Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-29 Thread William Allen Simpson

On 1/29/13 1:20 AM, Rob McEwen wrote:

[...] the US Federal government:

(A) ...cannot do a darn thing without MASSIVE graft  corruption... plus
massive overruns in costs... including a HEAVY dose of crony
capitalism where, often, the companies who get the contracts are the
ones who pad the wallets of the politicians in charge. [...]


Ummm, this isn't true.  As all of us old enough to remember know, the
ILECs promised that with *REDUCED* regulation they'd roll out
universal broadband IFF they were given the revenues from DSL --
putting the CLECs and small ISPs out of the broadband business.

The graft and corruption was in *private* industry, not the Federal
government, due to lack of regulation and oversight.



(B) In the US, we have this thing called the 4th amendment which
ensures a certain level of freedom and civil liberties and privacy.
Unfortunately, 4th amendment rights essentially disappear if the US
Federal government owns and operates broadband access. [...]


No, this isn't true either.  The 4th Amendment applies to the US
government.  What happened is the end-around allowing *private*
industry to collect personal data and infringe civil liberties.

That should not happen with direct US government ownership.  It could
be a boon to civil liberties.



(C) This allows them to do what the FCC ACTIVELY trying to do recently,
but hasn't yet found a way.

[...] Here is an article written by 8 former FCC
chairmen about the Disclose Act:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703460404575244772070710374.html
...can any sane person read that article... and then trust the US
Federal Gov't motives with owning/operating vast amounts of Broadband?


Ummm, none of these were on the FCC.  Some were on the stacked
Republican F*E*C.  And nobody trusts Spakovsky, the architect of
voter caging, purges, and suppression -- who was (as we now know)
illegally recess appointed to the FEC, and whose nomination was
withdrawn after disclosure of conflict of interest and the
resignation of half the Justice Department voter section staff!



Finally, while I've witnessed incompetence amongst certain unnamed baby
bells, there ARE... MANY... bright spots in Internet connectivity.
Frankly, we're spoiled by our successes. And the worst of the baby
bells, like all baby bells, do NOT have a monopoly. [...]


You seem to be living in an alternate universe.  Those of us who
actually owned an ISP know the ILEC oligopolies well.

The one bright spot, Google Fiber, does help Internet connectivity, but
doesn't help ISPs.  And this is the list for operators.




Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-29 Thread Rob McEwen
On 1/29/2013 7:43 AM, William Allen Simpson wrote:
 The graft and corruption was in *private* industry, not the Federal
 government, due to lack of regulation and oversight.

I never said there wasn't graft and corruption in private industry...
but that is anecdotal... hit and miss. In contrast, graft and
corruption in the Federal Government is widespread and rampant. Finding
one example of graft and corruption in private industry is a silly way
to try to disprove my point.

 (B) In the US, we have this thing called the 4th amendment which
 ensures a certain level of freedom and civil liberties and privacy.
 Unfortunately, 4th amendment rights essentially disappear if the US
 Federal government owns and operates broadband access. [...]

 No, this isn't true either.  The 4th Amendment applies to the US
 government.  What happened is the end-around allowing *private*
 industry to collect personal data and infringe civil liberties.

 That should not happen with direct US government ownership.  It could
 be a boon to civil liberties.

(A) If XYZ ISP gets frisky with my data, I can vote with my wallet to
another ISP.

(B) Furthermore, the Federal Government DOES make an excellent
watchdog for policing privacy violations by ISPs... that is, IF they
are on the field as referee,  and NOT as another player. Plus, them
NOT being another player helps them maintain impartiality as their
role as referee. (there are ALREADY examples of their role as
referee being compromised in the auto industry.. where Government
Motors got a break on a certain law, but Honda was slammed hard over the
SAME law!) Also, if the Federal Government owns/operates broadband, then
there is a high likelihood that their operation is subsidized to a point
where it becomes extremely difficult for a private business to compete
against them--as happens in area areas where the Federal Government
stepped out into the field as player. gravity then pulls the
Federal Government into a monopoly position... then, after that happens,
if THEY get frisky with my data, the ISPs I would have voted for with my
wallet... no longer exist.

(C) The fact that the Internet is a series of PRIVATE networks... NOT
owned/operated by the Feds... is a large reason why the 4th amendment
provides such protections... it becomes somewhat of a firewall of
protection against Federal gov't trampling of civil liberties... but if
they own the network, then that opens up many doors for them.

