Tag Archives: cable

The Limits of SpongeBob SquarePants

One Canadian’s Wireless Neighborhood Network Could Someday Serve Us All

By Robert X. Cringely

Like many of us, Andrew Greig put a WiFi access point in his house so he could share his broadband Internet connection. But like hardly any of us, Andrew uses his WiFi network for Internet, television, and telephone. He cancelled his telephone line and cable TV service. Then his neighbors dropped-by, saw what Andrew had done, and they cancelled their telephone and cable TV services, too, many of them without having a wired broadband connection of their own. They get their service from Andrew, who added an inline amplifier and put a better antenna in his attic. Now most of Andrew’s neighborhood is watching digital TV with full PVR capability, making unmetered VoIP telephone calls, and downloading data at prodigious rates thanks to shared bandwidth. Is this the future of home communications and entertainment? It could be, five years from now, if Andrew Greig has anything to say about it.

http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20040930.html

FIBER! Fiber to the Home comming to Huntington Beach!

Wow I wish I still lived in HB.
__________________________

Verizon Communications has stepped up its battle against cable operators with plans to debut a broadband-over-fiber service later this summer.

The service, called Fios, will be launched in Keller, Texas, and later parts of southern California and Florida, the company said Monday. At up to 30mbps (megabits per second), Fios is a quantum leap compared with Verizon’s DSL (digital subscriber line) service, which runs at a maximum of 1.5mbps.

Fios can reach these speeds because it’s based on fiber-optic lines that serve Internet access at a much higher clip than the traditional copper wires that support DSL.

Verizon also unveiled plans to sell cable television over the speedy Fios connection in 2005, boosting its strategy of offering customers a triple pack of services–voice calls, video and broadband–sold at discounted prices if purchased in a bundle. Cable operators have been using their own “triple play” strategy for several years to woo customers away from Verizon and the three other regional Bell operating companies

The launch of Fios opens a new front in a war between the Bells and the cable industry. Both sides are trying to lure the millions of Americans who are upgrading from slow dial-up services to speedier broadband connections. Cable leads in overall broadband market share, but the Bells have kept pace largely through aggressive DSL discounts and promotions.

Some of the Bells, such as Verizon and SBC Communications, see fiber as an answer to their problems. The Federal Communications Commission plans to allow the Bells to invest in fiber without requiring them to share their infrastructure with third parties, as is the case with copper wire networks. For many years, the Bells have protested that the line-sharing rules on copper wire networks are unfair, because cable companies are not required to share their lines.

Of the four Bells, Verizon is considered the furthest along with its fiber plans. It reiterated on Monday its goal of reaching 1 million homes and offices by the end of the year, with a third coming from expansion in Huntington Beach, Calif.; Tampa, Fla., and the Dallas-Fort Worth areas.

“Fiber from Verizon is coming down their streets and heading straight for their doors, and the excitement in these communities is building,” Paul Lacouture, president of Verizon’s network services group, said in a statement.

Fios will be only slightly more expensive than Verizon’s DSL plans, even though it will be much faster, and Verizon will supply the modems needed to make the switch to fiber, a company representative said.

A 2mbps to 5mbps Fios connection will cost $35 a month if purchased along with Verizon’s local and long-distance telephone service. The service will cost $40 if purchased alone. A connection of up to 15mbps is available for $45 a month if purchased as part of the same telephone service bundle, or $50 alone. The company did not reveal pricing for the 30mbps plans.

http://news.com.com/Verizon%27s+fiber+race+is+on/2100-1034-5275171.html?part=dht&tag=ntop

Oi, Moving

Wow, moving has been quite the experience, I am very tired, and still not quite all unpacked.
But its starting to feel like home again. ;p
I bought a new matching bathroom mat, toilet mat, towels. :)
Hopefuly this week, once i get my check from the sale, I’ll remember to go get some more stuff for the house, some plants, and other stuff hopefully.

Cox is a bunch of bastards too, they fucked up my order for phone/digi cable/cable modem
I called a week before I moved in, they didn’t get my phone in right on thursday, they had to send someone out on Friday. the person on Friday who was supposed to setup my cable modem, setup the digital cable, and didn’t setup my back bedroom, so today I called and bitched to the same service rep guy, and I was final so pissed with him, and spoke with his manager, and got my shit taken care of and a tech was out in an hour. :)

I managed to sell my washer/dryer and old fridge, and futon today too from the free add i put in the penny saver online. it was interesting the guy i sold it too, is going to college, and his name is Bones and he is originally from Nigeria, and he used to work for flashnet, in Texas. he’s got dreads too. seems pretty cool. after he said he worked at flashnet, i said I used to work for Flashcom before it went BK, which is just kinda odd I think. Ohwell the internet and its intricate ways. hehe

oh well more later tomorrow if im not too tired.
g’ntie

Bad Behavior has blocked 1371 access attempts in the last 7 days.

>>>>>>> .r246