FiOS coming to La Plata !

bfncbs1

Can you ping me now? Good
It is Pike stretching the cable, but it is on the lower portion of the pole. It does go down 231, but they are tightening from Rt.5 towards 231.

It also looks like the cable is banded to the existing lower cable (which I thought was Comcast) and that makes no sense if it is power - plus there is no insulators.

I wonder if Pike is dipping into Comcast now? I will try to stop on the way home and ask...


I still think its power (could be wrong) but when I saw it the other day they were just at the corner of 231 going towards route 5. From 231 the cable is on the right.......The cable Pike was running was on the left right under the current power lines..

I hope I'm wrong!
 
I still think its power (could be wrong) but when I saw it the other day they were just at the corner of 231 going towards route 5. From 231 the cable is on the right.......The cable Pike was running was on the left right under the current power lines..

I hope I'm wrong!

What are those "spacer" loops between the lines? Are they for tensioning?

That is what they are stringing to...
 

Xaquin44

New Member
From the article:

"If there is a power shortage, fiber-optic lines allow a home or office to keep a telephone dial tone, unlike with cable or DSL."

False. Comcast Phone has a dial tone if you have a corded phone.

just an FYI.

Personally, I can't wait for FIOS .... I doubt I'll see it in the next 50 years (I'm in Potomac Heights in Indian Head), but I look forward to it all the same.
 

vanbells

Pookieboo!!!
I'm sure the county will get it first. They have been talking for a long time. I would imagine something like a Comcast franchise agreement to happen again. DED has been seeking broadband access as a marketing tool for furture business growth.
 

Geester

Geester
Broadband over Powerlines (BPL) revisited

AP
IBM to help build broadband network in power lines
Wednesday November 12, 1:29 pm ET
By Andrew Vanacore, AP Business Writer
Broadband over power lines gets a needed endorsement from a big player in computing

NEW YORK (AP) -- IBM Corp. is throwing its considerable weight behind an idea that seemed to have faded: broadband Internet access delivered over ordinary power lines.

The technology has been around for decades, but most efforts to implement the idea on a broad scale have failed to live up to expectations.

ADVERTISEMENT
Now, with somewhat scaled-back goals, improved technology, and a dose of low-interest federal loans, IBM is partnering with a small newcomer called International Broadband Electric Communications Inc. to try to make the idea work in rural communities that don't have other broadband options.

Their strategy is to sign up electric cooperatives that provide power to sparsely populated areas across the eastern United States. Rather than compete toe-to-toe with large, entrenched cable or DSL providers, International Broadband is looking for customers that have been largely left out of the shift to high-speed Internet.

Signing on IBM, perhaps the highest-profile company to buy into the idea, could juice a technology that has failed to make much of an imprint.

"The technology is important but what's really important is this is a seminal moment in the delivery of broadband services to rural customers," said Bill Moroney, the head of the Utilities Telecom Council, an industry trade group. "Here's a beginning and really a great leap forward."

That's a claim likely to be met with some skepticism. Other companies touting broadband access over power lines and through wall outlets have come and gone, dogged by technical hurdles and opposition from amateur radio operators who said the technology interfered with their signals.

In the most recent case, a Dallas utility that planned to provide broadband access to 2 million customers on its power grid decided to shelve the idea in May. Instead the company, Oncor Electric Delivery Co., said it would use the equipment only to monitor the grid.

Federal Communications Commission statistics for 2006, the most recent year available, showed that fewer than 5,000 customers in the U.S. had broadband access through power lines.

IBM and International Broadband say their approach has a better shot.

Neither see big utility companies ever adopting broadband over power lines, which struggles to match the speed of phone or cable lines.

"Broadband service by any of the major utilities doesn't make sense," said Ray Blair, IBM's head of advanced networking. "It will never be able to compete head on."

But in rural areas, where other broadband providers can't afford to build infrastructure, Blair said the technology has come far enough in the past few years to make the power line model economical.

Progress has been slow going, he said, because the technology suppliers in the industry are smaller players without large budgets for research and advertising.