(D) Finally, the potential damage/intrusion/civil-liberties-violations
that can happen from the Feds owning/operating broadband vastly
surpasses what generally occurs in the worst-case-instances of private
ISPs going too far in selling data to make a buck. There is no
comparison. Last I checked, my ISP doesn't have the authority to throw
me in jail... or audit my taxes... doesn't control the FBI or ATF, etc.
The Federal government has the police state powers to throw me in jail.
An ISP cannot. Not that I'm a lawbreaker with things to fear... but
there is this really smart guy who wrote a book called Three Felonies A
Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent... it basically details how there
are so many ridiculous laws on the books that nobody follow (or even
know about)... that if the Feds want to make an example out of someone
or some business, they can ALWAYS find SOMETHING. Even in fortune 500
companies... if one of them decides to get real serious and follow ALL
such laws to a T... then they go out of business because their
overhead costs soar beyond their direct competitors, who are then able
to sell more products/services at a higher profit. My sister used to
work for GE... and she said they had this phrase there called
substantial compliance with Federal Laws. They couldn't be totally
compliant or they'd go out of business.

 Ummm, none of these were on the FCC.  Some were on the stacked
 Republican F*E*C.  And nobody trusts Spakovsky, the architect of
 voter caging, purges, and suppression -- who was (as we now know)
 illegally recess appointed to the FEC, and whose nomination was
 withdrawn after disclosure of conflict of interest and the
 resignation of half the Justice Department voter section staff!

I think you've gone off topic here. The bottom line is that the FCC of
the past few years has TRIED to make a crusade out of supposedly
protecting us against those meany ISPs' allegedly unfair bandwidth
allocation practices... with their proposed solution of net
neutrality... but, in reality, net neutrality is really just a
Federal Government power grab where they can then trample the 4th
amendment. Why would they do that? Because the current administration is
crawling with statist thugs, that is why. They can't help themselves. it
is in their blood. (notice that I'm NOT defending the Republican
administration FCC, nor do I care to. Your example is besides the point
and not relevant to this conversation. But the attempted net
neutrality power grab is relevant. Notice ALSO that neither 

Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-29 Thread Mark Radabaugh

On 1/29/13 7:43 AM, William Allen Simpson wrote:

On 1/29/13 1:20 AM, Rob McEwen wrote:

[...] the US Federal government:

(A) ...cannot do a darn thing without MASSIVE graft  corruption... plus
massive overruns in costs... including a HEAVY dose of crony
capitalism where, often, the companies who get the contracts are the
ones who pad the wallets of the politicians in charge. [...]


Ummm, this isn't true.  As all of us old enough to remember know, the
ILECs promised that with *REDUCED* regulation they'd roll out
universal broadband IFF they were given the revenues from DSL --
putting the CLECs and small ISPs out of the broadband business.

The graft and corruption was in *private* industry, not the Federal
government, due to lack of regulation and oversight.


The other big problem with putting the government in charge is that it 
creates too 'big' of a project.   Every large contractor wants a piece 
of it, every vendor wants a part, and the end result is a specification 
that is expensive and difficult to build.   Then the bidding process to 
build/supply it starts and takes 3 years plus the 5 years for the 
lawsuits from everyone who didn't win.  By now the specification is well 
out of date but we start building it anyway. Yeah - it's built.   But we 
need to upgrade it   Repeat the above.


Don't believe it?   Take a look at a much smaller Federal system - Air 
Traffic Control and the attempts to upgrade that system.


Why would Federal Internet be any different?

--
Mark Radabaugh
Amplex

m...@amplex.net  419.837.5015




Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-29 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013 01:20:25 -0500, Rob McEwen said:

 The market will eventually sort this out... and in many cases already
 has! Meanwhile, Amtrack and the Post Office show no signs of ever making
 it without their MASSIVE taxpayer subsidies.

I can't speak to Amtrack, but a large part of the Post Office's current
difficulties is that Congress forced them to pre-fund pensions - which is
nothing unusual.  Most places are required to pay in now for their current
employees so their pensions will be funded when they retire.

What's different about the Post Office is that they're required to pre-fund
for 75 years.  Yes, you read that right - they need to pay in *now* for
the pension fund of mail carriers who won't even be born for another decade.

