----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message-ID: <20201023012819.GA3363@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Fri, 23 Oct 2020 01:28:20 +0000
From: Bill Horne <malQassRimiMlation@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: CO backup power
On Thu, Oct 22, 2020 at 09:43:21AM -0400, Fred Goldstein wrote:
> This does lead to a push to use more private microwave solutions.
> We've replaced Verizon repeater backhauls with a mix of licensed and
> unlicensed microwave here. You'd be amazed what you can do unli-
> censed if you know what you're doing, though you really do have to
> know what you're doing or at least run it by someone who does, since
> some vendors will happily sell you a bill of goods. And unlicensed
> links need maintenance to check that they're not being clobbered by
> interference -- you may sometimes want to change frequency,
> especially on the popular 5 GHz band.
Is interference a common problem? Can low-beamwidth antennas help?
> The Wireless ISP industry has come a long way in 20 years. Its
> vendors have gone through multiple generations (not the same as
> mobile G's!) of technology. Fixed outdoor (WISP) gear is not the
> same as fixed indoor (WLAN, like Wi-Fi) or mobile. It's a category
> of its own. The biggest unlicensed-band equipment vendors in the US
> market are probably Cambium Networks (spun out of Motorola almost a
> decade ago), Ubiquiti, and Mimosa. MikroTik is a major radio-gear
> player in, uh, developing countries, but mainly a major router and
> switch player in the US.
Which vendor do you recommend for short (1-3 miles) and for longer
routes? How are the prices? How much time and effort goes into aiming
the dishes?
> Point to point and point to multipoint are different too -- with
> PtP, both ends have a highly directional antenna, while PtMP
> typically pairs a highly directional client radio with a sector. On
> 5 GHz, power limits for PtP use are highest, so you can easily shoot
> 10 miles with a pair of 2-foot dishes, if you have line of sight. If
> there's clutter (trees or buildings) in the way, though, all bets
> are off -- 5 GHz gets through a little bit of wood but not a lot. I
> do blast it through clutter on some short links though.
There used to be a couple of sites that would let me lookup the Tower
Height needed for a given route, without charge: do they still exist?
Thanks for the info: there's always another way to get it done, but
knowing how and who makes all the difference.
Bill
--
Bill Horne
(Remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
------------------------------
Message-ID: <26e49e6a-7c64-b01e-c25e-b3a908327947@ionary.com>
Date: 22 Oct 2020 09:43:21 -0400
From: "Fred Goldstein" <invalid@see.sig.telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Re: CO backup power
On 10/17/2020 7:13 PM, Steve Marquess wrote:
> ...
> So when my $22K T1 contract came up for renewal in late 2016 I decided
> to spend a small fortune on an antenna tower for line-of-sight access
> to local WISPs (I live in rough terrain). That has been much more
> reliable, not to mention way cheaper.
>
Several years ago, Verizon said that they'd be discontinuing their T1
service. A couple of years ago the FCC lifted their "carrier of last
resort" obligation for it. So basically they haven't bothered to go
around disconnecting working lines, but they're deteriorating in the
field and can't be trusted the way they used to be. Verizon's usual
answer is that they have FiOS in some places offering high-speed
Internet service you can watch TV on... but that has nothing to do with
what T1s are often used for. In particular, our local public safety
agencies use them for remote receivers on repeaters, so fire fighters'
walkie-talkies can be heard from fire scenes even when trapped in
basements. That has nothing to do with watching reruns on Hulu, which
seems to be what VZ wants you to buy instead. They basically took out
the copper plant and replaced it with an entertainment medium that
doesn't replace all of the old uses.
This does lead to a push to use more private microwave solutions. We've
replaced Verizon repeater backhauls with a mix of licensed and
unlicensed microwave here. You'd be amazed what you can do unlicensed if
you know what you're doing, though you really do have to know what
you're doing or at least run it by someone who does, since some vendors
will happily sell you a bill of goods. And unlicensed links need
maintenance to check that they're not being clobbered by interference --
you may sometimes want to change frequency, especially on the popular 5
GHz band.