The technology involves sending data on the same wires that provide electricity. Every half a mile or so, a device clamped to the line perpetuates the signal. Inside homes, customers plug a modem into any wall outlet and sign on.

But that stream of data has often run into interference with other wireless devices that happen to be nearby. Ham radio operators have been particularly irked, and even sued the FCC over it.

The key innovation introduced in the past few years, Blair said, is the ability to remotely control the devices fixed to power lines. That way it can be told to switch frequency when it meets interference.

IBM has signed a $9.6 million deal with International Broadband to provide and install the equipment. International Broadband Chief Executive Scott Lee said putting the network in place should take about two years and cost as much as $70 million.

The company will have access to 340,000 homes in Alabama, Indiana, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia, and Wisconsin, about 86 percent of which have no cable or DSL access, Lee said.

Capturing a large segment of that market would be a huge step for International Broadband, which currently provides only about 1,400 customers with broadband, most of them starting in the past year and half.

The basic service will start at $29.95 per month, which provides Internet download speeds of about 256 kilobits per second. That's just a few times faster than dial-up, but higher-end plans will offer up to 3 megabits per second, more comparable with DSL and cable. Also, upload and download speeds are the same over the power line service; upload speeds are generally lower on DSL and cable.

International Broadband has had help along the way from the federal government: Lee said the company has received $70 million in low-interest loans from the Department of Agriculture. Federal officials have seen broadband over power lines as an attractive option for spreading economic development in rural areas.

"Most of these people have broadband at school or at work but when they get home they lose all of those advantages," Lee said. "It's a service that is desperately needed."

Interesting stuff. Here's the original link...
IBM to help build broadband network in power lines: Financial News - Yahoo! Finance
 

bfncbs1

Can you ping me now? Good
AP
IBM to help build broadband network in power lines
Wednesday November 12, 1:29 pm ET
By Andrew Vanacore, AP Business Writer
Broadband over power lines gets a needed endorsement from a big player in computing

NEW YORK (AP) -- IBM Corp. is throwing its considerable weight behind an idea that seemed to have faded: broadband Internet access delivered over ordinary power lines.

The technology has been around for decades, but most efforts to implement the idea on a broad scale have failed to live up to expectations.

ADVERTISEMENT
Now, with somewhat scaled-back goals, improved technology, and a dose of low-interest federal loans, IBM is partnering with a small newcomer called International Broadband Electric Communications Inc. to try to make the idea work in rural communities that don't have other broadband options.

Their strategy is to sign up electric cooperatives that provide power to sparsely populated areas across the eastern United States. Rather than compete toe-to-toe with large, entrenched cable or DSL providers, International Broadband is looking for customers that have been largely left out of the shift to high-speed Internet.

Signing on IBM, perhaps the highest-profile company to buy into the idea, could juice a technology that has failed to make much of an imprint.

"The technology is important but what's really important is this is a seminal moment in the delivery of broadband services to rural customers," said Bill Moroney, the head of the Utilities Telecom Council, an industry trade group. "Here's a beginning and really a great leap forward."

That's a claim likely to be met with some skepticism. Other companies touting broadband access over power lines and through wall outlets have come and gone, dogged by technical hurdles and opposition from amateur radio operators who said the technology interfered with their signals.

In the most recent case, a Dallas utility that planned to provide broadband access to 2 million customers on its power grid decided to shelve the idea in May. Instead the company, Oncor Electric Delivery Co., said it would use the equipment only to monitor the grid.

Federal Communications Commission statistics for 2006, the most recent year available, showed that fewer than 5,000 customers in the U.S. had broadband access through power lines.

IBM and International Broadband say their approach has a better shot.

Neither see big utility companies ever adopting broadband over power lines, which struggles to match the speed of phone or cable lines.

"Broadband service by any of the major utilities doesn't make sense," said Ray Blair, IBM's head of advanced networking. "It will never be able to compete head on."

But in rural areas, where other broadband providers can't afford to build infrastructure, Blair said the technology has come far enough in the past few years to make the power line model economical.