 Education continues to not know where billions of dollars goes each
 year... Yet, in contrast, Enron execs in are jail and Enron is no longer
 in existence

So where are all the arrests and convictions for the mortgage games and
other Wall Street malfeasance that led to the financial crisis of 2008?
Seems that was a tad more egregious than anything Enron did, so there should
have been more arrests and convictions?


pgppnl5_6t2mX.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-29 Thread Rob McEwen
On 1/29/2013 11:38 AM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
 So where are all the arrests and convictions for the mortgage games and
 other Wall Street malfeasance that led to the financial crisis of 2008?
 Seems that was a tad more egregious than anything Enron did, so there should
 have been more arrests and convictions?

Not everyone gets caught. But across the board, corrupt private
businesses get caught  pay a price and/or disappear ...far more often
than corrupt government entities.

But even with the financial crisis of 2008, there was SOME reckoning.
Bernie Madoff is in jail. Lots of CEOs lost their jobs. Boards of
Fortune 500 companies are NOW... FINALLY... doing the due diligence that
used to not get done. Those things have to be done since everyone if
fighting for survival right now. Nobody can afford to do less... except
the Feds... who continue to operate/spend like its 1999.

More locally, on a smaller scale, I know of specific appraisers  real
estate investors who are in jail right now because they finally got
caught in a scam where (1) the investor would buy a property at a low
price, (2) his appraiser, who was in on the scam, would issue an
appraisal that was ridiculously high, (3) the real estate investor would
then get a LARGE loan on that property, (4) the investor would then
spend that money on expenses... showing no money on paper, it was
laundered (5) investor would declare bankruptcy and give those
properties back to the bank. (6) bank discovers that their collateral
on a 200K loan is really worth 40K. (repeat times 10 since the investor
did this several times over just before declaring bankruptcy.

Again, those guys are in jail. And the rules on preventing that have
been tightened. I agree, not enough people like that went to jail... but
LESS of this gets caught and punished with regard to the Federal
government's graft  corruption.

-- 
Rob McEwen
http://dnsbl.invaluement.com/
r...@invaluement.com
+1 (478) 475-9032




Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-29 Thread Jay Ashworth
- Original Message -
 From: Valdis Kletnieks valdis.kletni...@vt.edu

 What's different about the Post Office is that they're required to pre-fund
 for 75 years. Yes, you read that right - they need to pay in *now* for
 the pension fund of mail carriers who won't even be born for another
 decade.

And if that had not been passed (by a MUMBLE Congress), then instead of being
$6B in the red, they'd be about $1.5B in the black.

So let us not hang the need to save USPS on Congress, when they caused the
problem in the first place.

And let's move this thread to nanog-politics, k?

Cheers,
-- jra
-- 
Jay R. Ashworth  Baylink   j...@baylink.com
Designer The Things I Think   RFC 2100
Ashworth  Associates http://baylink.pitas.com 2000 Land Rover DII
St Petersburg FL USA   #natog  +1 727 647 1274



Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-29 Thread William Allen Simpson

On 1/29/13 8:30 AM, Rob McEwen wrote:

On 1/29/2013 7:43 AM, William Allen Simpson wrote:

The graft and corruption was in *private* industry, not the Federal
government, due to lack of regulation and oversight.


I never said there wasn't graft and corruption in private industry...
but that is anecdotal... hit and miss. In contrast, graft and
corruption in the Federal Government is widespread and rampant. Finding
one example of graft and corruption in private industry is a silly way
to try to disprove my point.


Actually, graft and corruption in the Federal Government is very
rare.  State and local government is more common, and the Feds are
usually needed to clean up afterward.  Note the Kwame Kilpatrick
public corruption trial (a big deal around here)

And of course, corruption is incredibly common in the private
sector, notably the financial services industry, the realty
developer industry, etc.



Ummm, none of these were on the FCC.  Some were on the stacked
Republican F*E*C.  And nobody trusts Spakovsky, the architect of
voter caging, purges, and suppression -- who was (as we now know)
illegally recess appointed to the FEC, and whose nomination was
withdrawn after disclosure of conflict of interest and the
resignation of half the Justice Department voter section staff!


I think you've gone off topic here. The bottom line is that the FCC of
the past few years has TRIED to make a crusade out of supposedly
protecting us against those meany ISPs' allegedly unfair bandwidth
allocation practices... with their proposed solution of net
neutrality... but, in reality, net neutrality is really just a
Federal Government power grab where they can then trample the 4th
amendment.


Huh?  You cited a WSJ opinion piece as from the FCC, when it was FEC,
and they are very different entities.  Yet you claim I'm off-topic?

