Is it a phased array antenna inside?
Betting it is.
Beam forming/phased array stuff from military radars (example, the
Ku/Ka-band aircraft mounted VSAT terminals made by an Israeli
company whose name I can't recall right now).
Plus a lot of
Product request: Please make something as beefy as the $195 Transtector
surge suppressor with a metal enclosure that is like a king size version
of the GIGESS-HV...
On 1/30/15 5:16 PM, Traci wrote:
"Some will say?"
Tell that to all of the highly successful ISPs (most of whom are
not stereotypical WISPs, but are 95% fiber and 5% microwave) using
60 GHz for 500 to 700 meter distances, places where it could cost
$130,000 for a fiber build.
Stranded cable just doesn't punch down
on standard 110-type "teeth" at all, it'll always be bad results.
Eric Kuhnke
e...@kuhnke-international.com
Sierra Leone (Africell): +232-88-284222
Sierra Leone (Airtel) +232-79-107461
Ghana (MTN): +233-5478-81863
Iridi
mic check, ping, SYN
-Eric
Incorrect, an RB2011LS-IN CPU can
generate about 600 Mbps of packets when doing a direct
RB2011-to-RB2011 speed test via singlemode fiber jumper.
On 2/14/15 1:12 PM, John Woodfield wrote:
The 2011's CPU will max out at
that speed.
Do it like a topo elevation map...� Radiomobile with elevation
coloring set to "relative" (not linear) does things nicely with
yellow shading to orange and then red, with mountaintops going
beyond red into white.
On 3/5/15 2:54 PM, Chuck McCown wrote:
If I sign up to work for a .IL company do we get a monthly allowance
for falafel and hummous?
On 2/27/15 9:19 PM, Patrick Leary wrote:
Servant-hearted, ambitious, smart, knowledge engineer
with excellent RF skills, but also LINUX. Must be willing to
nd treated with respect, and where family
ALWAYS comes first, you could do much worse.
On Feb 27, 2015 3:32 PM,
"Eric Kuhnke" e...@kuhnke-international.com
wrote:
wrote:
Care to layer in any more stereotypes?
On Feb 27, 2015 4:09 PM, "Eric Kuhnke"
e...@kuhnke-international.com
wrote:
Tacos with hummous
and matzo balls in them.
are
below. This will be the first time I'm including my full email sig in
a post to afmug in the last few months. There's two different phones on
both of the local GSM carriers. It costs about 35-40 cents a minute to
call here.
--
Eric Kuhnke
e...@kuhnke-international.com
Sierra Leone (Africell
then, I retract my last comment. Apparently you
do actually respect other cultures. My sincere apologies.
On Feb 27, 2015 4:16 PM, "Eric Kuhnke"
e...@kuhnke-international.com
wrote:
Good evening
all,
I'm currently
Ivar’s Salmon House.
From: Eric
Kuhnke
Sent: Friday, February 27, 2015 4:36 PM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] WANTED
a few hundred megabit? a 7304 with
dual AC power supplies, NPE-G100 and a couple of extra gigE
interfaces will total you under $300 if you look in the right
places.
On 2/20/15 6:35 PM, Jason McKemie wrote:
This will be an edge router, I'm
a 3560X or a 3750 is not really a
router. it's a switch that wishes it were a router. for under $500
you can build a 6506E with dual sup32 that will run circles around
it in real world routing performance and can do things like
MPLS...
or buy a 7606
emie wrote:
Do you have a source you would recommend for the
7301? Ebay or otherwise?
On Fri, Feb 20, 2015 at 1:26 PM, Eric
Kuhnke e...@kuhnke-international.com
wrote:
Sure, depends on your climate and instal
:03 PM, Jeremy wrote:
He asked for a replacement for a Cisco Nexus
SWITCH. He didn't ask about a router that I saw. Maybe I am
misunderstanding what he was looking for.
On Fri, Feb 20, 2015 at 12:17 PM, Eric
Kuhnke e...@kuhnke-international
misunderstanding what he was looking for.
On Fri, Feb 20,
2015 at 12:17 PM, Eric Kuhnke e...@kuhnke-international.com
wrote:
a 3560X or a 3750 is not really
RT (Request Tracker).
It has quite a learning curve if you really want to set it up correctly,
but is quite powerful. It's used by some of the largest ISPs in North
America.
