[WISPA] Sorry
Sorry about all those emails pouring through. Thunderbird decided to let through a bunch of emails that hung in the past. -- - Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions http://www.ics-il.com WISPA Wants You! Join today! http://signup.wispa.org/ WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org Subscribe/Unsubscribe: http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/
[WISPA] Sorry OT
Every day I read, attend webinars and conferences. And do everything I can to keep up with the technology curve. And then something like the movie Avatar comes along and I realize how far behind I really am. Imax 3D and video animation unlike any other. Totally incredible. Go for the reality check -B- Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry WISPA Wants You! Join today! http://signup.wispa.org/ WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org Subscribe/Unsubscribe: http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/
Re: [WISPA] Sorry..Long Story
Bob, That story is a scream. I read it aloud to my fiance and we were both cracking up. Thanks for sharing. If the tale every strangely morphs in to motorcycle road trips, then I'll share one of mine. Patrick Leary Aperto Networks 813.426.4230 mobile -Original Message- From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf Of Chuck Profito Sent: Friday, October 30, 2009 2:11 PM To: 'WISPA General List' Subject: Re: [WISPA] Sorry..Long Story What a great horror story! You are a great story teller! I'm still laughing. -Original Message- From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf Of Bob Moldashel Sent: Friday, October 30, 2009 2:04 PM To: WISPA General List Subject: Re: [WISPA] Sorry..Long Story WOW. I HATE Bees I bet that was fun when you opened that up! Reminds me of when I installed a system in North Carolina about 15 years ago. We installed some equipment in a communications shed (and I mean shed!) at the base of a tower. Picture this 300' guyed tower in the middle of a field with a 10' x 15' wooden shed underneath it. The grass is like waist high. the whole time I am walking up to this thing I am thinking ticks and bees. So I unlock the door and turn the light on and do a quick look around inside. I wait about 15 seconds and finally feel at ease that there are no bees waiting inside for me. The "shed" has around 10 radio repeater cabinets inside and the walls are covered in insulation. There are wires and transmission line all over the place. No sheetrock. In addition the ceiling also was covered in insulation but whoever put it up probably spent a whole 10 minutes doing it. Several sections were hanging down. The lighting really sucked. One 60 watt light bulb screwed into a ceramic base. And with some of the insulation hanging down around it some of the shed was pretty dark. I remember it was cool outside and windy so the guy I was working with decided to close the door so it would be a little warmer. 10 repeater cabinets, some with high power paging transmitters, create a lot of heat so it made a big difference with the door closed. So we start to mount a plywood backboard to the studs of the back wall so we would have something to mount our wall mount equipment cabinet to. I am drilling in deck screws when the battery operated Hilt drill gun dies. Being lazy and not wanting to go back out to the truck 1/4 mile across the the windy, tall grass field in the middle of no-name North Carolina the guy I am working with decides to hit the screws in with a hammer. This was NOT a good idea! On the third wack a section of insulation on the ceiling by the door falls down and this 50' BLACK SNAKE ( he was really only about 2-3' ) falls to the floor between us and the door! Suddenly my fear of bees fell to the number 2 position. We both screamed like little girls (the snake was a mute but he had his mouth open too!). We knew we had to get out of there. All I could think of was SNAKE BITE, POISON, ANTIVENOM, HELICOPTER, MEDEVAC, PAIN, NO CELL PHONE SERVICE, etc in about 1/2 second. Suddenly my guy grabs a piece of 2x3 wood stud to beat this snake to a pulp. ANOTHER BAD IDEA He swings the stud and hits the light bulb and its lights out in this freakin' snake infested casket And 100ms later I feel this "THING" slide across the top of my work boot and I was mobile! I pushed the other guy to one side and ran towards the last known location of the door. What I didn't know was the insulation was hanging in front of the door after he swung the stud and I ran face first into it about 3' from the door. Of course I was not expecting ANYTHING to hit my face so I started swinging like mad, got disoriented and realized that the door wasn't where it