Progress has been slow going, he said, because the technology suppliers in the industry are smaller players without large budgets for research and advertising.

The technology involves sending data on the same wires that provide electricity. Every half a mile or so, a device clamped to the line perpetuates the signal. Inside homes, customers plug a modem into any wall outlet and sign on.

But that stream of data has often run into interference with other wireless devices that happen to be nearby. Ham radio operators have been particularly irked, and even sued the FCC over it.

The key innovation introduced in the past few years, Blair said, is the ability to remotely control the devices fixed to power lines. That way it can be told to switch frequency when it meets interference.

IBM has signed a $9.6 million deal with International Broadband to provide and install the equipment. International Broadband Chief Executive Scott Lee said putting the network in place should take about two years and cost as much as $70 million.

The company will have access to 340,000 homes in Alabama, Indiana, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia, and Wisconsin, about 86 percent of which have no cable or DSL access, Lee said.

Capturing a large segment of that market would be a huge step for International Broadband, which currently provides only about 1,400 customers with broadband, most of them starting in the past year and half.

The basic service will start at $29.95 per month, which provides Internet download speeds of about 256 kilobits per second. That's just a few times faster than dial-up, but higher-end plans will offer up to 3 megabits per second, more comparable with DSL and cable. Also, upload and download speeds are the same over the power line service; upload speeds are generally lower on DSL and cable.

International Broadband has had help along the way from the federal government: Lee said the company has received $70 million in low-interest loans from the Department of Agriculture. Federal officials have seen broadband over power lines as an attractive option for spreading economic development in rural areas.

"Most of these people have broadband at school or at work but when they get home they lose all of those advantages," Lee said. "It's a service that is desperately needed."

Interesting stuff. Here's the original link...
IBM to help build broadband network in power lines: Financial News - Yahoo! Finance

BPL is dead and has been dead for years. This has no chance. Same story different year.
 

bfncbs1

Can you ping me now? Good
FiOS construction schedule for this month -

Charles – La Plata
Baltimore St
Caroline Dr
Cecil Rd
Charles St (Rte 6) - Appears to end at Penns Hill Rd.
Crain Hwy (Rte 301)
E Hawthorne Dr
Harford St
Kent Av
Oriole Ln
Prospect St
Spruce St
Talbot St
Washington Av


Waldorf is also included in the link below.

Also confirmed that St.Marys or Calvert won't see FiOS in 2009

http://www22.verizon.com/about/community/md/files/MDFTTPJAN09.pdf
 

hockeynutmd

New Member
FiOS construction schedule for this month -

Charles – La Plata
Baltimore St
Caroline Dr
Cecil Rd
Charles St (Rte 6) - Appears to end at Penns Hill Rd.
Crain Hwy (Rte 301)
E Hawthorne Dr
Harford St
Kent Av
Oriole Ln
Prospect St
Spruce St
Talbot St
Washington Av


Waldorf is also included in the link below.

Also confirmed that St.Marys or Calvert won't see FiOS in 2009

http://www22.verizon.com/about/community/md/files/MDFTTPJAN09.pdf

Just our luck...1 1/2 miles from Cooksey's Store and we won't be able to get it.
 

Geester

Geester
Today, I made my monthly call to Verizon to ask when I will get FIOS (I live in the Hollybrook neighborhood off of Penns Hill Rd.) Of course I don't expect to get it anytime in the near future, so I wasn't surprised by the generic answer of "currently unavailable in your area, no other information available." So I asked to talk to someone with a little more information such as a local build tech manager or anybody else who could at least give me a straight answer. I eventually got in touch with someone who was supposedly talking to "someone local to my area who works in the field." After being on hold for like twenty minutes, the guy told me that it would be available at my address on Feb. 20th. "February 20th of this year?" I asked. He said yup. Of course I didn't believe him, so I again told him that I was 3 miles down Penns Hill Rd. He told me to call back after February 20th if I didn't hear anything. He also gave me a number to call if February 20th comes and goes and no one can help me. So instead of waiting, I hung up with him and called the number right away. Someone picked up the phone right away, I gave him no information other than my address, and after a ten second delay, he gave me the same date of Feb. 20th. I still have a hard time believing this for a number of reasons. The main reason is that there hasn't been Verizon truck one down Penns Hill Rd in the recent past. The closest activity I've seen is at the corner of Rt. 6 and Penns Hill Rd. Am I to believe that they can lay 3 miles of fiber down Penns Hill in the next three weeks? Yeah right. But isn't it weird that two different people gave me the exact same date of Feb. 20th? I will update this post on February 21st with great news - LOL. A guy can dream, right?
 
