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| reply to trader22
Re: Learning Uverse deployment plans? In my experience, you watch for pavement markings and survey crews! Familiarize yourself with the cable routes between your property and the wire center and watch for construction activity.
If you're serious about tracking, make periodic requests with local authorities asking for copies of communications, permits or other documents related to communication utility changes and improvements. It should be as broad as possible because AT&T will likely use contractors for all of the advance work. (I think they used Michels in MKE a few years ago.) -- USNG: 16TDN2870 Find your USNG coordinates: USNGWeb |
 decifal join:2007-03-10 Bon Aqua, TN kudos:1 Reviews:
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| said by ArgMeMatey:In my experience, you watch for pavement markings and survey crews! Familiarize yourself with the cable routes between your property and the wire center and watch for construction activity.
If you're serious about tracking, make periodic requests with local authorities asking for copies of communications, permits or other documents related to communication utility changes and improvements. It should be as broad as possible because AT&T will likely use contractors for all of the advance work. (I think they used Michels in MKE a few years ago.) Lol, i've done this, had everything in the area mentally mapped out when one day I seen the contractors that normally are used to deploy Vrads and other services for ATT working at my RT location.. I was soo tickled I could've sheit skittles... Then I learned what they was actually doing... They was tapping into the fiber that fed my RT to run fiber down the road to a newly added Vrad in a much more lesser populated area than which my RT services (from the horses mouth itself on population served), and to further run to a cell tower down the road.......
Needless to say, it was another disappointing day with me and ATT :-p |