was. I stopped moving. He stopped moving. We decided to feel around for something familiar so we could get our bearings. Of course the whole time we are doing this we are thinking the snake is on the floor. WRONG! My guy reaches out and touches one of the repeater cabinets and says he knows where the door is and orients me. While he has his hand on top of the cabinet THE SNAKE SLIDES ACROSS IT He screams and we both bolt to the door and out into the field. To say the least I did not go back in. He called me all kinds of names and as a result (and the fact that I was his boss) he finished all the indoor work with the door wide open and mason's boots on. And he was very gentle and quiet. I don't know what happened to the snake but if I was him I would be around the Panama Canal right now. I'm sure he was just as scared as us but I didn't hang around to interview him. Always be careful no matter what you are doing. And Happy Halloween -B- Faisal Imtiaz wrote: > I believe that this was the original inspiration for the "BeeHive
Re: [WISPA] Sorry..Long Story
Yeah...Thanks .Its funny now. It wasn't then. :-) -B- RickG wrote: > Bob, thats the most you've written in a long time! Great story! -RickG > > On Fri, Oct 30, 2009 at 5:04 PM, Bob Moldashel wrote: > >> WOW. I HATE Bees I bet that was fun when you opened that up! >> >> Reminds me of when I installed a system in North Carolina about 15 years >> ago. We installed some equipment in a communications shed (and I mean >> shed!) at the base of a tower. Picture this 300' guyed tower in the >> middle of a field with a 10' x 15' wooden shed underneath it. The grass >> is like waist high. the whole time I am walking up to this thing I am >> thinking ticks and bees. >> >> So I unlock the door and turn the light on and do a quick look around >> inside. I wait about 15 seconds and finally feel at ease that there are >> no bees waiting inside for me. >> >> The "shed" has around 10 radio repeater cabinets inside and the walls >> are covered in insulation. There are wires and transmission line all >> over the place. No sheetrock. In addition the ceiling also was covered >> in insulation but whoever put it up probably spent a whole 10 minutes >> doing it. Several sections were hanging down. >> >> The lighting really sucked. One 60 watt light bulb screwed into a >> ceramic base. And with some of the insulation hanging down around it >> some of the shed was pretty dark. >> >> I remember it was cool outside and windy so the guy I was working with >> decided to close the door so it would be a little warmer. 10 repeater >> cabinets, some with high power paging transmitters, create a lot of heat >> so it made a big difference with the door closed. >> >> So we start to mount a plywood backboard to the studs of the back wall >> so we would have something to mount our wall mount equipment cabinet to. >> I am drilling in deck screws when the battery operated Hilt drill gun >> dies. Being lazy and not wanting to go back out to the truck 1/4 mile >> across the the windy, tall grass field in the middle of no-name North >> Carolina the guy I am working with decides to hit the screws in with a >> hammer. This was NOT a good idea! >> >> On the third wack a section of insulation on the ceiling by the door >> falls down and this 50' BLACK SNAKE ( he was really only about 2-3' ) >> falls to the floor between us and the door! Suddenly my fear of bees >> fell to the number 2 position. >> >> We both screamed like little girls (the snake was a mute but he had his >> mouth open too!). >> >> We knew we had to get out of there. All I could think of was SNAKE BITE, >> POISON, ANTIVENOM, HELICOPTER, MEDEVAC, PAIN, NO CELL PHONE SERVICE, >> etc in about 1/2 second. >> >> Suddenly my guy grabs a piece of 2x3 wood stud to beat this snake to a >> pulp. ANOTHER BAD IDEA >> >> He swings the stud and hits the light bulb and its lights out in this >> freakin' snake infested casket And 100ms later I feel this "THING" >> slide across the top of my work boot and I was mobile! >> >> I pushed the other guy to one side and ran towards the last known >> location of the door. What I didn't know was the insulation was hanging >> in front of the door after he swung the stud and I ran face first into >> it about 3' from the door. Of course I was not expecting ANYTHING to hit >> my face so I started swinging like mad, got disoriented and realized >> that the door wasn't where it was. >> >> I stopped moving. He stopped moving. >> >> We decided to feel around for something familiar so we could get our >> bearings. Of course the whole time we are doing this we are thinking the >> snake is on the floor. WRONG! >> >> My guy reaches out and touches one of the repeater