I know this is the case for video service drops, I.e coax, but is it also the 
case for cat5 or fiber drops?



> On Dec 16, 2015, at 8:12 PM, George Skorup <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Yes, most of the time it is in use. Let me rephrase drop ownership. Even if 
> we (or anyone else for that matter) put in new drops, the building owns it. 
> Period. That's the law.
> 
> You can put diplexers on the drops to isolate services. This usually ends up 
> in a fight with the cable company. And they lose, every time. I have many 
> stories, but I'm not going to talk about that on a public list.
> 
>> On 12/16/2015 5:18 PM, Jay Weekley wrote:
>> Was the existing coax not in use at the time?
>> 
>> George Skorup wrote:
>>> We have done a bunch using the existing coax in the building. Usually the 
>>> property owns the drops to the units. It's nice when all of the customers 
>>> are in one place. :) I will say this though, stay away from low income 
>>> housing. Leave those for the telco and cable.
>>> 
>>> You will be disappointed trying wireless in a brick building.
>>> 
>>>> On 12/16/2015 2:20 PM, Jay Weekley wrote:
>>>> MDUs are an example of how not to make money?
>>>> 
>>>> Gino Villarini wrote:
>>>>> how not to make money?
>>>>> 
>>>>> On Wed, Dec 16, 2015 at 3:24 PM, Jay Weekley <[email protected] 
>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>>    Is there really any money in MDU deployments?   If so, are you
>>>>>    doing WiFi or wired to the end user?
> 

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