 Reviews:
·QuantumVoice
| Hot air AT&T is emitting nothing but hot air. There are whole subdivisions near me that AT&T still hasn't deployed any form of DSL. All of them are less than five miles from the central office. These folks would be thrilled with even 256/128 service in comparison with their current choices of dial-up or satellite. |
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 patcat88 join:2002-04-05 Jamaica, NY kudos:1 | said by music4praise:AT&T is emitting nothing but hot air. There are whole subdivisions near me that AT&T still hasn't deployed any form of DSL. All of them are less than five miles from the central office. These folks would be thrilled with even 256/128 service in comparison with their current choices of dial-up or satellite. What about cable?
If you don't have cable because the area wasn't profitable enough, you sure as hell arenot going to have DSL (DSLAMs). |
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 | Actually, there any many areas where subdivisions are getting wired for DSL before even getting wired for cable. A lot of the time, cable doesn't want to come in until so many houses are built, but AT&T will offer DSL as soon as a few are built. I have noticed this especially in some of Charter's service areas. I guess they are too broke to jump in first. |
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 NormanSPremium,MVM join:2001-02-14 San Jose, CA kudos:4 Reviews:
·SONIC.NET
·Pacific Bell - SBC
| reply to music4praise said by music4praise:All of them are less than five miles from the central office. Assuming the CO is equipped with a DSLAM (not all are), between 3.25 miles and 5.0 miles is just plain too far for DSL, while between 2.25 and 3.25 is too far for anything faster than 1.5 Mb/s. And, with distance, you would be talking "wire" miles, not "crow-flight" miles. Copper does not always follow the most expeditious path between premises and CO. -- Norman ~Oh Lord, why have you come ~To Konnyu, with the Lion and the Drum |
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