The Wireless ISP industry has come a long way in 20 years. Its vendors
have gone through multiple generations (not the same as mobile G's!) of
technology. Fixed outdoor (WISP) gear is not the same as fixed indoor
(WLAN, like Wi-Fi) or mobile. It's a category of its own. The biggest
unlicensed-band equipment vendors in the US market are probably Cambium
Networks (spun out of Motorola almost a decade ago), Ubiquiti, and
Mimosa. MikroTik is a major radio-gear player in, uh, developing
countries, but mainly a major router and switch player in the US.
Point to point and point to multipoint are different too -- with PtP,
both ends have a highly directional antenna, while PtMP typically pairs
a highly directional client radio with a sector. On 5 GHz, power limits
for PtP use are highest, so you can easily shoot 10 miles with a pair of
2-foot dishes, if you have line of sight. If there's clutter (trees or
buildings) in the way, though, all bets are off -- 5 GHz gets through a
little bit of wood but not a lot. I do blast it through clutter on some
short links though.
Disclaimer: The Wireless ISP Association (WISPA) is my client; I'm their
FCC Technical Consultant.
------------------------------
Message-ID: <82595f97-e85d-4c4d-c93b-5b80da7d2f2e@veridicalsystems.com>
Date: 23 Oct 2020 19:59:19 -0400
From: "Steve Marquess" <marquess@veridicalsystems.com>
Subject: Re: CO backup power
Jeff asked me to repost my tower pictures.
I've attached a shot of the competed tower (I have over half a gig of
tower photos). The tower is 140' feet high, an unfortunate necessity
since I'm located in a little valley.
I also included: 1) a shot of the foundation; those piers are 9' tall.
4400 pounds of rebar and 34 yards of 9000psi concrete, and 2) a shot of
the tower structure which I assembled horizontally on the ground in two
pieces. Those give a sense of how much labor went into this (random
factoid: 800 lbs of hardware, every nut and bolt of which was torqued by
yours truly).
BTW the country permits office told me this is the largest privately
owned tower in the county.
The tower cost about $30K for materials and subcontracted services
(permits, geotechnical survey, crane rental). I saved another $30K (at
least) by doing all the erection myself, from foundation excavation and
pour to tower assembly (many manweeks of labor). If I had just written
a check I think it would have cost me at least $70K. The full process,
from getting the permit (non-trivial), the engineered design and
fabrication, foundation prep and assembly and erection, spanned a good
year and a half. Note I already owned a backhoe and forklift, both of
which were essential and heavily utilized. Also tools like a transit,
also essential.
That sounds expensive, and it was, but my company paid for it as a
business expense and keep in mind I was paying over $7K a year for the
T1 line. So payback is (counting my own labor as free) only about five
years. That's assuming the T1 service was viable, which at that point
it wasn't.
The WISP I'm using via the tower charges me $80 a month for 10Mb service
(up and down), which has been pretty solid.
An additional significant bonus was that I put a cellular repeater on
the top of the tower, and for the first time ever cell phones are now
usable in the house (not in the yard, unfortunately). I have some
nearby neighbors (right next door and right across the street for
instance) with a zero bar cell signal, and that's a real hassle when
POTS service isn't usable either.
Well, I've been very pleased with how it turned out. A big gamble, in
time and effort, but it paid off. So I think I'd do it again, more or
less as-is, even knowing how much work it turned out to be.
-Steve M.
Images:
The completed tower
The tower foundaton
The tower sections lying on the ground, with Steve in the picture
--
Steve Marquess
Veridical Systems, Inc.