On 2/26/15 12:08 PM, Tyler Treat wrote:
Looking for an open source or otherwise free ticketing system. Doesn't
Seconding the Tycon one, works great.
Not particularly low cost but worth it, IMHO. I believe they have
outsourced the power supply manufacturing to a Taiwanese DC PS
manufacturer as the casing looks suspiciously familiar.
Eric Kuhnke
e...@kuhnke
Isn't that nice, they get to take your money and earn interest (or
whatever) on it for months until the product ships. Negligibly tiny
amount for one order, but multiply by hundreds of customers each
ordering thousands of dollars of gear.
Many vendors only bill for
Is that an ancient DS3 capacity 38 GHz system I see behind the
airfiber?
Eric Kuhnke
e...@kuhnke-international.com
On 4/20/15 12:50 PM, Gino Villarini wrote:
Enjoy
"Buying 8 PMP450�s is going to drain your wallet"
There's the understatement of the week
Eric Kuhnke
e...@kuhnke-international.com
On 4/20/15 11:41 AM, Peter Kranz wrote:
I'm not aware of a competitor at this time.. We wanted 1
Seems like that that point you are better off building a ring-topology
network composed of 100% PTP links and dishes. If you can still reach
all the required clients doing it.
Eric Kuhnke
e...@kuhnke-international.com
On 4/20/15 12:04 PM, Adam Moffett wrote:
Is a 15 degree panel even
One question question, for the radio B11 radio head, there is no such thing
as a separate high/low model? Either end is fully software configurable
for all of the different TDD and FDD-like modes?
On top of the relatively low price this is a good thing for reducing the
number of cold shelf
Meanwell RSP series and their DIN rail mount kit... The RSP-500 for
example:
http://www.meanwell.com/webapp/product/search.aspx?prod=RSP-500
or the SDR-480? 85-264VAC input OK, 50/60Hz.
http://www.meanwell.com/webapp/product/search.aspx?prod=sdr-480
On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 11:32 AM, Josh
I see you've been hiring DirecTV installers
On Wed, Oct 21, 2015 at 8:20 AM, Adam Moffett wrote:
>
>
>
> "dumb ape go point bowl shape thing at tower stick" <-- LOL
>>
>
>
Is anyone hiring installers on a contract/1099, piece work basis? Like how
the satellite TV installers are paid a flat rate per install for
residential dish installations. Give them access to a ticketing system for
your install queue, and a small stockpile of the common CPEs to keep on
hand.
bal deals, to make a new telephone company
> to totally overbuild the island.
>
> *From:* Adam Moffett <dmmoff...@gmail.com>
> *Sent:* Thursday, October 22, 2015 2:18 PM
> *To:* af@afmug.com
> *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] ISPs “reminded” to not use government money for
> alcohol an
Sounds like this guy ruined it for everyone.
Since 2002, Sandwich Isles Communications has collected $242,489,940 from
the federal
Universal Service Fund to serve no more than 3,659 customers.
2
During that same time, Albert Hee, the
owner of Sandwich Isles’s parent company Waimana Enterprises
https://www.youtube.com/user/yovo68/videos
Looks like it should have some sheet steel at a 45 degree angle bracing it
outwards towards the feet edges...
On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 6:54 AM, Adam Moffett wrote:
> I didn't notice it until you said something, but yeah it would appear to
> have less strength side to side.
>
I don't understand why anyone would voluntarily take responsibility for
managing netgear crap... If you're going to have a residential customer
you can take two approaches:
1) "Here is the demarc. Plug you 100BaseTX or 1000BaseT thing in here and
you will get a DHCP address. Your router and your
why haven't they fixed the
> underpass?
>
>
>
> -
> Mike Hammett
> Intelligent Computing Solutions
> http://www.ics-il.com
>
> ------
> *From: *"Eric Kuhnke" <e...@kuhnke-international.com>
> *To: *af@afmug.com
> *S
https://www.lora-alliance.org/
https://medium.com/@dconrad/how-new-long-range-radios-will-change-the-internet-of-things-ed8e6b5e367f#.6oj7erk51
Here's a manufacturer with a datasheet:
http://www.semtech.com/images/datasheet/sx1276_77_78_79.pdf
http://www.semtech.com/apps/product.php?pn=SX1276
I do wish everyone would just standardize on the REMEC mount (cylindrical
center waveguide slip fit) that has four corner latches.