cabinets and says he >> knows where the door is and orients me. While he has his hand on top of >> the cabinet THE SNAKE SLIDES ACROSS IT >> >> He screams and we both bolt to the door and out into the field. >> >> To say the least I did not go back in. He called me all kinds of names >> and as a result (and the fact that I was his boss) he finished all the >> indoor work with the door wide open and mason's boots on. >> >> And he was very gentle and quiet. >> >> I don't know what happened to the snake but if I was him I would be >> around the Panama Canal right now. I'm sure he was just as scared as us >> but I didn't hang around to interview him. >> >> Always be careful no matter what you are doing. >> >> And Happy Halloween >> >> -B- >> >> >> >> >> >> Faisal Imtiaz wrote: >> >>> I believe that this was the original inspiration for the "BeeHive" Antenna >>> !! >>> >>> LOL !! >>> >>> >>> Faisal Imtiaz >>> SnappyDSL.net >>> -Original Message- >>> From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On >>> Behalf Of Chuck Profito >>> Sent: Friday, October 30, 2009 2:44 PM >>> To: 'WISPA General List' >>> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Halloween request >>> >>> I can't believe no one's had a ghost pass them in the attic or a snake in a >>> server etc: >>> Here'
Re: [WISPA] Sorry..Long Story
Bob, thats the most you've written in a long time! Great story! -RickG On Fri, Oct 30, 2009 at 5:04 PM, Bob Moldashel wrote: > WOW. I HATE Bees I bet that was fun when you opened that up! > > Reminds me of when I installed a system in North Carolina about 15 years > ago. We installed some equipment in a communications shed (and I mean > shed!) at the base of a tower. Picture this 300' guyed tower in the > middle of a field with a 10' x 15' wooden shed underneath it. The grass > is like waist high. the whole time I am walking up to this thing I am > thinking ticks and bees. > > So I unlock the door and turn the light on and do a quick look around > inside. I wait about 15 seconds and finally feel at ease that there are > no bees waiting inside for me. > > The "shed" has around 10 radio repeater cabinets inside and the walls > are covered in insulation. There are wires and transmission line all > over the place. No sheetrock. In addition the ceiling also was covered > in insulation but whoever put it up probably spent a whole 10 minutes > doing it. Several sections were hanging down. > > The lighting really sucked. One 60 watt light bulb screwed into a > ceramic base. And with some of the insulation hanging down around it > some of the shed was pretty dark. > > I remember it was cool outside and windy so the guy I was working with > decided to close the door so it would be a little warmer. 10 repeater > cabinets, some with high power paging transmitters, create a lot of heat > so it made a big difference with the door closed. > > So we start to mount a plywood backboard to the studs of the back wall > so we would have something to mount our wall mount equipment cabinet to. > I am drilling in deck screws when the battery operated Hilt drill gun > dies. Being lazy and not wanting to go back out to the truck 1/4 mile > across the the windy, tall grass field in the middle of no-name North > Carolina the guy I am working with decides to hit the screws in with a > hammer. This was NOT a good idea! > > On the third wack a section of insulation on the ceiling by the door > falls down and this 50' BLACK SNAKE ( he was really only about 2-3' ) > falls to the floor between us and the door! Suddenly my fear of bees > fell to the number 2 position. > > We both screamed like little girls (the snake was a mute but he had his > mouth open too!). > > We knew we had to get out of there. All I could think of was SNAKE BITE, > POISON, ANTIVENOM, HELICOPTER, MEDEVAC, PAIN, NO CELL PHONE SERVICE, > etc in about 1/2 second. > > Suddenly my guy grabs a piece of 2x3 wood stud to beat this snake to a > pulp. ANOTHER BAD IDEA > > He swings the stud and hits the light bulb and its lights out in this > freakin' snake infested casket And 100ms later I feel this "THING" > slide across the top of my work boot and I was mobile! > > I pushed the other guy to one side and ran towards the last known > location of the door. What I didn't know was the insulation was hanging > in front of the door after he swung the stud and I ran face first into > it about 3' from the door. Of course I was not expecting ANYTHING to hit > my face so I started swinging like mad, got disoriented and realized > that the door wasn't where it was. > > I stopped moving. He stopped moving. > > We decided to feel around for something familiar so we could get our > bearings. Of course the whole time