1829 Mount Ephraim Road
Adamstown, MD 21710
301-874-2571
marquess@veridicalsystems.com
gpg/pgp key: http://veridicalsystems.com/docs/0x2FC01B38-pub.asc
------------------------------
Message-ID: <86sga6cx8l.fsf@telecom2018.csail.mit.edu>
Date: 22 Oct 2020 11:32:10 +0000
From: Moderator <telecomdigestsubmissions@remove-this.telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Utah's 911 system crashed and there are still no clear
answers about what went wrong
By Scott D. Pierce February 25, 2020
Beginning Saturday morning and continued intermittently until Sunday
morning, cellphone users were unable to connect to emergency services in
areas across the state. The problem affected Salt Lake, Davis, Weber,
Utah, Summit and Washington Counties - and more.
https://www.sltrib.com/news/2020/02/25/utah-authorities-still/
--
Bill Horne
Telecom Digest Moderator
***** Moderator's Note *****
As I've written before, stories about Centurylink's service failures
can be extremely difficult to find. This one, which came up while I
was searching Google for something else 911- related, illustrates the
point: it seems I can only find info on Centurylink's troubles by
accident, or weeks/months after the fact.
Bill Horne
Moderator
------------------------------
Message-ID: <20201021214051.GA28871@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Wed, 21 Oct 2020 21:40:51 +0000
From: Moderator <telecomdigestsubmissions@remove-this.telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Adblockers installed 300,000 times are malicious and should
be removed now
If you have Chromium versions of Nano Adblocker or Nano Defender, pay
attention.
By Dan Goodin
Adblocking extensions with more than 300,000 active users have been
surreptitiously uploading user browsing data and tampering with users'
social media accounts thanks to malware its new owner introduced a few
weeks ago, according to technical analyses and posts on Github.
ugo Xu, developer of the Nano Adblocker and Nano Defender extensions,
said 17 days ago that he no longer had the time to maintain the
project and had sold the rights to the versions available in Google's
Chrome Web Store. Xu told me that Nano Adblocker and Nano Defender,
which often are installed together, have about 300,000 installations
total.
https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2020/10/popular-chromium-ad-blockers-caught-stealing-user-data-and-accessing-accounts/
--
Bill Horne
Telecom Digest Moderator
------------------------------
Message-ID: <cadfae6d-6475-8874-2703-3e3c09ce3c9f@veridicalsystems.com>
Date: 20 Oct 2020 16:09:25 -0400
From: "Steve Marquess" <marquess@veridicalsystems.com>
Subject: Re: CO backup power
I don't know of Jeff mentioned it, but I've been complaining about
connectivity options here in Maryland for a long time; e.g.
http://veridicalsystems.com/blog/life-in-a-digital-ghetto/index.html
I also posted a detailed background piece for my neighbors (some of
whom are piggy-backing off my tower) as I was building the tower that
replaced the T1:
http://veridicalsystems.com/gallery/Community/WISP-options.html
Thanks,
-Steve M.
--
Steve Marquess
Veridical Systems, Inc.
1829 Mount Ephraim Road
Adamstown, MD 21710
301-874-2571
marquess@veridicalsystems.com
gpg/pgp key: http://veridicalsystems.com/docs/0x2FC01B38-pub.asc
------------------------------
Message-ID: <rmqg71$ope$1@dont-email.me>
Date: 21 Oct 2020 23:28:34 -0000
From: "bob prohaska" <bp@www.zefox.net>
Subject: Re: CO backup power
Steve Marquess <marquess@veridicalsystems.com> wrote:
>
> So when my $22K T1 contract came up for renewal in late 2016 I decided
> to spend a small fortune on an antenna tower for line-of-sight access
> to local WISPs (I live in rough terrain). That has been much more
> reliable, not to mention way cheaper.
And I'm fretting about reliability of a $100/month connection............
Which, up to now, has been quite good. Maybe I should just shut up and
be happy, then look for a WISP when I'm demonstrably not happy.
Thanks for the perspective!
bob prohaska
------------------------------
*********************************************
End of telecom Digest Sat, 24 Oct 2020