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hockeynutmd

New Member
Today, I made my monthly call to Verizon to ask when I will get FIOS (I live in the Hollybrook neighborhood off of Penns Hill Rd.) Of course I don't expect to get it anytime in the near future, so I wasn't surprised by the generic answer of "currently unavailable in your area, no other information available." So I asked to talk to someone with a little more information such as a local build tech manager or anybody else who could at least give me a straight answer. I eventually got in touch with someone who was supposedly talking to "someone local to my area who works in the field." After being on hold for like twenty minutes, the guy told me that it would be available at my address on Feb. 20th. "February 20th of this year?" I asked. He said yup. Of course I didn't believe him, so I again told him that I was 3 miles down Penns Hill Rd. He told me to call back after February 20th if I didn't hear anything. He also gave me a number to call if February 20th comes and goes and no one can help me. So instead of waiting, I hung up with him and called the number right away. Someone picked up the phone right away, I gave him no information other than my address, and after a ten second delay, he gave me the same date of Feb. 20th. I still have a hard time believing this for a number of reasons. The main reason is that there hasn't been Verizon truck one down Penns Hill Rd in the recent past. The closest activity I've seen is at the corner of Rt. 6 and Penns Hill Rd. Am I to believe that they can lay 3 miles of fiber down Penns Hill in the next three weeks? Yeah right. But isn't it weird that two different people gave me the exact same date of Feb. 20th? I will update this post on February 21st with great news - LOL. A guy can dream, right?

I live off Oliver Shop, right near Wheatley Road. Would you mind sending me the number you called so I can inquire as well?

Thanks
 

atrusomder

Isaiah 55:8-9
I called some 2 months or more ago for my dad, and they told me the same thing.
It will be available after the 20th of Feb...
He's down Mattingly..
 

SoMdDude

New Member
Heyyy dude, im in Charles County very close to PG County and Accokeek (rout 228 and Bensville road to be exact), and i know for a fact there is a CO right next to the entrance for my neighborhood (Laurel Branch)

Any word on when FIOS will be in my neck of the woods? :) Danke

And you all talking about Waldorf being a bad area, yea certain places are bad, just like any town these days, where i live its very quiet and there is never any crime, my 2 cents

Oh snap! just saw the link you posted for the work schedules in charles, yipppeeee!!!

Charles - Waldorf

Bensville Rd
Bergamont Ct
Billingsley Rd

Im a ½ mile off bensville at the most, w00t




I'm a manager with Verizon :howdy:

We use existing RT's and add what is called a adtran to the remote terminals. This is how we reach more remote areas or areas that have a large population but aren't close to a central office.

Let me clarify on the FiOS offering. When I say La Plata I mean La Plata. Other towns and cities such as Nanjemoy, Port Tobacco, Welcome are not targeted for FiOS.....Only La Plata sorry :jameo:

Back to your feed ....You are more then likely fed from Penns Hill Rd which would pretty much be a no go for DSL. Have you looked into EVDO? I have that now and it's great. The price is high but I would have to say quality of the service in wonderful. I average about 1.5m down and about 500K up which is better then the lowest DSL tier. DSl isgood obviously because o the price.
 
