibre is strung along telephone poles to reach that place out in the sticks. Imagine a high speed 'net link to Ted Clampet's shack he had before he got his oil money.... "Wee Doggies, look at this porn"..... :-) An increasing amount of fiber is being buried on (or under) highway right-of-way. I know; I work for a state department of transportation, and we worked deals to get some very nice free bandwidth out of the fibers along some Interstates. I expect we'll be able to do the same for fibers buried along federal and state highways, once the carriers recover from the dot-bomb and start building bandwidth out again. -- Mike Andrews Tired old sysadmin |
#8
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 "Mike" == Mike Andrews writes: [... Robert Casey talks about fiber and railroad right-of-ways ...] Mike An increasing amount of fiber is being buried on (or under) Mike highway right-of-way. I know; I work for a state department of Mike transportation, and we worked deals to get some very nice free Mike bandwidth out of the fibers along some Interstates. I expect Mike we'll be able to do the same for fibers buried along federal and Mike state highways, once the carriers recover from the dot-bomb and Mike start building bandwidth out again. This was done five or ten years ago in New York -- I worked at the place that managed the fiber for the state. The fiber was laid along the NYS Thruway, which passes through the nine largest cities in NY and within some short number of miles of a large percentage of the state population. Much of that fiber was dark last I heard. The idea of buried fiber along every two-lane road in the country may be a fantasy, but laying cable along every Interstate is certainly doable with the resources available. Of course, who will run this true "information superhighway" is the next debate... Mike -- Mike Andrews Tired old sysadmin Jack. - -- Jack Twilley jmt at twilley dot org http colon slash slash www dot twilley dot org slash tilde jmt slash -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (FreeBSD) iD8DBQFAjsOPGPFSfAB/ezgRAoLNAKDQ1ba8/I5uGGZCpqs0U5D2R7HKrwCeMmyq SpbRzv99q4xLcYnhNN6mF2U= =JVbz -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#9
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![]() "Jack Twilley" wrote The idea of buried fiber along every two-lane road in the country may be a fantasy, but laying cable along every Interstate is certainly doable with the resources available. Of course, who will run this true "information superhighway" is the next debate... Ten-twelve years ago I was up in northern Minnesota deer hunting. Got up to my stand way back down a township road, 5 miles from the nearest dwelling, at zero-dark-thirty and waited for Bambi's dad to show up with the sunrise. Just in time for morning colors (0800) I start hearing this awful racket off in the distance, like a farmer might be buring drainage tiles or something, except this part of Minnesota hasn't seen an agricultural plow since the depression. Finally got curious (and cold) enough to go investigate. Here, out in the middle of absolute nowhere, is a contract crew burying a 144-fiber cable big as your wrist, and another spare alonside of it. Every half-mile they put in an above-ground service loop, and the next day another crew came behind and plonked down a splice-and-access pedestal at each loop waiting for the subscribers to show up. The pedestals are still there, some kinda shot up, but no customers on the horizon. I bet the local Podunk Power Cooperative is getting ready to roll out BPL in the same manner! 73, de Hans, K0HB |
#10
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![]() "KØHB" wrote in message link.net... "Jack Twilley" wrote The idea of buried fiber along every two-lane road in the country may be a fantasy, but laying cable along every Interstate is certainly doable with the resources available. Of course, who will run this true "information superhighway" is the next debate... Ten-twelve years ago I was up in northern Minnesota deer hunting. Got up to my stand way back down a township road, 5 miles from the nearest dwelling, at zero-dark-thirty and waited for Bambi's dad to show up with the sunrise. Just in time for morning colors (0800) I start hearing this awful racket off in the distance, like a farmer might be buring drainage tiles or something, except this part of Minnesota hasn't seen an agricultural plow since the depression. Finally got curious (and cold) enough to go investigate. Here, out in the middle of absolute nowhere, is a contract crew burying a 144-fiber cable big as your wrist, and another spare alonside of it. Every half-mile they put in an above-ground service loop, and the next day another crew came behind and plonked down a splice-and-access pedestal at each loop waiting for the subscribers to show up. The pedestals are still there, some kinda shot up, but no customers on the horizon. I bet the local Podunk Power Cooperative is getting ready to roll out BPL in the same manner! 73, de Hans, K0HB Hello, Hans My gut feeling is that if someone is out in the boonies and they *really* want high speed internet, they could go for satellite and have a decent system. Yes, $50.00 per month is not as cheap as you can get cable or DSL (at least in some areas), but it is doable and I doubt too many ISPs are going to try high speed service where, even if they could subscribe everyone, the average population density is 10 per square mile or less ![]() I suspect that BPL will go the same route; they'll try, perhaps, but it will be in the cities and suburbs where they can make money (and they will have competition *and* cause a lot of qrm). The low population density areas will *still* not be served (except by satellite or, perhaps, dial-up). As for president, I *still* like Ike!!! 73 from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.669 / Virus Database: 431 - Release Date: 4/26/04 |
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