On Tue, Oct 27, 2015 at 3:36 PM, Bill Prince wrote:
> Depends on who makes the dish and who you talk to.
>
> If the dish you're using was made
(not my screenshot).
On Wed, Oct 28, 2015 at 2:29 PM, Josh Luthman
wrote:
> But there was another security hole up to 5.6.1...
>
>
> Josh Luthman
> Office: 937-552-2340
> Direct: 937-552-2343
> 1100 Wayne St
> Suite 1337
> Troy, OH 45373
>
> On Wed, Oct 28, 2015
traffic between their credit card terminal and the processor should be
end-to-end encrypted. Audits of their network equipment would be required
for PCI compliance *if* they were storing card info in plaintext anywhere
on their LAN, which they are not.
On Wed, Oct 28, 2015 at 11:54 AM, Ken Hohhof
incident like
>> target keeps having with there PA system.
>>
>> http://wtvr.com/2015/10/15/target-store-plays-porn-over-pa-system/
>>
>> On Fri, Oct 23, 2015 at 8:23 PM, Ken Hohhof <af...@kwisp.com> wrote:
>> > Oh, that kind of “public address”.
>> >
23, 2015 at 8:23 PM, Ken Hohhof <af...@kwisp.com> wrote:
> > Oh, that kind of “public address”.
> >
> > From: Eric Kuhnke
> > Sent: Friday, October 23, 2015 7:14 PM
> > To: af@afmug.com
> > Subject: [AFMUG] now you can yell at people thr
https://www.ubnt.com/unifi/unifi-ap-ac-edu/
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6e/%C5%BDi%C5%BEkovsk%C3%A1_v%C4%9B%C5%BE_a_d%C5%AFm.JPG
Any chance you can get the customer to ditch pots entirely, no ATA, and
have them buy some sip headphones? Yealink sip-t22p are around $40 on eBay.
A lot less hassle than trying to do analog:digital:analog with any degree
of reliability.
On Nov 10, 2015 9:29 AM, "Mark - Myakka Technologies"
> Ethernet against lightning.
>
> http://www.sandman.com/surge.html
>
>
> *From:* Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.com>
> *Sent:* Wednesday, November 11, 2015 7:26 AM
> *To:* af@afmug.com
> *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] OT - Extend POTS via IP
>
>
> Any chance you can get
;
> http://www.midwest-ix.com COO/Chairman
>
> Internet Exchange - Peering - Distributed Fabric
>
>
>
> On Nov 10, 2015, at 8:44 AM, Josh Luthman <j...@imaginenetworksllc.com>
> wrote:
>
>
>
> New server? 7 no question.
>
> Josh Luthman
> Office: 9
> those trees, drones and balloons might not be a solution, even satellite
> might be tough. And if people can’t afford or don’t want a computer,
> connectivity is not the only obstacle. Schools sending kids home with
> Chromebooks might break through that.
>
>
> *From:* Eric Kuhnk
7, for the 3.x series kernel if nothing else.
On Mon, Nov 9, 2015 at 9:41 PM, Ken Hohhof wrote:
> There seems to be a fair bit of dissatisfaction with RHEL7/CentOS 7. I'm
> building a couple new servers, if my others are running CentOS 6 and do
> what I need, should I resist
Do SC/UPC duplex bulkhead connectors in your tower top box, for example if
running 24 strands up a tower. Use SC to LC jumper cables in liquid tight
conduit. LC for the radio end of course.
One corning CCH panel is good for twelve strands of SC connectors. There
are tiny enclosures for the cch
I see two separate emails.
On Nov 12, 2015 4:19 PM, "Josh Reynolds" wrote:
> erm, is anybody else seeing duplicates?
>
> On Thu, Nov 12, 2015 at 6:19 PM, Josh Reynolds
> wrote:
> > Hello? Test? 1 2 3?
> >
> > :)
>
Use neither, 1000BaseLX SFPs are $16 a piece. Do 1310nm on singlemode up a
tower. Any serious fiber contractor or FTTA installer will laugh at the
idea of outside plant multimode.
On Nov 12, 2015 1:50 PM, "Peter Kranz" wrote:
> For any new builds you should use 50um since
Openvz is really more like a chroot jail. You can accomplish much better
functionality and the ability to run a wider range of guest VMs with xen or
kvm.
Keep in mind with openvz all guest OS must run the same kernel as the host.
