Yeah. There are probably multiple addresses at a big building like that but maybe not. If that's it then yep, just a polygon around it or find the address in the fabric file, then see if there are others.
On Fri, Jul 22, 2022 at 1:39 PM Seth Mattinen <se...@rollernet.us> wrote: > On 7/22/22 10:57 AM, Seth Mattinen wrote: > > On 7/22/22 10:16 AM, Cameron Crum wrote: > >> Mike are you asking me about the program or just a general question > >> about towers? If general question, then you just do a spatial > >> intersection between your buffered fiber routes or a polygon that > >> surrounds all the homes you pass and the address data they send. > >> Pretty easy if you know how to use a spatial database. A PE will ask > >> how you did it and then probably ask you to show them and then sign > >> and stamp. > >> > > > > > > So if one were only serve a specific address you'd just draw a box > > around that address? > > > > > Actually don't even know if "serve" is the correct term. We allow people > to connect to a port on our equipment if they happen to know about it > and can provide their own equipment or cabling to reach it. How would > one map something like that? A single square over our business office > address? > > -- > AF mailing list > AF@af.afmug.com > http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com >
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