Matthew Black wrote:
On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 10:10:33 -0800 Etaoin Shrdlu <shrdlu@deaddrop.org> wrote:
Matthew Black wrote:
On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:51:41 -0800 "Tomas L. Byrnes" <tomb@byrneit.net> wrote:
Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are actually LOCAL.
In Verizon land, residential customers do not have CLEC voice or DSL alternatives. We do not have Cox. Our area is served by Charter Communications who has the broadband cable monopoly. Verizon has the fiber monopoly with their FIOS. AT&T fiber is not possible in Verizon land. Nobody competes against Verizon for residential service in Southern California.
Sir, both COVAD and DSLExtreme beg to differ. Seriously. I just checked.
-- The histories of mankind are histories only of the higher classes.
Thomas Malthus
Going through COVAD's interactive DSL chooser, there are no options for RESIDENTIAL service.
<http://covad.com/web/index.html>
DSLextreme is charging a higher price than Verizon and I suspect they are simply reselling Verizon's DSL rather than connecting my copper to their network. That's hardly what I consider CLEC service. I could be wrong and would switch if I could. But I don't see them offering voice and that's why I conclude they are reselling Verizon's DSL service.
matthew black california state university, long beach
I have 25 DSLExtreme lines along with 3 other providers in businesses all around the SoCal area. The local loop is whatever the telco is, but the network is their own. The service was better a few years ago, but it's still far exceeds what the big telco provides. The DSLX techs know their stuff and only once did I have a tech not believe me. On the last call, the tech asked me if I checked the DSL filters and I told them I had a hole house Selco box at the MPOE and ran a dedicated cat5 wire as the phone like for the DSL modem. The tech understood what I had did. No ATT, SBC, or Verizon tech has ever understood that. For one location, because of the distance, I had to order an IDSL line from Covad (SBC owned the wires). I ran a cat5 drop from MPOE to the office to make the tech's job easier. (yes I use cat5 for phone and everything. Why not?) Well, the install date came, the Covad tech came out and installed it, but left with it not working. So the blame game went on between SBC and Covad for 2 months before a time could be arranged when both could be at the location at the same time. When Covad connects the DSL modem to the pair at the MPOE the modem makes a hissing sound. Covad proclaims the pair is bad. SBC guy says the pair test good. SBC swaps to a new pair, but hissing remains. During this time they are both on hold to the same call center, with their cell phones on speaker. It was the same on hold music so it was sort of like listening in stereo. Both basically sat around for 3 hours on hold until the SBC guy gave up and left. Covad guy's phone battery went dead 10 minutes later. Nobody ever got a tech on the phone. To prove that the hissing noise was causing the problem, Covad guy connected his laptop up and quickly got on the internet. Everything was working fine. I guess nobody checked 3 hours ago and just assumed it didn't work. He tossed me a box with the modem and left. I was left to punch down the phone lines and put the modem in the office. It was then I discovered IDSL has about 130 volts running in the lines. Outch. The IDSL line stopped working 2 years later so I replaced it with an EVDO modem. Been fine since. ATT is worse. I had a DSL guy install the DSL in a vacant abandoned building twice. The business moved down the block, but the ATT guy just went to the old building again and again. it took 4 months for that ATT install.