Unless you need openvz for a hosting environment that will have
radio just released that only supported multimode
> somehow? Maybe mimosa?
>
> On Thu, Nov 12, 2015 at 6:58 PM, Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > Use neither, 1000BaseLX SFPs are $16 a piece. Do 1310nm on singlemode up
> a
> > tower. Any serious fiber c
e backported to that 2.6.32 kernel.
>
> On Thu, Nov 12, 2015 at 8:25 PM, Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > The gains are insignificant with an openvz jail environment compared to a
> > paravirtualized (PV, not HVM) Xen environment. With OpenVZ in its curren
at 5:18 PM, Josh Reynolds <j...@kyneticwifi.com> wrote:
> The can be significant performance gains in both memory reduction and
> IO by using OpenVZ though. It just depends on your needs and
> environment.
>
> On Thu, Nov 12, 2015 at 7:09 PM, Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.
Does anyone have a typical 1000BaseT to SFP media converter handy, and a
kill-a-watt? Or a DC bench test power supply that outputs 12VDC and
displays realtime amperage?
3.5W? 5W? 7.5W?
Everywhere on the planet south of 80 degrees latitude can be serviced with
10 or 20 Mbps, it's just a question of dollars per month...
How about a 3.8 meter Ku-band VSAT system with 60W BUC and Comtech SCPC
modem?
Works great for embassies and such.
:-)
On Fri, Nov 13, 2015 at 8:44 PM, Rory
Not a good day for things to break in France.
On Fri, Nov 13, 2015 at 9:05 PM, Curtis Brotherton
wrote:
>
>
m Subject: Re: [AFMUG] 1000BaseT to SFP media
> converter watt load
> I just read 1.7W with a kill-a-watt on a StarTech media converter.
>
> .no traffic on the converter, but I don't know if that matters.
>
> On 11/14/2015 2:16 AM, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
>
>> Does anyone have
http://www.wired.com/2015/11/the-land-that-the-internet-forgot/
yeah you're not going to get a lot of subscribers in a county where 90% of
the children qualify for free school lunches... no matter what the
population is, hard finding a sufficient number of people to pay $50/mo.
Somebody should bother the FCC to allow +10 or +18 Tx power in 24 GHz, but
only with very tight pattern (RPE, tiny sidelobes and f/b ratio) 2' and 3'
PTP dishes... I wonder how successful such a lobbying effort would be.
On Thu, Oct 29, 2015 at 7:26 PM, Josh Luthman
Snow in the air actually causes a lot less fade at =>11 GHz than the
equivalent amount of rain. Even wet snow is relatively "dry" when it's in
the air until it hits surfaces and starts congealing.
On Thu, Oct 29, 2015 at 6:33 PM, Jeremy wrote:
> Seriously though, how
t;> There was a company that had a 2.4GHz narrow band unit that would go 7
>>> miles. I looked for them a few months ago and couldn’t find them.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Rory
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> *From:* Af [mailto:af-bou
jesus christ, $3600 and $2800? What does that get you that a properly set
up installation of cacti with threshold alerting, and a separate also
properly setup opennms instance doesn't?
opennms is a very powerful tool and has a bit of a learning curve behind
it. it's also way more powerful than
Thinkpads (well, the X and T series, not the consumer stuff) are well
supported in Linux as well. They generally come with Intel chipset wireless
cards, though there are exceptions. My standard Thinkpad software image for
workstations is XUbuntu based. If you tried a Linux GUI and hated gnome or
Their location is on the SE facing edge of Orcas, too close to Mt.
Constitution and blocked by trees for ptmp links. Much better ptp link view
from there to Anacortes and towers on hilltops in Skagit county. If you
were to stand on top of their water tank I bet $5 you will not see the Mt.
Re: your last paragraph, about the DOD, I'm pretty sure P25 is just another
software load on a software defined radio. For military use things like the
SINCGARS radios (Harris) are software defined and only talk to other DOD
radios. I could see them wanting to have the ability to talk to public
The respectful clandestine drug dealing was going pretty well until the
Silk Road got shut down. Well, like six different .onion / tor based sites
popped up to take its place...
On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 8:16 PM, That One Guy /sarcasm <
thatoneguyst...@gmail.com> wrote:
> The days of respectful
An ATA is a sip phone on its Ethernet interface, dial tone POTS on its rj11
port. It would be set up the same way as , for example a yealink sip-t28p
which is a sip hardphone.
