People have been digging up fiber thinking it's copper anyways, but yeah that's a big problem.
On Thu, Dec 4, 2008 at 9:43 AM, Joe Greco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > That is the one and only thing keeping a land line at my home. I > > have two young children, and I need to be sure that if something > > were to ever happen that: 1.) The phone would work even if the > > power was out, or the Internet connectivity was flaking out. > > 2.) 911 would function exactly the way it is supposed to, and > > not be routed to some 3rd party call center which could potentially > > delay a response. > > > > I haven't found the power to be reliable, and the cable Internet > > tends to go down when the power goes out. There's always cellular, > > but then you have to depend on there being someone with a cell phone > > around to make the call, and my kids aren't to the age yet that I > > would want them toting around their own cell phones. As long as > > my POTS line is more reliable than VoIP, I'll probably keep it. > > Network reliability is certainly one aspect. > > However, in some areas, copper is being stripped (and I don't mean stolen, > though that's a problem too), see the typical Verizon FIOS install for > example. The reliability of having a battery-backed CPE of some sort is > questionable. In an inside-CPE environment, replacing the battery is a > rough proposition. You can't expect customers to do it, look at how hard > it is to get smoke detector batteries replaced, and this would be a more > complex SLA-alike less frequently. You can't get workers to do it, just > think of the logistics. In an outside-CPE environment, you could do it, > probably. But then you might well be better off just running DSL to the > home and centralizing the battery, and um, does that bring us back to > U-verse? (Did I just make an argument for U-verse?) > > It would be nice to see a program like AT&T Lifeline that was oriented > towards maintaining copper for emergency purposes, except that I suspect > that this would raise a whole new set of issues, such as periodic testing. > Regular use of a landline ensures that it works. > > This raises other issues as well; E911 services are probably experiencing > an ever-higher volume of "test" calls, for example, and testing of copper- > only "emergency POTS lines" would raise that further. I suppose this > could be addressed with an automated system fronting the 911 call ("You > have reached 911. To report an emergency, please press 1 or wait on the > line. For test functions, press pound.") I'd personally like that, it > would be better for testing purposes. > > Fun pics: > > http://www.kramerfirm.com/pictures/thumbnails.php?album=2 > > VoIP service is dodgy on the end of consumer grade Internet connections, > though. Around here, the cable TV tends to fail with the power when the > power supply/amps on the poles burn through their batteries in an hour > or two. DSL may be a bit better, but since everyone's got a cordless > phone that requires AC power, ... > > Really, I sometimes wonder at how readily accessible 911 really is in a > regional crisis. You're probably well-covered if you have VoIP *plus* > a cell or POTS, but how many people have actually checked with their 911 > dispatch to make sure that their VoIP is registering properly? > > Given the tendency towards wireless, if you don't have POTS, it may be > best to just keep an old cell around without a service plan to be able > to dial 911. You can probably even teach the kids how to deal with that, > at least once they're old enough to know their home phone and address. > > ... JG > -- > Joe Greco - sol.net Network Services - Milwaukee, WI - http://www.sol.net > "We call it the 'one bite at the apple' rule. Give me one chance [and] then > I > won't contact you again." - Direct Marketing Ass'n position on e-mail > spam(CNN) > With 24 million small businesses in the US alone, that's way too many > apples. > > -- Josh Potter