Net Neutrality has nothing what-so-ever to do with the 4th Amendment.



Why would they do that? Because the current administration is
crawling with statist thugs, that is why. They can't help themselves. it
is in their blood. (notice that I'm NOT defending the Republican
administration FCC, nor do I care to.


You seem very confused, and have devolved into ill-informed racist
anti-Obama diatribe that has no place on this list.



Your example is besides the point
and not relevant to this conversation. But the attempted net
neutrality power grab is relevant. Notice ALSO that neither do I defend
all practices of ISPs' bandwidth allocations. But, again, their
customers do have the option to vote with their wallets. Such options
are lost with a Federal Gov't monopoly.)


The Internet was developed by the Federal Government.  I started my
first TCP/IP implementation in 1979 on a NOAA+EPA grant; I wrote the
legislative boilerplate that provided funding for the NSFnet, and
convinced Michigan legislators to support it; then went on to write
many technical standards; and built an ISP starting in 1994.

The NSFnet wouldn't have been possible without a Federal prosecution,
and the resulting ATT Green decision.

With today's oligopolies, there's no way to vote with your wallet.

I'm done with this thread.  Please don't feed the troll.




Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-29 Thread Rob McEwen
On 1/29/2013 12:21 PM, William Allen Simpson wrote:
 ill-informed racist

Really? And you call me a troll, too?

 anti-Obama diatribe that has no place on this list.

I never said anything about Obama, but, at face value, the 'Disclose'
Act was totalitarian in nature. Something I'd expect to see only
seriously proposed in the old Soviet Union. Those who enthusiastically
supported it are/were statist thugs. Proposing a bill which limits free
political speech by putting ridiculous and hugely-expensive burdens on
mom  pop bloggers typing from their living room computers is
something straight out of East Germany circa 1960 (except with today's
technology). If that means I'm talking about Obama, so be at... if the
shoe fits... but to say this is racist is laughable. Also, you can
try to dismiss the Disclose act critics by throwing labels at them...
but interesting that you didn't go on record challenging the facts in
that wsj op-ed, or go on record supporting the Disclose act. (attach
the messenger as a means of avoiding the actual subject material...
much like your 100% baseless racist accusation towards me.)

Also, you're right, at a couple of points, I did get FCC and FEC labels
mixed up. But my larger points stand. The campaign finance law passed
several years ago and the proposed 'Disclose' Act demonstrated less than
pure intentions regarding the Federal Government's desire to control
information. And the Federal Government's net neutrality proposals ARE
100% all about 4th amendment violations, as a means towards controlling
information. Even if I'm wrong and those proposing net neutrality have
100% best intentions (they don't), then a trampling of the 4th amendment
would STILL become a law of unintended consequences, at least in the
implementation proposes I've read.

-- 
Rob McEwen
http://dnsbl.invaluement.com/
r...@invaluement.com
+1 (478) 475-9032




Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-29 Thread Michael Painter
- Original Message - 
From: valdis.kletni...@vt.edu

To: Rob McEwen r...@invaluement.com
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2013 6:38 AM
Subject: Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land
snip

So where are all the arrests and convictions for the mortgage games and
other Wall Street malfeasance that led to the financial crisis of 2008?
Seems that was a tad more egregious than anything Enron did, so there should
have been more arrests and convictions?


http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/secret-and-lies-of-the-bailout-20130104





Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread Brent Jones
s/CenturyLink/ATT and I've got plenty of good stories for you.
I think the big telcos these days simply don't care, and don't understand.
They hire sales drones from Wal-Mart, and expect them to put in orders
for longhaul circuits, or metro ethernet, and what you get is samples
of perfume or pizza delivery.

On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 9:32 AM, Joe Maimon jmai...@ttec.com wrote:
 Anybody have some happy success stories to share about service in Qwest
 service area post Centurylink acquisition?

 Unfortunately the ones I have contain more humor than success.

 Story #1

 Ethernet/Fiber service near Tampa ordered via partner, misordered as MPLS,
 re-ordered as vpls.

 Delivered by June, I have been trying unsuccessfully to get a MAC off the
 NID ever since.

 Similarly, I have been unsuccessful in getting the LEC onsite to
 troubleshoot the NID. My last update was a due date of 2/22, after they
 missed a 1/17 date. Nope, not a typo.

