Sterling, I would not class you as a wanna be Google, I would classify you as a 
better than Google FTTH.  

But are you giving up on FTTH in favor of 5G builds?  

Didn’t think so, me neither....

From: Mark Radabaugh 
Sent: Wednesday, February 01, 2017 1:31 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] CenturyLink installing these

Adam,


So 2 questions for you (or anyone)…

Do you think the government should fund private companies to build fiber 
everywhere because 10Mb won’t be sufficient for the “need”, not the “want”.   
Do we as a country spend a lot of public money to effectively create a monopoly 
fiber carrier in every region?   Or is it better to make sure everyone has 
access to 10Mb and allow the free market to compete for the “want”?   To me the 
former creates a monopoly with government money with all of it’s inefficiencies 
 and long term harm to the consumer.    The latter takes longer but has a 
better chance of staying competitive.

The ‘monopoly last mile provider’ model is probably not going to happen in the 
US.  While it could I don’t see any current political chance of that happening.

Given the major providers as well as the wanna-be’s like Google are giving up 
on FTTH builds in favor of fiber -> 5G builds now, why should the FCC still be 
pushing the FTTX only model?    

Given 5G is little more than hype at this point I have my doubts that the model 
will actually work, but that’s another story.

I’m asking these questions in the WISPA FCC chair capacity because I want to 
understand what our policy should be, keeping in mind that government funding 
schemes are rarely friendly to small companies and often result in significant 
harm.

As Amplex - I’m building fiber to towers, FTTH on the routes to the towers and 
in wooded areas I can’t otherwise serve, and creating micro pops along the way 
on the fiber routes.   Personally I think that is the winning answer for the 
future - but that’s just me.

Mark


  On Feb 1, 2017, at 2:55 PM, Adam Moffett <[email protected]> wrote:

  I agree with you on the need.  In my mind, nobody "needs" more than 1meg.  
10meg generally makes them happy and not have too fuss about how they're using 
it (for now).  They "want" 25-100 meg for all their entertainment.

  Put another way:  I might only "need" 10 amps of electrical capacity as long 
as I'm careful about how I'm using it, but my 200 amp service makes me a happy 
and contented consumer for the foreseeable future.

  Regardless of what anyone "needs", fiber is going to end up the standard 
delivery mechanism for data because it will meet the need of today and the need 
of next year and the next 50 years.  If you build anything else, then in the 
long run you'll have people still clamoring for improvement and it will end up 
being replaced.  

  There's nothing wrong with meeting the immediate need with wireless, and you 
can absolutely make money doing it, but the long term and permanent answer is 
going to be fiber.  So if you want to stay relevant in the future you'll be 
looking at how to get into that game whether it's with private funding or 
government subsidy.

  This is a WISP, we're a WISPA member, and I want WISP's to succeed.....but 
facts is facts.

  -Adam



  ------ Original Message ------
  From: "Mark Radabaugh" <[email protected]>
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: 2/1/2017 2:11:22 PM
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] CenturyLink installing these

    Chuck,

    Explain why we would have to bury fiber for that customer when the current 
standard for ‘served’ for Internet is 10Mbps which is easily done with 
wireless, and “Advanced Broadband” is 25/3Mb.    I still think there is a very 
valid argument that 10Mbps is more than sufficient for the services that the 
government should be guaranteeing (phone, telemedicine, education).  25/3 is 
more about entertainment than anything else and I don’t see where this is a 
taxpayer obligation.   I want Broadway shows in my little town too - but I 
don’t expect the government to fund them.

    The major carriers are moving away from landlines as fast as they can and 
are really looking to replace all last mile with wireless if they can make it 
work (and they think they can).  I don’t think it will be long until getting 
traditional landline service in the city is no longer an option - why would we 
still be forcing this in rural areas?

    The other issue is the cash cow that funded USF for years (intrastate phone 
revenue) is rapidly diminishing and will finish it's spiral of death soon 
unless the contribution base is expanded to broadband.  

    Mark

    Mark Radabaugh
    WISPA FCC Committee Chair
    [email protected]
    419-261-5996

      On Feb 1, 2017, at 12:38 PM, Chuck McCown <[email protected]> wrote:

      Depends on what you call rural.  I have served areas with perhaps 1 house 
every 5 miles.  You are not going to find a wisp willing to build out in areas 
like that.  I plowed 20 miles of fiber for one single house.  

      From: That One Guy /sarcasm
      Sent: Wednesday, February 01, 2017 10:34 AM
      To: [email protected]
      Subject: Re: [AFMUG] CenturyLink installing these

      If WISPA does their job well, small business can more effectively service 
the rural markets than the telcos, for alot less money

      On Wed, Feb 1, 2017 at 11:33 AM, Jason McKemie 
<[email protected]> wrote:

        You think? It seems like the Republicans are in the pocket of big 
telco, so I wouldn't hold my breath.