Which services? If you don't run your own asterisk or other sip speaking
server, Google "hosted PBX sip". There's lots.
t had any
> issues. It is a huge step up from where they were.
>
> On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 12:11 PM, Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> wow, scrolling through that, it is significantly more detailed than the
>> last ubnt MIB I saw. Th
lderbergs.
>
>
>
> On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 1:25 PM, <ch...@wbmfg.com> wrote:
>
> I am pretty sure the tri lateral commission is involved somehow...
>
>
>
> *From:* Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.com>
>
> *Sent:* Wednesday, November 4, 2015 9:43 AM
3.0.2.1/UBNT-MIB.txt
>
> On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 11:44 AM, Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> ubnt guys, what's the state of SNMP on these? If any serious progress
>> has been made in the last 3-4 months, can you paste a numeric snmpwalk of
>> an
Same on any half duplex TDD platform with PtMP and low modulation (QPSK)
subscribers. If you have a ubnt 5 GHz AP with a bunch of clients in 64QAM
3/4 to 64QAM 5/6 and a few are on the air using QPSK 1/2, it's going to
drag down the performance of that whole radio and sector significantly. It
can
Don't reinvent the wheel, if you want to do this I would build it on top of
cacti + network weathermap.
Network weathermap already does a lot of this.
http://network-weathermap.com/
On Fri, Nov 6, 2015 at 6:22 PM, Adam Moffett wrote:
> I've always thought the network map
can we please not post alex jones' conspiracy theory website?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex_Jones_%28radio_host%29
black helicopters, the new world order, JADE HELM, obama is a secret
muslim, obama is gonna take away your guns. obamacare death panels!
On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 5:53 AM, Rory
pam URL’s, executable files, etc.
>
>
>
> The story made little sense.
>
>
>
> Mark
>
>
>
> On Nov 4, 2015, at 9:31 AM, Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> can we please not post alex jones' conspiracy theory website?
>
> h
oh they very much existed and had been fleshed out in excruciating
imaginary detail before deus ex was published in 2000. FEMA conspiracies
were a stable of Art Bell's late night AM radio show from like 1995 to 2000.
On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 8:35 AM, Seth Mattinen wrote:
> On
Regionally it may cause things to suck for a short while, but the whole
reason they bought Clearwire was for the spectrum... that wimax air space
is going to be reused with 3GPP rev9 and rev10 radios.
On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 5:52 AM, Rory Conaway wrote:
> It’s seriously
Which is why something like an SC-SC duplex bulkhead mount is still called
an "adapter"...
http://www.fs.com/narrow/sc-to-sc_v909t0/fiber-optic-adapters_1000
People in China do call them couplers. The word adapter is not bad, since
you can mate just about any 2.5mm ferrule with another 2.5mm
http://www.southpolestation.com/trivia/90s/ftp0.jpg
(FTP transfer from the south pole)
1991: https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~aas/SPUC/91/computer91.html
1995: https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~aas/SPUC/95/spole.95final2b.html
gt; same as the original.
>>
>> -Ty
>>
>>
>>
>> -Ty
>>
>> On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 10:51 AM, Seth Mattinen <se...@rollernet.us>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> On 11/4/15 08:43, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
>>>
>>>> oh they very muc
ubnt guys, what's the state of SNMP on these? If any serious progress has
been made in the last 3-4 months, can you paste a numeric snmpwalk of an
operational unit?
second question: If SNMP is still broken, does CPU usage of the http
management interface have any effect on traffic flow
ge.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> -
>>>> Mike Hammett
>>>> Intelligent Computing Solutions
>>>> http://www.ics-il.com
>>>>
>>>> <https://www.facebook.com/ICSIL>
>>>> <https://plus.goog
Ticketing: Request Tracker. It is more powerful than you could possibly
ever need.
On Thu, Nov 5, 2015 at 4:24 PM, Matt wrote:
> What is everyone using for billing and ticketing? We are using in
> house built database/ticketing and standard accounting package for
>
You're looking at the difference in code rates between 256QAM 3/4 code rate
(MCS8) and 256QAM 5/6 code rate (MCS9)? All things being equal in the same
size TDD 40 MHz channel, of course the MCS9 radio will have a greater
bps/Hz.