 Story #2

 Ethernet/Fiber service in Phoenix ordered via partner. Apparently, in order
 to save on the expense of the NID/switch combo, the LEC ran the second set
 of fiber strands up to an existing customer in the building, using dedicated
 conduit from the building dmarc (which is accessible by our customer).

 They then instructed us to run copper back from their customer back to our
 customer's space. This recipient of the new fiber refused permission (not to
 mention being unhappy at unwittingly providing shared service).

 LEC claims the order was marked closed and delivered and any changes are new
 orders that will take 45 days. There has not been an update since, although
 presumably, we are on the 45 day clock.

 Due on the 1st, delivered in mid December, this is a month late with no
 timely resolution in sight.

 I have been assured by everyone involved that escalation has been pursued to
 the highest levels, including pleading with the CEO of the unwitting service
 providing customer, to no avail.

 If someone from Centurylink who can make things happen and be privy to the
 real dealings would please reach out directly to me, I have high hopes that
 there can be happy endings for these stories.

 Or if anybody has any useful suggestions, ideas, advice, or even
 commiserations, all are welcome to share.

 Best,

 Joe




-- 
Brent Jones
br...@brentrjones.com



Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread Warren Bailey
Spoken like a true ATT customer..;)


From my Android phone on T-Mobile. The first nationwide 4G network.



 Original message 
From: Brent Jones br...@brentrjones.com
Date: 01/28/2013 10:07 AM (GMT-08:00)
To: Joe Maimon jmai...@ttec.com
Cc: North American Networking and Offtopic Gripes List nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land


s/CenturyLink/ATT and I've got plenty of good stories for you.
I think the big telcos these days simply don't care, and don't understand.
They hire sales drones from Wal-Mart, and expect them to put in orders
for longhaul circuits, or metro ethernet, and what you get is samples
of perfume or pizza delivery.

On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 9:32 AM, Joe Maimon jmai...@ttec.com wrote:
 Anybody have some happy success stories to share about service in Qwest
 service area post Centurylink acquisition?

 Unfortunately the ones I have contain more humor than success.

 Story #1

 Ethernet/Fiber service near Tampa ordered via partner, misordered as MPLS,
 re-ordered as vpls.

 Delivered by June, I have been trying unsuccessfully to get a MAC off the
 NID ever since.

 Similarly, I have been unsuccessful in getting the LEC onsite to
 troubleshoot the NID. My last update was a due date of 2/22, after they
 missed a 1/17 date. Nope, not a typo.

 Story #2

 Ethernet/Fiber service in Phoenix ordered via partner. Apparently, in order
 to save on the expense of the NID/switch combo, the LEC ran the second set
 of fiber strands up to an existing customer in the building, using dedicated
 conduit from the building dmarc (which is accessible by our customer).

 They then instructed us to run copper back from their customer back to our
 customer's space. This recipient of the new fiber refused permission (not to
 mention being unhappy at unwittingly providing shared service).

 LEC claims the order was marked closed and delivered and any changes are new
 orders that will take 45 days. There has not been an update since, although
 presumably, we are on the 45 day clock.

 Due on the 1st, delivered in mid December, this is a month late with no
 timely resolution in sight.

 I have been assured by everyone involved that escalation has been pursued to
 the highest levels, including pleading with the CEO of the unwitting service
 providing customer, to no avail.

 If someone from Centurylink who can make things happen and be privy to the
 real dealings would please reach out directly to me, I have high hopes that
 there can be happy endings for these stories.

 Or if anybody has any useful suggestions, ideas, advice, or even
 commiserations, all are welcome to share.

 Best,

 Joe




--
Brent Jones
br...@brentrjones.com




Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread Joe Maimon
If the bells werent so bell like, it would be a lot harder to win 
business from them.


A colleague of mine is fond of asserting that the peter principle 
applies to corporations as a whole.


Joe


Warren Bailey wrote:

Spoken like a true ATT customer..;)


 From my Android phone on T-Mobile. The first nationwide 4G network.



 Original message 
From: Brent Jones br...@brentrjones.com
Date: 01/28/2013 10:07 AM (GMT-08:00)
To: Joe Maimon jmai...@ttec.com
Cc: North American Networking and Offtopic Gripes List nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land


s/CenturyLink/ATT and I've got plenty of good stories for you.
I think the big telcos these days simply don't care, and don't understand.
They hire sales drones from Wal-Mart, and expect them to put in orders
for longhaul circuits, or metro ethernet, and what you get is samples
of perfume or pizza delivery.

