No because you didn't own the phone the phone company did and they sent
someone out to install it and charged you monthly for it...
On 12/13/2019 3:25 PM, Nate Burke wrote:
I've only run into the google WIFI system at a customer once. Luckily
it wasn't interfering with the feed. Whenever a customer asks, I tell
them to get any system except for the google one.
But the guy at the store told them that they just needed to put a puck
in their steel outbuilding 1000' away from the house, and the WIFI
would work just fine out there. When the telephone was first
invented, were there these same problems? 'I nailed the crank phone
on the wall of the outhouse out back, but Martha can only hear me in
the kitchen when I yell into it, and then only when the kitchen window
is open.'
On 12/13/2019 2:32 PM, Ken Hohhof wrote:
Has anyone figured out a solution to interference with Google WiFi at
customers fed via 5 GHz?
We have found it to be an unsolvable problem due to:
1) Google does not let you set the frequencies
2) Google does not let you set the channel width (and therefore
presumably uses 80 MHz channels)
3) The mesh system presumably uses additional spectrum for the
backhaul between pucks
4) Most customers put in 3 of them, virtually guaranteeing at least
1 of them will be right near the dish to the tower
5) Many customers also figure they can put them in outbuildings to
get service to their shop, barn, etc. (one customer today intended to
put one in his wife’s “she-shed”)
With any other router we just set the channel to a U-NII-1 or DFS
channel. We have a fair amount of 3.65 GHz in our network and then
it isn’t a problem, but the majority is still 5 GHz.
--
Trey Scarborough
VP Engineering
3DS Communications LLC
p:9729741539
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