Talking about the bps/Hz for a single stream, the specs for
From: "Chuck Hogg" <ch...@shelbybb.com>
> To: af@afmug.com
> Sent: Thursday, November 5, 2015 6:01:35 AM
> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Roundcube
>
>
> I hope you are charging handsomely for email. We just quit it for our
> customer base...and only had 2-3 complaints.
The hard part about spam filtering on network engineering/operational
mailing lists, occasionally somebody needs to copy and paste the body of an
entire spam email, phish or joe-job for discussion and diagnostics
purposes.
If filtering solely on SPF record + DKIM you can still allow it provided
hat. LTE was made for cellular. Ask any LTE vendor (other than
> Telrad) about doing anything other than NAT and they will ask "why would
> you want that?". Ask them about running MPLS through a CPE and they'll
> think you're a lunatic. To them the CPE is a cell phone.
>
> On 11
ipset
> limitation of this current version.
>
>
>
> Patrick Leary, Telrad
>
> 727-501-3735
>
>
>
> *From:* Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] *On Behalf Of *Eric Kuhnke
> *Sent:* Friday, November 6, 2015 8:35 AM
> *To:* af@afmug.com
> *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] Offi
The AP and CPE PtMP radio products appear to be posted at Doubleradius:
http://www.doubleradius.com/store.html?manufacturer=576
On Fri, Nov 6, 2015 at 10:06 AM, Faisal Imtiaz
wrote:
> Production , no alpha/beta, yes. ( their A5 product).
>
> Faisal Imtiaz
>
I guess nobody ever thought that an ISP might *ever* want to deploy
MPLS-capable edge routers at a CPE? Considering the cost of the CPE radios
and the APs it's pretty weird they do not support a 1600 byte MTU.
Before anyone says "MPLS customers should be on their own PTP link if
they're such an
Google sure doesn't sell bandwidth, but if they have a POP somewhere, it's
highly likely that transport providers which sell EoMPLS circuits or other
forms of transport to the nearest carrier hotel are also in there... Or at
least a major carrier with a DWDM terminal (though their minimum may be
Is there a table somewhere showing which SKUs of radio operate in DFS and
lower bands, and which do not (as currently locked by firmware)?
9/125 SM cleavers good enough for basic 1310nm <10km LX links (active
ethernet, no GPON or EPON) are like $85 from China... yes they work. Look
on eBay.
You want an entirely different level of thing if you're going to be doing
longer distances or CWDM/DWDM.
On Sun, Oct 18, 2015 at 11:34 PM,
That is pretty much how I plan it (using zero GPS). You need to have good
gain, precise aim and be relatively close to the sector to achieve 64QAM
3/4 or 5/6 code rate on the older RocketM5 stuff (with a Nanobeam M5-22 or
25 as a CPE, for example). Same to achieve 256QAM 3/4 or 5/6 with a
Will it work with a REMEC standard 4' 11 GHz dish (cylindrical center
waveguide slip fitting, four latches for tension clips on the four
corners)? I may not want to use one of the Jirous dishes.
Mimosa guys watching the list, can you please post a high-res photo of what
the radio head to dish
Liquid metal / flow batteries are not really commercially available, unless
you want a "trial" plant for utility scale that is a multiple of 2, 4 or
more 20 foot sized ISO cargo containers...
It's not something you can buy with an AMEX card and have shipped to your
business.
The best
Recently upgraded my SugarCRM 6.5 instance to SuiteCRM:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SuiteCRM
https://suitecrm.com/
In short, the company that published SugarCRM CE (free, GPL) stopped
updating it, so it's been forked and continued under a new name. Easy
upgrade. Some new features and the UI
Just insist on some ridiculously low interest rate, don't budge and they
will stop calling. If that doesn't work, transfer them to Lenny:
https://m.reddit.com/r/itslenny/
On Oct 13, 2015 9:00 PM, "can...@believewireless.net" <
p...@believewireless.net> wrote:
> Is anyone else getting flooded
Same here, -89 is effectively useless... It'll also be dragging
down all of the other clients on the same sector by using up air
time (TDD) causing the radio to do QPSK 1/2 modulation.
On 10/7/15 1:11 PM, Jeremy wrote:
I would not expect -86 and -89 to
I bet it's intended for electric buses and similar. Those are
labeled CAN, guessing CANbus
http://www.kvaser.com/about-can/the-can-protocol/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAN_bus
tl;dr: it's a messy clusterfuck networking standard that's worse
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