On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 9:32 AM, Joe Maimon jmai...@ttec.com wrote:

Anybody have some happy success stories to share about service in Qwest
service area post Centurylink acquisition?

Unfortunately the ones I have contain more humor than success.

Story #1

Ethernet/Fiber service near Tampa ordered via partner, misordered as MPLS,
re-ordered as vpls.

Delivered by June, I have been trying unsuccessfully to get a MAC off the
NID ever since.

Similarly, I have been unsuccessful in getting the LEC onsite to
troubleshoot the NID. My last update was a due date of 2/22, after they
missed a 1/17 date. Nope, not a typo.

Story #2

Ethernet/Fiber service in Phoenix ordered via partner. Apparently, in order
to save on the expense of the NID/switch combo, the LEC ran the second set
of fiber strands up to an existing customer in the building, using dedicated
conduit from the building dmarc (which is accessible by our customer).

They then instructed us to run copper back from their customer back to our
customer's space. This recipient of the new fiber refused permission (not to
mention being unhappy at unwittingly providing shared service).

LEC claims the order was marked closed and delivered and any changes are new
orders that will take 45 days. There has not been an update since, although
presumably, we are on the 45 day clock.

Due on the 1st, delivered in mid December, this is a month late with no
timely resolution in sight.

I have been assured by everyone involved that escalation has been pursued to
the highest levels, including pleading with the CEO of the unwitting service
providing customer, to no avail.

If someone from Centurylink who can make things happen and be privy to the
real dealings would please reach out directly to me, I have high hopes that
there can be happy endings for these stories.

Or if anybody has any useful suggestions, ideas, advice, or even
commiserations, all are welcome to share.

Best,

Joe





--
Brent Jones
br...@brentrjones.com






Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread Constantine A. Murenin
On 28 January 2013 10:35, Warren Bailey
wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com wrote:
 Spoken like a true ATT customer..;)

I've had an ATT FTTU in my bedroom closet, which was an Alcatel
HONT-C (4 POTS (unused), 1 Ethernet; 155.52 Mbps upstream and 622.08
Mbps downstream; shared with at most 32 users), and ATT California
outright refused to provision the U-verse internet at anything higher
than 18Mbps downstream and 1.5Mbps upstream, at a time when their
web-site loudly offered a 24Mbps tier for the general public for 10
extra bucks.

Yes, this was at a time when VDSL2 users were already provisioned
24Mbps down and 3Mbps up; FTTU users weren't privileged as such (and
probably still aren't to this day).

ATT FTTU experience starts with the installation: you have a fibre
technician that calls you prior to the date of the centrally-scheduled
appointment, and tells you that you'll have an extra appointment prior
(and in addition) to the original pre-scheduled appointment date.
He'll also likely confide in you that that's the way things work at T
-- he has to schedule his own appointments for FTTU ONT installation,
and no single customer is beforehand informed of any such
appointments.

Then in a misunderstanding that something can be done to get the
advertised speeds that certainly must be supported by the installed
ONT, you can spend hours with sales, tech support and the ATT
California executive office, who will all give all sorts of excuses
that you are too long from the CO / VRAD / etc etc.  Whereas in
reality ATT is simply too lazy to update their FTTU provisioning
profiles, and not a single FTTU installation is being offered any
internet services above 18Mbps.  (Somehow, it is my impression that
noone in the company even knows this for a fact -- I've not had a
single over-the-phone representative confirm that 24Mbps tier is never
offered for FTTU.)

Note that even if you disregard the fact that Verizon successfully
delivers 25/25, 50/20 and many other tiers over essentially the same
technology, the simple math of 622/155 divided by 32 users turns out
to be higher than 18/1.5, and especially several factors higher than
the 1.5 part of 18/1.5.  This does not even account for many people
getting the cheapest and slower tiers, or the fact that the whole
point of FTTU BPON is overprovisioning support.

Well, that's ATT for you:  already has the network, already has the
price structure, already has the marketing going, already has all the
passive and active equipment installed that's capable of vastly
superior speeds, already has the customers willing to pay more each
month for faster speeds, and already has customers abandoning FTTU
services because of artificially-imposed speed limitations, yet T
still can't be bothered to flip some provisioning bits.

C.



Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread William Herrin
On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 2:48 PM, Constantine A. Murenin
muren...@gmail.com wrote:
 Well, that's ATT for you:  already has the network, already has the
 price structure, already has the marketing going, already has all the
 passive and active equipment installed that's capable of vastly
 superior speeds, already has the customers willing to pay more each
 month for faster speeds, and already has customers abandoning FTTU
 services because of artificially-imposed speed limitations, yet T
 still can't be bothered to flip some provisioning bits.

And then there's the ATT U-Verse outage for the better part of a week.

http://www.cnn.com/2013/01/24/tech/web/uverse-outage-att/index.html


On the other hand, I've been unsuccessfully trying to pay my Verizon
Fios bill for a month now. The credit card died two months ago. They
keep trying to bill it. Can't log in to the linked account online. The
web site mentions that a temporary password can be had from the paper
bill they haven't sent in the better part of a decade. After hours on
the phone the representative opened a ticket with IT.

They sent me an email reminding me that their billing failed. With no
return contact information, just an invitation to log in to my
non-working account and pay it. What fun!

-Bill


-- 
William D. Herrin  her...@dirtside.com  b...@herrin.us
3005 Crane Dr. .. Web: http://bill.herrin.us/
Falls Church, VA 22042-3004



RE: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread David Prall
You should try paying Verizon in Advance, they sent me to collections
because I had a negative balance on my account for 3 months. Took me 6
months after closing my account to get them to correct the late payment
charges and send me a refund.

--
http://dcp.dcptech.com

 -Original Message-
 From: William Herrin [mailto:b...@herrin.us]
 Sent: Monday, January 28, 2013 3:18 PM
 To: Constantine A. Murenin
 Cc: North American Networking and Offtopic Gripes List
 Subject: Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land
 
 On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 2:48 PM, Constantine A. Murenin
 muren...@gmail.com wrote:
  Well, that's ATT for you:  already has the network, already has the
  price structure, already has the marketing going, already has all the
  passive and active equipment installed that's capable of vastly
  superior speeds, already has the customers willing to pay more each
  month for faster speeds, and already has customers abandoning FTTU
  services because of artificially-imposed speed limitations, yet T
  still can't be bothered to flip some provisioning bits.
 
 And then there's the ATT U-Verse outage for the better part of a week.
 
 http://www.cnn.com/2013/01/24/tech/web/uverse-outage-att/index.html
 
 
 On the other hand, I've been unsuccessfully trying to pay my Verizon
 Fios bill for a month now. The credit card died two months ago. They
 keep trying to bill it. Can't log in to the linked account online. The
 web site mentions that a temporary password can be had from the paper
 bill they haven't sent in the better part of a decade. After hours on
 the phone the representative opened a ticket with IT.
 
 They sent me an email reminding me that their billing failed. With no
 return contact information, just an invitation to log in to my
 non-working account and pay it. What fun!
 
 -Bill
 
 
 --
 William D. Herrin  her...@dirtside.com  b...@herrin.us
 3005 Crane Dr. .. Web: http://bill.herrin.us/
 Falls Church, VA 22042-3004




Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread david peahi
My experience with one of the big 2 telcos in the USA is unbelievable even
now looking back a few months:

1. at my key network monitoring site telco Northern Telecom (before NT
changed their name to Nortel) SONET equipment circa 1995 kept failing,
taking legacy circuits down hard.
2. Escalating the problem to the account team resulted in their maintaining
that there were no SONET alarms at the telco monitoring site, so nothing
could be done.
3. At the 4th  SONET outage, the telco discovered that the Northern Telecom
alarm component had failed which explained why there were no alarms for the
previous outages.
4. Despite all of the outages to a key location, the telco took 8 months to
replace the NT equipment with modern MSPP equipment. During job walks with
the telco, the telco OSP engineers insisted that the NT equipment was still
good since it is still working, and tried to talk me out of insisting
that they upgrade their NT equipment.

The above anecdote is typical in my experience with the telcos, and
underscores the need for a national broadband buildout in the USA, funded
and run by the Federal Government, based upon the Australian National
Broadband Network model. The USA telcos have had their chance, in my
opinion, now is the time for them to get out of the way.

