  TKJunkMail Enjoy the sun Premium join:2002-03-03 Avalon, NJ
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·Comcast
| reply to Hipjones Re: Nice
said by Hipjones :Funny how when they get this to work there is less bashing on the BPL's and more on the HAM's. This is great.You wanted more upload for 2006,you got it.Please dont comment on how no one will ever get it or how it's gonna fade,been there,heard that. Once BPL can be shown to work, the same apps that work over any BB platform will work over BPL. That they are hyping Voip is sort of irrelevant. It works over any BB pipe. -- -- Join Red Room Forum My Web Page |
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 Endgame Your member at work Premium join:2005-07-07 USA
·Pacific Bell - SBC
| BHAM might be a good way to get broadband over long distances pretty soon and there's plenty of this ham spectrum available to fill up and clog! You hammers will be behammed. Yeah when pigs fly I know!  -- Introducing the new AT&T. Your world. Destroyed because we have the Deathstar in our logo! Hah Hah Haaaa  |
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 amungus Premium join:2004-11-26 America clubs:
| reply to TKJunkMail found that strange too, hyping it as being a pipe for power and phone.... voip will also (barely) work over a dialup connection.
like the 1st post, I could see weird random problems with this... really though, it ought to work as stable as cable, without any packets accidentally ending up at the neigbors house. time will tell.
glad there's less interference, that's a good thing even if you aren't a ham enthusiast. |
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 bbskeptic
join:2005-09-12 Burlington, VT | reply to TKJunkMail not all bb pipes are equal. A fat pipe with erratic latency issue will be useless for VoIP or any other real time application. |
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 RayW Premium join:2001-09-01 Layton, UT clubs:
·XMission
| reply to Endgame said by Endgame :BHAM might be a good way to get broadband over long distances pretty soon and there's plenty of this ham spectrum available to fill up and clog! You hammers will be behammed.  Yeah when pigs fly I know! Not sure if you are making a joke or are serious or just putting out some words, but the Hams only have the use of a very minor portion of the 1.8-30 MHz spectrum, and if memory serves me correctly, some of those frequencies are as a secondary user (meaning that if the prime user is using them, Hams can not).
Now the US military is a different subject. Last I saw, we still used HF and low VHF radios a lot. Could be interesting. -- I am not lost, I find myself every time. |
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