we are doing this we are thinking the > snake is on the floor. WRONG! > > My guy reaches out and touches one of the repeater cabinets and says he > knows where the door is and orients me. While he has his hand on top of > the cabinet THE SNAKE SLIDES ACROSS IT > > He screams and we both bolt to the door and out into the field. > > To say the least I did not go back in. He called me all kinds of names > and as a result (and the fact that I was his boss) he finished all the > indoor work with the door wide open and mason's boots on. > > And he was very gentle and quiet. > > I don't know what happened to the snake but if I was him I would be > around the Panama Canal right now. I'm sure he was just as scared as us > but I didn't hang around to interview him. > > Always be careful no matter what you are doing. > > And Happy Halloween > > -B- > > > > > > Faisal Imtiaz wrote: >> I believe that this was the original inspiration for the "BeeHive" Antenna >> !! >> >> LOL !! >> >> >> Faisal Imtiaz >> SnappyDSL.net >> -Original Message- >> From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On >> Behalf Of Chuck Profito >> Sent: Friday, October 30, 2009 2:44 PM >> To: 'WISPA General List' >> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Halloween request >> >> I can't believe no one's had a ghost pass them in the attic or a snake in a >> server etc: >> Here's ours from last October. Thank goodness it was a cool morning. >> >> >> >> -Original Message- >> From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On >> Behalf Of Chuck Profit
Re: [WISPA] Sorry..Long Story
What a great horror story! You are a great story teller! I'm still laughing. -Original Message- From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf Of Bob Moldashel Sent: Friday, October 30, 2009 2:04 PM To: WISPA General List Subject: Re: [WISPA] Sorry..Long Story WOW. I HATE Bees I bet that was fun when you opened that up! Reminds me of when I installed a system in North Carolina about 15 years ago. We installed some equipment in a communications shed (and I mean shed!) at the base of a tower. Picture this 300' guyed tower in the middle of a field with a 10' x 15' wooden shed underneath it. The grass is like waist high. the whole time I am walking up to this thing I am thinking ticks and bees. So I unlock the door and turn the light on and do a quick look around inside. I wait about 15 seconds and finally feel at ease that there are no bees waiting inside for me. The "shed" has around 10 radio repeater cabinets inside and the walls are covered in insulation. There are wires and transmission line all over the place. No sheetrock. In addition the ceiling also was covered in insulation but whoever put it up probably spent a whole 10 minutes doing it. Several sections were hanging down. The lighting really sucked. One 60 watt light bulb screwed into a ceramic base. And with some of the insulation hanging down around it some of the shed was pretty dark. I remember it was cool outside and windy so the guy I was working with decided to close the door so it would be a little warmer. 10 repeater cabinets, some with high power paging transmitters, create a lot of heat so it made a big difference with the door closed. So we start to mount a plywood backboard to the studs of the back wall so we would have something to mount our wall mount equipment cabinet to. I am drilling in deck screws when the battery operated Hilt drill gun dies. Being lazy and not wanting to go back out to the truck 1/4 mile across the the windy, tall grass field in the middle of no-name North Carolina the guy I am working with decides to hit the screws in with a hammer. This was NOT a good idea! On the third wack a section of insulation on the ceiling by the door falls down and this 50' BLACK SNAKE ( he was really only about 2-3' ) falls to the floor between us and the door! Suddenly my fear of bees fell to the number 2 position. We both screamed like little girls (the snake was a mute but he had his mouth open too!). We knew we had to get out of there. All I could think of was SNAKE BITE, POISON, ANTIVENOM, HELICOPTER, MEDEVAC, PAIN, NO CELL PHONE SERVICE, etc in about 1/2 second. Suddenly my guy grabs a piece of 2x3 wood stud to beat this snake to a pulp. ANOTHER BAD IDEA He swings the stud and hits the light bulb and its lights out in this freakin' snake infested casket And 100ms later I feel this "THING" slide across the top of my work boot and I was mobile! I pushed the other guy to one side and ran towards the last known location of the door. What I didn't know was the insulation was hanging in front of the door after he swung the stud and I ran face first into it about 3' from the door. Of course I was