        On Wednesday, February 1, 2017, That One Guy /sarcasm 
<[email protected]> wrote:

          i think that bank account may be closed very soon

          On Wed, Feb 1, 2017 at 8:18 AM, Mark Radabaugh <[email protected]> 
wrote:

            Lipstick on a pig.   The copper in still rotting in the ground and 
the only approved Centurylink fix appears to be the upgrade from black to 
orange trash bags.   Except when those are out of stock.  

            Centurylink will be back to the FCC shortly crying about how the 
need more support money to fix the plant.  The only question is if they do it 
this year or next.

            Mark Radabaugh
            WISPA FCC Committee Chair
            [email protected]
            419-261-5996

              On Feb 1, 2017, at 8:15 AM, Mike Hammett <[email protected]> wrote:

              They couldn't before either, but they didn't give a shit.




              -----
              Mike Hammett
              Intelligent Computing Solutions

              Midwest Internet Exchange

              The Brothers WISP






------------------------------------------------------------------

              From: "Darin Steffl" <[email protected]>
              To: [email protected]
              Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2017 11:49:50 PM
              Subject: Re: [AFMUG] CenturyLink installing these


              These should all be fiber fed. Any new DSLAM's with CAF funding 
are very likely fiber fed. They just can't support the bandwidth requirements 
with only bonded T1's anymore. 

              On Tue, Jan 31, 2017 at 11:34 PM, Josh Reynolds 
<[email protected]> wrote:

                One would suspect a calix e7-2 or e7-20 (2Tbps backplane, 
100Gbps link to each line card). I don't think you can even feed those by 
anything short of at least a gig ethernet circuit. I never really tried on any 
of the E7-2s I've used in the past though :)

                On Jan 31, 2017 11:29 PM, "Forrest Christian (List Account)" 
<[email protected]> wrote:

                  Out of curiosity, do  you know how are they feeding these 
shelves?   


                  I know that in at least one case a couple of years ago, Qwest 
was feeding an entire neighborhood on I think 4 T1's.   


                  On Tue, Jan 31, 2017 at 5:06 PM, Darin Steffl 
<[email protected]> wrote:

                    Exactly. Calix VDSL2 Remote DSLAM. These are the result of 
CAF funding from Govt. to provide minimum 10/1 Mbps speeds to the census blocks 
they took funding for.  

                    If Centurylink had crappy or no DSL in these areas before, 
expect them to be able to offer somewhat functional to excellent DSL speeds to 
customers in range of these remote DSLAMs. For really close customers, they may 
see up to 40/1 Mbps speeds.

                    On Tue, Jan 31, 2017 at 3:54 PM, Carl Peterson 
<[email protected]>wrote:

                      As someone already said, its clearly and E3.  
https://www.calix.com/systems/e-series/e3-e5-dsl.html

                      On Tue, Jan 31, 2017 at 4:18 PM, George Skorup 
<[email protected]>wrote:

                        Regen would be my guess.

                        On 1/31/2017 2:45 PM, Tim Reichhart wrote:

                          it got fiber ran into it for remote dslam to provide 
customers vdsl2 along that route.

                          Tim

                          -----Original Message-----

                            From: "Carl Peterson" <[email protected]>
                            To: [email protected]
                            Date: 01/31/17 03:28 PM
                            Subject: Re: [AFMUG] CenturyLink installing these

                            Calix.  I'd guess G.Fast

                            Sent from my iPhone


                              On Jan 31, 2017, at 3:07 PM, Josh Corson 
<[email protected]> wrote:


                              Does anyone know what these are? They are popping 
up on fairly rural
                              areas of our coverage areas and on the state 
highways.

                              Thanks

                              <mime-attachment.txt>
                              <image1.JPG>









                      -- 

                      Carl Peterson

                      PORT NETWORKS
                      401 E Pratt St, Ste 2553
                      Baltimore, MD 21202
                      (410) 637-3707 




                    -- 

                    Darin Steffl  
                    Minnesota WiFi
                    www.mnwifi.com
                    507-634-WiFi
                     Like us on Facebook



                  -- 

                        Forrest Christian CEO, PacketFlux Technologies, Inc.

                        Tel: 406-449-3345 | Address: 3577 Countryside Road, 
Helena, MT 59602
                        [email protected] | http://www.packetflux.com

                           







              -- 

              Darin Steffl  
              Minnesota WiFi
              www.mnwifi.com
              507-634-WiFi
               Like us on Facebook






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