• I'm ditching the cable company - someday [telecom]

    From Bill Horne@21:1/5 to All on Sat Feb 11 18:46:19 2023
    Richard called me on Wednesday morning, and said he'd be right over:
    he was at the Central Office, a couple of miles away from my house.

    Our dog went crazy a few minutes later, and I told Richard that “He’s harmless!” while he pulled boxes out of his truck.

    I hadn't been able to figure out where the old drop wire came in: the
    fiber drop for the cable modem descends from the pole, runs over my
    driveway, and attaches to the eave at the corner on the South side of
    the house. There was, however, no sign of a mounting point for a
    telephone drop wire.

    I showed Richard the downstairs wall where the RG-59 coax feeds come
    out of the box - there's a coaxial TV feed in almost every room,
    unused for all the years I've been here, because I’ve never thought
    that satellite TV was worth the money, and the two dishes that were
    put up to provide it are still attached to the mounts at the front of
    my house.. I have a cable modem, that provides me with a limited
    Internet connection which, by the good graces of the press contact at
    the North Carolina Governor's office, allows me ssh access to the
    Telecom Digest servers. The new owner of the cable tv company cut that
    off the day after they took over, and I had to borrow access to a VPN,
    which I now pay Alexis Rosen at Panix to keep available.

    The VPN allwoed me to publish the Digest, during the week or two that
    it took the press contact at the North Carolina Governor’s office to
    convince the new cable tv owner to stop blocking port 22. I figured
    they would start up again in another few days, which is what Comcast
    used to do when I lived near Boston, but port 22 is still open, so I’m assuming that they don’t think I’m worth the trouble.

    No complaint to the Governor’s office goes unpunished, however: my Callcentric phone number - it’s a VoIP connection - stopped working
    back around September. I’ve already posted about that fiasco, and the
    VoIP ports are still blocked, after multiple complaints and calls from oh-so-sincere-and-knowledgeable flacks who told me that the problem
    was "CGNAT" and that I should pay for a fixed IP address - only $30
    per month extra! - to "cure" the problem. The oh-so-sincere-and-
    knowledgeable flacks were, for some reason, unable to give me a reason
    why the cable tv company customers who purchase the VoIP phone
    offering made by the cable tv company weren’t required to have a fixed
    IP address, but they promised to do some research and get back to
    me. That was, you guessed it, around September.

    The Cisco 303 VoIP instrument has been sititng on the desk in the
    spare bedroom, where my wife has her computer, and she plays Solitaire
    for hours on end, with a special mouse that I bought so she could
    still use the machine. Her hands shake too much for her to dial a cell
    phone, but the buttons on the Cisco phone are still big enough for her
    to use, and I want her to have a way to call 911 if there’s an
    emergency. I had bought it on Ebay when I got my extension from
    Hamshack Hotline, which connects me to other ham operators through an
    Asterisk PBX in the basement of a ham who lives in Massachusetts. I
    got one for my brother, too, since he doesn't like to talk on his
    cellphone, and the model 303 VoIP phone has three lines available, so
    I put in the Callcentric service so we’d have a "home" number.

    My house is too far down in the hollow for me to see the mountaintops
    where Skyrunner has their head ends, so I can’t bypass the cable tv
    company with MMDS service. There are no other cable tv companies with
    service up here in the hills, even though the fiber connection the
    current pirates use was installed at taxpayer expense and is available
    to competitors.

    That left Frontier Communications, the ILEC for this area, but they
    don't offer any fiber service. I was talking to another Ham Radio
    operator who’s in my club, and he was telling me how he got a VPN
    going through a linode machine, allowing him to bypass the port blocks
    of the cable tv company to provide Echolink service to our club's
    repeater network, and the subject of VoIP came up: I told him that my brother’s club has VoIP phones they use at emergency deployments,
    connected via microwave links to Asterisk boxes at their EOC, so that
    the Incident Commanders and politicians at a disaster sites can use
    the interfaces they’re familiar with. I could, I suppose, figure out
    how to get the same VPN going, although I’d have to get a Raspberry Pi
    box going to do the routing, unless I chose to just use my Linux box
    all the time.

    My friend asked if I could get DSL, and I realized that I hadn't
    considered it, even though I used it for years up north. My wife
    enjoys Netflix movies when she's not playing Solitaire, and I hadn't
    know that there are DSL services available with speeds rivaling what
    the cable tv company claims to provide.

    I called Frontier the next day, and the Service Rep told me that I
    could get a home phone bundled with DSL service for less than
    Callcentric's service costs, but her computer didn't show if she could
    sell me ADSL, so she put in "a ticket" to have it checked out, and
    promised me a callback.

    Frontier rang my cell phone on Monday - it uses a "WIFI" connection
    when I'm at home, since the cell towers are too far away - and we
    spoke on what is obviously a VoIP connection - funny how companies
    with expert lawyers don’t have to worry about port blockage - and I
    placed an order for both a landline and ADSL service.

