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#1 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Gilford, NH / Welch Island
Posts: 6,311
Thanks: 2,407
Thanked 5,310 Times in 2,071 Posts
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I have Fairpoint on Welch and rarely need to reboot. Maybe once a month if I had to guess... Dan
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It's Always Sunny On Welch Island!! ![]() |
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,513
Thanks: 221
Thanked 820 Times in 492 Posts
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I did have an AT&T Microcell unit tied to it, it should not have anything to do with it but we had to reboot them both daily to keep it working smooth. I would not lose connectivity but it would be slow until I did.
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#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Welch Island and The Taylor Community
Posts: 3,318
Thanks: 1,233
Thanked 2,103 Times in 960 Posts
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We had stop and go service Sunday evening but the modem never lost synch and the internet light stayed green. When the speed test did run it was our normal 1.54 down 0.4 up. So I think that the line to the substation is good but Fairpoint was having capacity issues higher up in the network.
We did experience very poor internal Fairpoint coordination after a major 7/2 outage, the 26 pair cable on Welch was down between several poles. Trouble report "tickets" were entered and then mysteriously lost in interstellar space. Internet tech support was not able to get info on repair status and so on. I think that the old, formally Verizon and Bell Atlantic segment, has never been integrated with the newer internet based part of the company. The tech that repaired our service, same one that did the original install, was a pleasure to work with and got us up and running in short order. That is, as soon as he was aware that we had a problem. And that was when I saw him up on a nearby pole working another problem as he had yet to receive our repair ticket. And he called a few days later to make sure that our service was still OK. So there are a lot of good folk in the company, the real problem is one of the management structure. |
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#4 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Welch Island and The Taylor Community
Posts: 3,318
Thanks: 1,233
Thanked 2,103 Times in 960 Posts
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From WMUR web site:
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#5 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Mont Vernon NH & Big Barndoor Island
Posts: 323
Thanks: 4
Thanked 184 Times in 62 Posts
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Good news is the island tech called me, I explained the problem and he called someone who fixed it in 10 minutes... Guess they migrated me to another port, but never did the back end setup work to make it live.
Only a monopoly can get away with a 7 day outage for simple crap like this. It's such a shame we have good LTE up here now, but it's too damned expensive to use. I can't see the islands ever getting upgraded equipment for anything more then 1.5mbs |
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#6 | |
Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2013
Posts: 13
Thanks: 21
Thanked 11 Times in 3 Posts
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http://www.google.com/loon/ It seems like a great way to get high speed internet to places like islands or rural areas! FWIW, we have Metrocast at the lake (WAM) and I see issues with it where it'll drop Internet connection. I'm monitoring it now, and if I see it happen on a fairly regular basis then I'll have proof to them about the issues with their services. Dave |
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#7 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Lakes Region
Posts: 1,321
Thanks: 282
Thanked 287 Times in 169 Posts
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I hope some magical breakthrough happens in technology, or Bill Gates decides to become an island dweller, but I'm not holding my breath. ![]() |
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#8 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Mont Vernon NH & Big Barndoor Island
Posts: 323
Thanks: 4
Thanked 184 Times in 62 Posts
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Well, the theory is that "utilities" are allowed to be a monopoly and given access to public property (roads, spectrum bandwidth etc.), in exchange for serving the entire public. They're not supposed to be able to cherry pick the most profitable customers and dump the rest.
I'd guess that the islands don't fall into the profitable category. It seems like the right long term solution is wireless, but at $10/gb it's off by at least a factor of 10 to be useful. Comcast = ~.20/GB ATT/Verizon = ~10.00/GB |
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#9 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Lakes Region
Posts: 1,321
Thanks: 282
Thanked 287 Times in 169 Posts
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then everyone in Coos county deserves the same. Coming down to how it relates to the Lakes Region, lets take a few examples. Moultonboro first had Amrac cable. Owned by someone that owned a cable company in another state and a house in a development in town. They would only run cable to Rt 109, 25, Mboro neck and a few to select developments. Even Time Warner, today, a sucessor after a few buyouts has a number of areas they aren't willing to service, yet the town has them as a monopoly. Take Tamworth, another town in the lakes region family, Time Warner only ran cable to the most populated areas, the others are left to their own resources. Trying to abbreviate this as much as possible. Lets take a contrast, Alexandria for example. They required that everyone with a power drop also have a cable outlet at the closest pole to every building. Hence, even the remotest shack anywhere in town has an outlet a pole distance away. That is Metrocast territory. Then there is Sandwich, they required the same, and Time Warner has declined to service any area of town. So, whats with Fairpoint servicing islands at an obvious loss.... Well, when they agreed to buy out Verizon, they had to agree to connect 90% (this is a close guess.... someone can Google this) of the state, regardless of their location. Indeed it took them a few years, but they are almost at that point. They are doing this at a loss to get the states copper landline business. One other point, which is current technology. Suissevale, in Moultonboro (very, very dense funnel development) was afforded a early DSL. This was back when cable wasn't TW, but Adelphia (if memory serves me right), they had 4M speeds max and Verizon had a fiber linked terminal box in the middle of the development, this was 15 years ago. Verizon topped out in the old DSL at 3M and they sold it at quite a discount. Well, in the last 15 years, Time Warner will offer 50M (if you can afford it) and Verizon (now Fairpoint) will not upgrade to their new new technology, which will support 15M. Can you blame them? Why pay to install their new gear at 15M when people can get 50M ? Why should Fairpoint pay anything at all, since the area qualifies in their 90% area? So back to Islands, the original thread. Take Welch, Fairpoint is meeting their commitment to the PUC, no reason to upgrade, when outer mongolia, NH has nothing and that can increase their % yield for their PUC commitment. Whatever anyone has with Fairpoint is where they will stay, unless there is an external factor.... Sorry to bore ![]() |
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