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bfncbs1

Can you ping me now? Good
Today, I made my monthly call to Verizon to ask when I will get FIOS (I live in the Hollybrook neighborhood off of Penns Hill Rd.) Of course I don't expect to get it anytime in the near future, so I wasn't surprised by the generic answer of "currently unavailable in your area, no other information available." So I asked to talk to someone with a little more information such as a local build tech manager or anybody else who could at least give me a straight answer. I eventually got in touch with someone who was supposedly talking to "someone local to my area who works in the field." After being on hold for like twenty minutes, the guy told me that it would be available at my address on Feb. 20th. "February 20th of this year?" I asked. He said yup. Of course I didn't believe him, so I again told him that I was 3 miles down Penns Hill Rd. He told me to call back after February 20th if I didn't hear anything. He also gave me a number to call if February 20th comes and goes and no one can help me. So instead of waiting, I hung up with him and called the number right away. Someone picked up the phone right away, I gave him no information other than my address, and after a ten second delay, he gave me the same date of Feb. 20th. I still have a hard time believing this for a number of reasons. The main reason is that there hasn't been Verizon truck one down Penns Hill Rd in the recent past. The closest activity I've seen is at the corner of Rt. 6 and Penns Hill Rd. Am I to believe that they can lay 3 miles of fiber down Penns Hill in the next three weeks? Yeah right. But isn't it weird that two different people gave me the exact same date of Feb. 20th? I will update this post on February 21st with great news - LOL. A guy can dream, right?

You are correct that it will come down Penns Hill. It's suppose to stop right before the "Y" at Penns Hill/Newport Church Rd. This is obviously coming from Rt.6

Now the date of Feb.20th is pretty aggressive since there is a lot of fiber that needs to be buried on Penns Hill.

The good news is at least that area will finally get real broadband.......And of course in my opinion the best broadband on the market! Of course I'm a little bias!
 

bfncbs1

Can you ping me now? Good
Heyyy dude, im in Charles County very close to PG County and Accokeek (rout 228 and Bensville road to be exact), and i know for a fact there is a CO right next to the entrance for my neighborhood (Laurel Branch)

Any word on when FIOS will be in my neck of the woods? :) Danke

And you all talking about Waldorf being a bad area, yea certain places are bad, just like any town these days, where i live its very quiet and there is never any crime, my 2 cents

Oh snap! just saw the link you posted for the work schedules in charles, yipppeeee!!!

Charles - Waldorf

Bensville Rd
Bergamont Ct
Billingsley Rd

Im a ½ mile off bensville at the most, w00t



Where you live you are golden!
 

bfncbs1

Can you ping me now? Good
Today, I made my monthly call to Verizon to ask when I will get FIOS (I live in the Hollybrook neighborhood off of Penns Hill Rd.) Of course I don't expect to get it anytime in the near future, so I wasn't surprised by the generic answer of "currently unavailable in your area, no other information available." So I asked to talk to someone with a little more information such as a local build tech manager or anybody else who could at least give me a straight answer. I eventually got in touch with someone who was supposedly talking to "someone local to my area who works in the field." After being on hold for like twenty minutes, the guy told me that it would be available at my address on Feb. 20th. "February 20th of this year?" I asked. He said yup. Of course I didn't believe him, so I again told him that I was 3 miles down Penns Hill Rd. He told me to call back after February 20th if I didn't hear anything. He also gave me a number to call if February 20th comes and goes and no one can help me. So instead of waiting, I hung up with him and called the number right away. Someone picked up the phone right away, I gave him no information other than my address, and after a ten second delay, he gave me the same date of Feb. 20th. I still have a hard time believing this for a number of reasons. The main reason is that there hasn't been Verizon truck one down Penns Hill Rd in the recent past. The closest activity I've seen is at the corner of Rt. 6 and Penns Hill Rd. Am I to believe that they can lay 3 miles of fiber down Penns Hill in the next three weeks? Yeah right. But isn't it weird that two different people gave me the exact same date of Feb. 20th? I will update this post on February 21st with great news - LOL. A guy can dream, right?

By the way you may or may not have noticed the orange conduit sticking out of the ground at the corner of 6/Penns hill. Thats was placed 2 weeks ago. VZ conduit for fiber.

You will notice going down Rt.6 at Hudson Ridge and several other places.
 
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