Barbed Wire Fences Were An Early DIY Telephone Network

Barbed Wire Fences Were An Early DIY Telephone Network

Before Ma Bell came to town, and long before DSL, it was barbed wire, of all things, that brought rural communities together. A Sears telephone hooked up to barbed wire—miles of which were already conveniently strung along fences—connected far-flung ranches in the recently settled American west. Thus an ingenious and unregulated telephone system sprung up a hundred years ago.

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UK regulator names Microsoft, Google and others for white space wireless trials

UK regulator names Microsoft, Google and others for white space wireless trials

Though rural dwellers are often broadband-poor, there seems to be plenty of companies lining up to serve them in the UK. Regulator Ofcom just announced participants for its “white space” or unused spectrum trials, including Microsoft, Google, Click4Internet and British Telecom. Redmond’s going to test WiFi-like services to underserved Glasgow, while Click4internet will assess rural broadband in remote or tricky locations. Google has signed on as a potential database provider, and other use cases like traffic management will be tested by BT and others. Ofcom wants to launch such services by next year and released a blueprint detailing how existing mobile and digital terrestrial TV spectrums could be divvied up. To see all the companies and what each plans to do, check the source.

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Source: Ofcom

AT&T agrees to LTE interoperability with smaller US carriers

AT&T Logo on an angle

Numerous regional US carriers have called for AT&T to support their 700MHz bands, which would give them the LTE devices and roaming coverage they need to compete with national rivals. These networks may soon get their wish: as part of an FCC-led deal, AT&T has agreed to support LTE on the 700MHz A Block frequencies held by smaller providers. While AT&T is short on details, it’s already modifying its network to support the additional bands. Compatible devices will arrive in a “reasonable time frame,” the telecom giant says. The commitment doesn’t address LTE interoperability problems with Verizon and other major US networks, but it should help at least a few tiny carriers stand a fighting chance in the 4G era.

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Via: GigaOM

Source: FCC, AT&T Public Policy Blog

UK watchdog warns of rural broadband delay, blames BT monopoly

UK rural broadband deployment targets pushed back nearly two years

Despite receiving hundreds of millions of pounds in government subsidies, the effort to bring high-speed internet to rural parts of the UK seems to be running seriously behind schedule. The National Audit Office (NAO) says the original goal of providing 90 percent of Brits with access to at least a 25Mbps connection by May 2015 will likely be pushed back to the end of 2016 — and at a cost that’s £207 million ($312 million) more than first anticipated. A big part of the problem, according to the NAO, is a lack of competition among those bidding to help with the project. BT has already been awarded more than half of the local contracts and no other company is in the running to scoop up what’s left. As well as slowing things down, this effective monopoly may also be adding to the financial pain; whereas before the government expected BT to foot 36 percent of the bill, that’s now dropped to just 23 percent. Microsoft’s whitespace idea could avoid all these issues, but in terms of schedules it seems just as remote.

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Source: The Telegraph

Dish and nTelos start testing fixed LTE broadband in rural Virginia (video)

Dish and nTelos start testing fixed LTE broadband in rural Virginia

Dish has so far had to be content with offering broadband over its existing satellite network, but the company has made no secret of wanting a terrestrial service. The carrier can now do more than talk about those plans: it just launched a pilot LTE service in rural Virginia with nTelos’ help. The test run supplies 2.5GHz wireless internet access to a handful of homes near Afton and Waynesboro, with speeds hovering at a respectable 20Mbps to 50Mbps. Neither provider is ready to talk about where the trial goes from here, although Dish is ambitious enough to see all of an underserved rural America as its potential customer base. We have a hunch that the company would like to pick up a little more spectrum before its dreams come true.

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Source: Dish

UK regulator wants white space wireless service in 2014, starts trials this fall

TV static

While there have been white space test runs in the UK, these were private trials that weren’t going to get the ball rolling without government help. Thankfully, local regulator Ofcom is of a like mind. It now plans a trial for data on the in-between frequencies this fall, with full-fledged service going live as soon as 2014. The agency expects to settle on the final locations for the pilot after it chooses partners. No, Ofcom can’t guarantee that all the stars will align for rural broadband or other long-range wireless projects — but its involvement at least means those stars are within reach.

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Via: GigaOM

Source: Ofcom

Verizon wraps up 700MHz spectrum sales to three rural telecom firms

Verizon wraps up 700MHz spectrum sales to three rural telecom firms

While Verizon wasn’t quick to start selling 700MHz blocks to live up to the terms of its AWS purchase, it’s clearly willing to up the tempo. The carrier says it just finished deals this week to sell lower B-block 700MHz airwaves in Texas to already announced customer Nortex Communications as well as Oklahoma’s Panhandle Telecommunication Systems. We’re also learning that Verizon quietly signed off on a deal in mid-January that transfers A-block spectrum in Houston to Colorado Valley Communications. The agreements might not provide the interoperability with Verizon’s C-block that some crave, but they could still help level the playing field for smaller telecom outlets.

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Hughes updates its HughesNet satellite broadband with Gen4 service

DNP HughesNet Gen 4 Embargo

On the same day that Dish’s new satellite broadband service kicks off, partner Hughes is upgrading its own offering with even faster speeds. HughesNet Gen4 offers downloads of up to 15 Mbps to the 19 million (or so) Americans who can’t get high-speed fixed-line broadband services. $50 a month will get customers 10 Mbps download and 1 Mbps upload with a 20GB data cap, while $80 a month offers a 30GB limit and 2 Mbps upload — but for high-rolling hermits, $100 a month gets you the full 15 Mbps down, 2 Mbps up and a 40GB allowance. Current users wanting in on the action aren’t excluded from the program, and can register their interest at our More Coverage link.

Continue reading Hughes updates its HughesNet satellite broadband with Gen4 service

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Hughes updates its HughesNet satellite broadband with Gen4 service originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Oct 2012 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CenturyLink gets $35 million FCC grant to connect 45,000 rural homes to the internet (updated)

DNP CenturyLink gets $35 million FCC grant to connect 45,000 rural homes to the internet

CenturyLink has announced that it’s getting $35 million from the FCC’s Connect America Fund to hook 45,000 homes in rural areas up to the internet. The company isn’t hiding its disappointment at the donation, since it was originally angling for closer to $90 million. However, the conditions attached to the extra cash made further deployment “uneconomic,” so the company will have to settle at this first target to begin with. There is some hope for countryside folk: CenturyLink mavens have filed a waiver application which, if granted, would let the company connect a further 60,000 homes where service is currently too expensive to install.

Update: The FCC has made its own announcement, pledging that it’ll connect up to 400,000 unconnected citizens in the next three years and up to seven million in six. The full text is after the jump.

Continue reading CenturyLink gets $35 million FCC grant to connect 45,000 rural homes to the internet (updated)

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CenturyLink gets $35 million FCC grant to connect 45,000 rural homes to the internet (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Jul 2012 12:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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