not expecting ANYTHING to hit my face so I started swinging like mad, got disoriented and realized that the door wasn't where it was. I stopped moving. He stopped moving. We decided to feel around for something familiar so we could get our bearings. Of course the whole time we are doing this we are thinking the snake is on the floor. WRONG! My guy reaches out and touches one of the repeater cabinets and says he knows where the door is and orients me. While he has his hand on top of the cabinet THE SNAKE SLIDES ACROSS IT He screams and we both bolt to the door and out into the field. To say the least I did not go back in. He called me all kinds of names and as a result (and the fact that I was his boss) he finished all the indoor work with the door wide open and mason's boots on. And he was very gentle and quiet. I don't know what happened to the snake but if I was him I would be around the Panama Canal right now. I'm sure he was just as scared as us but I didn't hang around to interview him. Always be careful no matter what you are doing. And Happy Halloween -B- Faisal Imtiaz wrote: > I believe that this was the original inspiration for the "BeeHive" Antenna > !! > > LOL !! > > > Faisal Imtiaz > SnappyDSL.net > -Original Message- > From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On > Behalf Of Chuck Profito > Sent: Friday, October 30, 2009 2:44 PM > To: 'WISPA General List' > Subject: Re: [WISPA] Halloween request > > I can't believe no one's had a ghost pass them in the attic or a snake in a > serv
Re: [WISPA] Sorry..Long Story
WOW. I HATE Bees I bet that was fun when you opened that up! Reminds me of when I installed a system in North Carolina about 15 years ago. We installed some equipment in a communications shed (and I mean shed!) at the base of a tower. Picture this 300' guyed tower in the middle of a field with a 10' x 15' wooden shed underneath it. The grass is like waist high. the whole time I am walking up to this thing I am thinking ticks and bees. So I unlock the door and turn the light on and do a quick look around inside. I wait about 15 seconds and finally feel at ease that there are no bees waiting inside for me. The "shed" has around 10 radio repeater cabinets inside and the walls are covered in insulation. There are wires and transmission line all over the place. No sheetrock. In addition the ceiling also was covered in insulation but whoever put it up probably spent a whole 10 minutes doing it. Several sections were hanging down. The lighting really sucked. One 60 watt light bulb screwed into a ceramic base. And with some of the insulation hanging down around it some of the shed was pretty dark. I remember it was cool outside and windy so the guy I was working with decided to close the door so it would be a little warmer. 10 repeater cabinets, some with high power paging transmitters, create a lot of heat so it made a big difference with the door closed. So we start to mount a plywood backboard to the studs of the back wall so we would have something to mount our wall mount equipment cabinet to. I am drilling in deck screws when the battery operated Hilt drill gun dies. Being lazy and not wanting to go back out to the truck 1/4 mile across the the windy, tall grass field in the middle of no-name North Carolina the guy I am working with decides to hit the screws in with a hammer. This was NOT a good idea! On the third wack a section of insulation on the ceiling by the door falls down and this 50' BLACK SNAKE ( he was really only about 2-3' ) falls to the floor between us and the door! Suddenly my fear of bees fell to the number 2 position. We both screamed like little girls (the snake was a mute but he had his mouth open too!). We knew we had to get out of there. All I could think of was SNAKE BITE, POISON, ANTIVENOM, HELICOPTER, MEDEVAC, PAIN, NO CELL PHONE SERVICE, etc in about 1/2 second. Suddenly my guy grabs a piece of 2x3 wood stud to beat this snake to a pulp. ANOTHER BAD IDEA He swings the stud and hits the light bulb and its lights out in this freakin' snake infested casket And 100ms later I feel this "THING" slide across the top of my work boot and I was mobile! I pushed the other guy to one side and ran towards the last known location of the door. What I didn't know was the insulation was hanging in front of the door after he swung the stud and I ran face first into it about 3' from the door. Of course I was not expecting ANYTHING to hit my face so I started swinging like mad, got disoriented and realized that the door wasn't where it was. I stopped moving. He stopped moving. We decided to feel around for something familiar so we could get our bearings. Of course the whole time we are doing this we are