I don't have all of the answers, but I sure let a vendor know when they're 
wrong. ;-) 




----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 



----- Original Message -----

From: "Patrick Leary" <patrick.le...@telrad.com> 
To: af@afmug.com 
Sent: Tuesday, March 3, 2015 7:41:57 PM 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] New feedback 



Alvarion did that. I admit, I'm not a fan of capping Glen. It is a gimmick. The 
hardware is what it is, and this hardware is expensive. 30dBm per port. 4 
tx/4rx. Power is expensive. The highest quality DSPs on the market. not 
consumer grade stuff with the sensitivity of your in home Wi-Fi router. We 
build our own phy from the ground up too, our own ATPC algorithms too. 

On the software, we do that though -- enabling modularity and scale as you need 
to. I think I need to do a dedicated webinar to this community to walk you guys 
(or those inclined) through it (any takers?). I do not think we can be a 
solution that makes sense where you only have 15 clients. That's the blunt 
truth. Unless you are doing 50 Mbps customers, I am not your micropop (but I 
can do that in some modest scale). That said, I wonder where that 15 number 
comes from? Can you please explain on what architecture that is based? Range? 
Height? Etc. If it is based on a micropop and even then on what just that pop 
can see, I'd say that's likely a model invented out of necessity due to the 
poor performance of the system you are using. 

I had a guy on a call today. He zoomed me in on Google Earth to his "NLOS" 
area. Farmland with wind breaks and shade trees for the homes. He is at 400' 
and can't connect squat behind those breaks. In my world, that's LOS all the 
way, even at 150 ft. It is total garbage that so many systems to can't deal 
with that and you've all been fed that that is "normal." It is not. It is just 
gear with terrible specs where the only R&D is at the software level, and even 
that is scant. ....You do not have NLOS problems. You have equipment problems. 
How such a product ever was allowed to go to market as a "solution" for rural 
broadband is, to me, cynical and reflective of playing a market to skim 
opportunistic dollars from a market segment that sometimes seems to embrace 
abuse. Sort of like the poor 700 MHz owners who got sucked in to buying 20 year 
old Marconi WipLL repackaged as a 700 MHz "solution" because all there was to 
buy. Then vendors do that crap and THEN, THEN tell you there's no backward 
compatibility when they come out with something new? 

WISPs. Sometimes you guys drive me nuts. You are like cheerleaders that love to 
date the quarterbacks who abuse you. That is like selling a car that falls 
apart once you leave residential streets. None of you should ever have accepted 
these golf carts to run your fleets. Sometimes, cheap is just cheap. 

Boy, I'm gonna hear it from my vendor peers, but this ain't a game or just a 
job for me. I damn sure hope it ain't that for you either. 


        
Patrick Leary 
M 727.501.3735 

        
        




From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Glen Waldrop 
Sent: Tuesday, March 03, 2015 8:08 PM 
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] New feedback 


Sort of off topic, but what would be the smallest AP we could get? 

I'm thinking about using this system on a few of my towers to make sure we 
never leave without a new customer, but I serve a very rural area. 

I have some towers with 15 clients. 

Is an omni + GPS sync or narrow channel out of the question? 









----- Original Message ----- 

From: Patrick Leary 

To: tel...@wispa.org ; af@afmug.com 

Sent: Tuesday, March 03, 2015 4:42 PM 

Subject: [AFMUG] New feedback 


This is an interesting bit of commentary from one of our new customers. If he 
wishes to identify himself, he will.... 


        
Patrick Leary 
M 727.501.3735 

        
        




From: 
Sent: Tuesday, March 03, 2015 2:31 AM 
To: Patrick Leary; Nick Dewar 
Subject: Interesting Statistic 

" Patrick / Nick – 

Our Director of Operations, which you both met in St Louis, sent out an 
interesting email to our staff this evening. In February with only 20 working 
days we completed 40 installs with one technician ... This is only icing on the 
cake, especially since we are onboarding two more techs. .. I ran some 
additional numbers and found that out of the “Telrad” installations that we 
scheduled, 100 % were successful both of these months. This is a game changer, 
and it proves that we can eliminate the need to waste further time with the 
dreaded site surveys. Our success is not without the help of Telrad’s Compact 
solution. Truly amazing and inspiring, excited for our aggressive expansion 
this spring/summer/fall. I cannot wait to have hundreds of these damn things in 
the air. 

Excited and thankful to be a part of the LTE Beta, and am thankful for the 
“Holy Grail” email that introduced us to the product. ... " 





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