    Richard asked to see the electrical panel, and I took him to the back
    room next to the furnace, where the Generac switch and the main
    electric panel are, and he showed me the "Demarcation Point" box, on
    the wall next to the electric panel, with an underground feedline that apparently runs under my driveway instead of over it. He found the one
    "JK" lead that goes to the phone outlet upstairs in my living room,
    alongside four or five others which used to be cut down on a
    "protection" block that was, surprisingly, on the customer side of the
    demarc. We went upstairs, where the cable modem and my Asus router sit
    on the shelf over the chairs where we sit and watch the news from the
    CBS streaming service. The end of the wire had a four-prong jack on
    it, and Richard swapped it out for an RJ-14, and asked if I wanted to
    keep the old one. I told Richard that the Smithsonian was looking for
    it, and that he should send it in and claim the prize, and we shared a
    laugh and he connected the DSL modem along with a low-pass filter for
    the POTS line. I plugged in an old "Trimline" type of phone I’ve had
    in a box for years, amazed that the dial tone wasn't just another VoIP connection, since Frontier charges about $25 less per month for the
    phone line when it’a part of the bundle.

    Righard told me that the DSL I was getting requires two pairs of wire,
    since the speed I had ordered uses two "bonded" DSL connections, and
    he went off to arrange for the correct pairs to appear on the cable
    that runs under my driveway. I made myself a sandwich, and waited.

    After a couple of hours, Richard drove back up our dirt road and
    delivered the bad news: the DSL modem wouldn’t sync for more than a
    few seconds, and I'm about 13 kilofeet away from the CO, so the
    "ticket" the Sales Rep had called in should have come back marked “Do
    not offer” instead of “OK to provide.”

    I felt bad for the guy - he’d done the work, and even laughed at my
    jokes and anecdotes about Feature Group A connections back in the bad
    old days - so I told him I’d take the telephone line even if I
    couldn’t get the DSL service. He deserved to get credit for the
    upsale, I figured, and he told me that Frontier will be installing
    fiber next year, so in the meantime I can get a phone with *really*
    big buttons and a headset amplifier so that my wife can have a
    familiar look and feel.

    I changed the Telecom Digest FAQ so that it sort-of shows the new
    number if you look hard, and shrugged my shoulders and cancelled the Callcentric line effectvie at the end of the month. I could have
    dropped it last year, but I've had it forwarded to my cell phone,
    since I like the way it keeps vendors from sending me text messages on
    my “landline” number.

    I called the new POTS number from my cellphone - Callcentric is a
    non-portable provider, according to Frontier - and it rang once and
    tripped and all I heard was crackling. If I picked up the phone
    quickly, I could talk on it, with a lot of static, so I realized that
    the "protector" on my side of the demarc had probably punched through
    years ago, and was now causing ring-trip-idle faults.

    Drat. I left a note at the CO, so that Richard won’t get dinged for a
    failed install, and I’m hoping that he or one of the other techs will
    see it and come by to swap out the carbons for me.

    Sigh: I really wanted that DSL line. At least my wife can call 911,
    even though the "Trimline" type instrument is so light that it comes
    off the desk when she picks up the handset. It’ll work in an
    emergency, and in the meantime I’ve been asking around for spare "big
    button" desk sets.

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  • From Bill Horne@21:1/5 to Bill Horne on Mon Feb 13 18:06:55 2023
    On Sat, Feb 11, 2023 at 06:46:19PM -0500, Bill Horne wrote:


    Richard called me on Wednesday morning, and said he'd be right over:
    he was at the Central Office, a couple of miles away from my house.

    [snip]

    I called the new POTS number from my cellphone - Callcentric is a non-portable provider, according to Frontier - and it rang once and
    tripped and all I heard was crackling. If I picked up the phone
    quickly, I could talk on it, with a lot of static, so I realized that
    the "protector" on my side of the demarc had probably punched through
    years ago, and was now causing ring-trip-idle faults.

    [snip]


    This morning, at 8:05 AM, Paul called me about the problem with the
    phone line. I said “Now is fine” when he asked if he could come over
    right away.

    I went through the things I had looked for, and told Paul that the
    wiring on my side of the demarc showed a 7,000 ohm cross if I measured
    it with the red lead on the red wire, but a 12,500 ohm cross when I
    reversed the leads.

    Paul went downstairs, and after about ten minutes he came back and
    told me “I found it!” He invited me to see the source of the problem,
    and took me outside and down to the lower level, and showed me a
    “mystery” wire that vanished into the overhead from a junctoin box on
    the outside wall.

    We traded jokes about Black Helicopters and Chinese balloons, but I
    had to agree that it was probably there from the days when customers
    paid for each extension phone, and he left the wires laid back so that
    the phone line would work with the trimline-style phone I have plugged
    in to it inside the house.

    It has voice mail. There was no way to avoid it. I couldn't get a line
    with a regular busy signal instead, and I asked several times. I
    didn't want call waiting, and I didn't have to have it, and I could do
    without conference-calling, so that’s not on their either.

    But, I’ll stop kvetching: it works, and my wife can get calls while
    sitting at her computer, or dial 911, and that’s the important part.

    Bill Horne

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