thinking the snake is on the floor. WRONG! My guy reaches out and touches one of the repeater cabinets and says he knows where the door is and orients me. While he has his hand on top of the cabinet THE SNAKE SLIDES ACROSS IT He screams and we both bolt to the door and out into the field. To say the least I did not go back in. He called me all kinds of names and as a result (and the fact that I was his boss) he finished all the indoor work with the door wide open and mason's boots on. And he was very gentle and quiet. I don't know what happened to the snake but if I was him I would be around the Panama Canal right now. I'm sure he was just as scared as us but I didn't hang around to interview him. Always be careful no matter what you are doing. And Happy Halloween -B- Faisal Imtiaz wrote: > I believe that this was the original inspiration for the "BeeHive" Antenna > !! > > LOL !! > > > Faisal Imtiaz > SnappyDSL.net > -Original Message- > From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On > Behalf Of Chuck Profito > Sent: Friday, October 30, 2009 2:44 PM > To: 'WISPA General List' > Subject: Re: [WISPA] Halloween request > > I can't believe no one's had a ghost pass them in the attic or a snake in a > server etc: > Here's ours from last October. Thank goodness it was a cool morning. > > > > -Original Message- > From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On > Behalf Of Chuck Profito > Sent: Friday, October 30, 2009 11:19 AM > To: 'WISPA General List' > Subject: [WISPA] Halloween request > > > It's Spooky Funny Friday > > It's time to post your Spooky Tech Tails for all to shake and quiver at. > > > > -
[WISPA] Sorry but I thought it had too much pertaining to us: FWD: 10.29 :: Boo! :: Is "BandwidthCrunch" a new candy bar for Halloween? :: The Zombies still benefiting from the Sony Bono Act :: RIP: C
-- Original Message -- From: Robert Cannon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Reply-To: Telecom Regulation & the Internet<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Thu, 30 Oct 2008 11:07:35 -0700 CyberTelecom News Federal Internet Law and Policy Democracy cannot succeed unless those who express their choice are prepared to choose wisely. The real safeguard of democracy, therefore, is education. Franklin D. Roosevelt Opposition Grows To 'Intercarrier Compensation Reform' - Martin's latest baby bell gift not going over wellâ¦, dslreports Nearly 75 members of Congress are urging the FCC to delay its November 4 vote on revamping both the Universal Service Fund and the intercarrier compensation system until more extensive public review can be completed. As we recently reported, the FCC's Kevin Martin is pushing a plan written by Verizon and AT&T aimed at allowing them to pay less to smaller rural carriers to connect calls. Verizon and AT&T's plan http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/Opposition-Grows-To-Intercarrier-Compensation-Reform-98753 More Info: http://www.cybertelecom.org/broadband/rcomp.htm FCC Poised To Approve White Space Broadband - McDowell: Could see a 5-0 approval, dslreports Despite a last ditch effort by the National Association of Broadcasters, the politicians they pay to love them and Dolly Parton, it appears that the November 4 vote on white space broadband will not only move forward, it may pass overwhelmingly. FCC Commissioner Robert "what broadband problem?" McDowell tells Reuters he thinks there's a good chance the vote could be 5-0 in favor, quite a feat for a frequently http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/FCC-Poised-To-Approve-White-Space-Broadband-98767 More Info: http://www.cybertelecom.org/broadband/wireless.htm#white Dolly Parton enters 'white space' debate, CNET The country music artist joins broadcasters in their fight to delay the FCC vote on whether to open up so-called white space spectrum for unlicensed use. http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-10077742-94.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20 More Info: http://www.cybertelecom.org/broadband/wireless.htm#white Another Broadband Tech Exec Says There's No Bandwidth Crunch, Techdirt We've pointed out in the past that whenever you hear warnings about a coming broadband crunch, it almost always comes from consultants and politicians. If it comes directly from companies, it's inevitably from the CEO or lobbyists. Yet, when you talk to execs who actually are technologists (even at telcos) they're quite willing to admit that the whole broadband crunch issue is something of a myth. All you need to do is regular upgrades to the network, and most recognize that there's no risk to a network getting http://techdirt.com/articles/20081028/032667.shtml More