On Sat, Apr 19, 2008 at 11:12 PM, Butch Evans <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sat, 19 Apr 2008, Marlon K. Schafer wrote:
>
> As for RF and networking skills, I don't think that the networking part
> > is that big of a deal. Anyone can handle that part of your network from
> >
>
> While this is p
Just found out quite recently about 802.21 and what it'll supposedly do for
interconnectivity between 802 and non-802 networks. Hate to admit this, but
I didn't know that until, like, yesterday! lol
How important is this for the WISPA group?
And what other new IEEE standards should someone who w
Until recently, I haven't had to worry about doing anything other than
simply specifiying an 802.11 channel on 1,6, or 11.
Now, however, I see that there are way more channels available (12/13 in
some countries for 802.11b; 53 through 67 / 94 through 175 for 802.11a), and
I also see that there are
This is true. But the networking expertise is much easier done remotely
than the RF stuff is. I know you already know that though :-)
marlon
- Original Message -
From: "Butch Evans" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "WISPA General List"
Sent: Saturday, April 19, 2008 11:12 PM
Subject: Re: [WISP
I mostly watch actual shipping product.
802.11 and proprietary. Other than that, there are no real products out
there these days
I'm looking forward to a polling system that will also have good colo
properties. But I keep waiting.
marlon
- Original Message -
From: "Rogelio" <[E
On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 10:36 AM, Marlon K. Schafer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> This is true. But the networking expertise is much easier done remotely
> than the RF stuff is. I know you already know that though :-)
> marlon
True dat!
I fire up PuTTY, do my thing, and often don't even where
I've not seen one this good that's current. But here's what I have so far.
http://odessaoffice.com/wireless/power_levels.html
marlon
- Original Message -
From: "Rogelio" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "WISPA General List"
Sent: Sunday, April 20, 2008 9:16 AM
Subject: [WISPA] 802.11 channel ->
Grin, yeah. That's one of the reasons it's been so hard for the big boys to
do unlicensed. It really requires feet, good feet, on the ground.
marlon
- Original Message -
From: "Rogelio" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "WISPA General List"
Sent: Sunday, April 20, 2008 10:42 AM
Subject: Re: [WI
The magic number is relevent to your region.
@$35 per sub and 300sub, that wouldn't even cover the roof right fees in my
neighborhood.
The magic number depends on at one point your reoccurring costs can stop
rising, proportional to your revenue.
In my marget it wasn't about profitabilty, it was
Sure 1 person can support 600 subs.
The problem is 1 tech can't be in two places at once.
It requires a minimum of two techs, and for efficiencies, preferably 3.
And what happens when thereis a global outage, and all 600 subs needed
responded to at once?
These are the factors that startup forget a
On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 10:52 AM, Marlon K. Schafer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Grin, yeah. That's one of the reasons it's been so hard for the big boys
> to do unlicensed. It really requires feet, good feet, on the ground.
> marlon
So, which vendors do you feel "get it" when it comes to addr
Valemount StarOS.
Rogelio wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 10:52 AM, Marlon K. Schafer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
>> Grin, yeah. That's one of the reasons it's been so hard for the big boys
>> to do unlicensed. It really requires feet, good feet, on the ground.
>> marlon
>
>
> So, which v
Nigel Bruin wrote:
> On 19 Apr 2008, at 09:29, Christopher Orr wrote:
>> Rogelio-
>>
>> I believe T-Mobile has that [EMAIL PROTECTED] is the brand.
>
> Yup. UMA using Kineto equipment.
>
Handover works well as long as you're not moving too fast. :)
My wife drove about 70 mph and maintaned a ssh session I was working in for 3
hours.
Then I was done working so I turned off the box.
Not bad :)
-Original Message-
From: Bryan Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, April 20, 2008 1:38 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] GSM
On Sun, 20 Apr 2008, Rogelio wrote:
>I've been doing networking stuff for a while, and I still have to
>pause and think for a second when it comes to IGMP, RSTP, etc.
Yup. There are many times I have to look at the documentation.
I've been doing ISP networks since 1993.
>The more things chang
What do you see as the future of our industry over the next 5 years?
AT&T is expanding U-Verse (will this be available outside of town?)
Verizon is expanding FiOS (will this be available outside of town?)
Cable will be using DOCSIS 3
3G will gain more steam
WiMAX will have larger and larger shares
You forgot satellite which is picking up steam.
Honestly.
Now is the time to sell! (hence one of the reasons I sold last month.)
Unless your servicing very rural area with almost no population.
-Original Message-
From: Mike Hammett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, April 20, 20
I would disagree. We are adding 120-140 new subs every month in an area
that has 200,000 population total (25,000 square miles). We have cable,
DSL, 2.5ghz licensed WiMax, two other WISPs (using Canopy), etc. We are
also not the cheapest service in town.
You have to provide some value to your s
I agree, now is not the time to sell. We are now just getting going .
Soon everyone will have to have a broadband connection and that means we
should be at least able to double our sizes quickly.
Dial up is almost dead. Couldn't be soon enough.
Travis Johnson wrote:
> I would disagree. We are a
I think this message would best be answered by what the FCC is going to do.
They seem to squash or auction everything (i.e. BPL, 700Mhz, DSL line sharing,
telcos not having to share fiber, etc...) we can get to compete with the big
guys in a real effective way.
The guys in the big markets that
We are still making money on dial-up... with over 600 accounts still
active (at $19.95/month) it still provides a good revenue stream. ;)
Travis
Microserv
George wrote:
I agree, now is not the time to sell. We are now just getting going .
Soon everyone will have to have a broadband connec
WiMAX was dead, is dead and will remain dead. OK, not factually true but
emotionally true. The cell companies will use WiMax frequencies and
technologies but they will be a premium service and not well suited to
compete with us for point to multi point fixed wireless. It will never live
up
So, would the next five years be a viable time to start a WISP, or is
the future really set for those already established WISPs?
Thanks,
Ryan
> WiMAX was dead, is dead and will remain dead. OK, not factually true but
> emotionally true. The cell companies will use WiMax frequencies and
> tec
Hmm, one employee, that would be me, I'm also the secretary, janitor,
installer, tech support, and the list goes on.
Kurt Fankhauser
WAVELINC
P.O. Box 126
Bucyrus, OH 44820
419-562-6405
www.wavelinc.com
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of G
Start a WISP now and quick, like someone else said, everyone will "need"
broadband pretty soon even if they don't want it, websites are NOT getting
less complex... I've noticed a lot of new installs now just because "the
kids" want to play XBOX live and stuff like that.
Kurt Fankhauser
WAVELINC
P.
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