Info: http://www.cybertelecom.org/ci/tiers.htm IPv6: Zeno's Paradox and Invisible Brick Walls, CircleID As we continue our ride toward the exhaustion of IPv4 addresses, Regional Internet Registries public discussion groups such as the ARIN PPML mailing list remain filled with endless discussions on how large swaths of allocated IPv4 addresses are unused, should be reclaimed or recycled one way or another, maybe be put on the free market and sold to the highest bidder or parsed out in more egalitarian controlled ways. http://www.circleid.com/posts/20081029_ipv6_zeno_invisible_brick_walls/ More Info: http://www.cybertelecom.org/dns/ipv6.htm Comcast raises outlook on strong quarter, Globe and Mail Video revenue rose as the cable firm added digital subscribers http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheGlobeAndMail-Technology/~3/435750290/ More Info: http://www.cybertelecom.org/industry/comcast.htm Qwest cutting 1,200 jobs as profit drops, Globe and Mail Revenue also dropped at the Denver-based phone company http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheGlobeAndMail-Technology/~3/435750289/ More Info: http://www.cybertelecom.org/industry/qwest.htm Iran - Government continues to harass cyber-feminists in attempt to silence them - 29.10.2008, RSF No description http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=29135 More Info: http://www.cybertelecom.org/intl/me.htm#iran Reflections on the 10th Anniversary of the Sonny Bono Act, PK The 10th anniversary of the DMCA is not the only infamous 10th anniversary that Public Knowledge gets to âcelebrateâ this week. Yesterday was the 10th anniversary of the enactment of the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998. That law extended copyright terms from 50 years after the life of an author and 70 years in the case of corporations, to 70 years beyond the life of an author and 95 years in the case of corporations. Named after Sonny Bono, the late Congressman best known for his musical and http://feeds.publicknowledge.org/~r/publicknowledge-main/~3/436205460/1830 More Info: http://www.cybertelecom.o
[WISPA] Sorry
Obviously that reply was to the wrong message, and was not meant to for the list. Sorry, I was too quick on the keyboard. It's been a long day. -Alex -- Alex Kelly ICON Technologies Inc. "We take care of technology so you can take care of business". 570-876-6908 -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of John Seaman Sent: Wednesday, August 13, 2008 2:34 PM To: wireless@wispa.org Subject: [WISPA] 900 MHz Horizontal Omni Recommendation Anyone here have specific recommendations for good 900 MHz Horizontal Omni antennas? Thanks, John WISPA Wants You! Join today! http://signup.wispa.org/ WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org Subscribe/Unsubscribe: http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/ WISPA Wants You! Join today! http://signup.wispa.org/ WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org Subscribe/Unsubscribe: http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/
[WISPA] sorry guys... don't respond, havin mail issues...
test... -- WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org Subscribe/Unsubscribe: http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/
[WISPA] sorry, we had a funky server issue...
...that for some reason re-sent massive batches of messages already sent a few weeks back. I apologize for all the confusion. Patrick Leary AVP Marketing Alvarion, Inc. o: 650.314.2628 c: 760.580.0080 Vonage: 650.641.1243 -Original Message- From: David E. Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, June 13, 2006 10:13 PM To: WISPA General List Subject: Re: Wierd ... was [WISPA] 3650 equipment John Scrivner wrote: > It is not a clock issue. All the messages that were sent with old dates > were already delivered previously. These are duplicate messages. Hm. Hmmm (digs around through mail server logs) Well, the old posts from three weeks ago and the new posts from today have different Message-IDs, so at least it ain't my fault. :) David Smith Semi-Unofficial WISPA Web Tinker MVN.net -- WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org Subscribe/Unsubscribe: http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/ * This footnote confirms that this email message has been scanned by PineApp Mail-SeCure for the presence of malicious code, vandals & computer viruses (191). * This footnote confirms that this email message has been scanned by PineApp Mail-SeCure for the presence of malicious code, vandals & computer viruses(43). -- WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org Subscribe/Unsubscribe: http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/