Here is a link to the Australian National Broadband site, describing how
the existing telco-owned copper network will be switched off:

http://www.nbn.gov.au/2012/12/03/did-you-know-that-our-copper-network-is-being-switched-off/

David



On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 11:48 AM, Constantine A. Murenin muren...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 On 28 January 2013 10:35, Warren Bailey
 wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com wrote:
  Spoken like a true ATT customer..;)

 I've had an ATT FTTU in my bedroom closet, which was an Alcatel
 HONT-C (4 POTS (unused), 1 Ethernet; 155.52 Mbps upstream and 622.08
 Mbps downstream; shared with at most 32 users), and ATT California
 outright refused to provision the U-verse internet at anything higher
 than 18Mbps downstream and 1.5Mbps upstream, at a time when their
 web-site loudly offered a 24Mbps tier for the general public for 10
 extra bucks.

 Yes, this was at a time when VDSL2 users were already provisioned
 24Mbps down and 3Mbps up; FTTU users weren't privileged as such (and
 probably still aren't to this day).

 ATT FTTU experience starts with the installation: you have a fibre
 technician that calls you prior to the date of the centrally-scheduled
 appointment, and tells you that you'll have an extra appointment prior
 (and in addition) to the original pre-scheduled appointment date.
 He'll also likely confide in you that that's the way things work at T
 -- he has to schedule his own appointments for FTTU ONT installation,
 and no single customer is beforehand informed of any such
 appointments.

 Then in a misunderstanding that something can be done to get the
 advertised speeds that certainly must be supported by the installed
 ONT, you can spend hours with sales, tech support and the ATT
 California executive office, who will all give all sorts of excuses
 that you are too long from the CO / VRAD / etc etc.  Whereas in
 reality ATT is simply too lazy to update their FTTU provisioning
 profiles, and not a single FTTU installation is being offered any
 internet services above 18Mbps.  (Somehow, it is my impression that
 noone in the company even knows this for a fact -- I've not had a
 single over-the-phone representative confirm that 24Mbps tier is never
 offered for FTTU.)

 Note that even if you disregard the fact that Verizon successfully
 delivers 25/25, 50/20 and many other tiers over essentially the same
 technology, the simple math of 622/155 divided by 32 users turns out
 to be higher than 18/1.5, and especially several factors higher than
 the 1.5 part of 18/1.5.  This does not even account for many people
 getting the cheapest and slower tiers, or the fact that the whole
 point of FTTU BPON is overprovisioning support.

 Well, that's ATT for you:  already has the network, already has the
 price structure, already has the marketing going, already has all the
 passive and active equipment installed that's capable of vastly
 superior speeds, already has the customers willing to pay more each
 month for faster speeds, and already has customers abandoning FTTU
 services because of artificially-imposed speed limitations, yet T
 still can't be bothered to flip some provisioning bits.

 C.




Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread Constantine A. Murenin
On 28 January 2013 13:57, david peahi davidpe...@gmail.com wrote:
 The above anecdote is typical in my experience with the telcos, and
 underscores the need for a national broadband buildout in the USA, funded
 and run by the Federal Government, based upon the Australian National
 Broadband Network model. The USA telcos have had their chance, in my
 opinion, now is the time for them to get out of the way.

 Here is a link to the Australian National Broadband site, describing how the
 existing telco-owned copper network will be switched off:

 http://www.nbn.gov.au/2012/12/03/did-you-know-that-our-copper-network-is-being-switched-off/

Do they have any customers object?

I recall a few recent stories about Verizon having problems after
Sandy with NYC customers insisting that they want DSL restored instead
of the FiOS brought in.

C.



Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread Joe Maimon



Constantine A. Murenin wrote:

On 28 January 2013 13:57, david peahi davidpe...@gmail.com wrote:



http://www.nbn.gov.au/2012/12/03/did-you-know-that-our-copper-network-is-being-switched-off/


Do they have any customers object?

I recall a few recent stories about Verizon having problems after
Sandy with NYC customers insisting that they want DSL restored instead
of the FiOS brought in.

C.




Copper services are still down in the neighborhood. Fiber is not a UNE.



Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread Scott Weeks

--- muren...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Constantine A. Murenin muren...@gmail.com

 Here is a link to the Australian National Broadband site, describing how the
 existing telco-owned copper network will be switched off:
 http://www.nbn.gov.au/2012/12/03/did-you-know-that-our-copper-network-is-being-switched-off/

Do they have any customers object?

I recall a few recent stories about Verizon having problems after
Sandy with NYC customers insisting that they want DSL restored instead
of the FiOS brought in.



Having listened to ausnog for a while, I'm not so sure
about how well that has/is worked/working for Australia.

scott



Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread Randy Bush
 Anybody have some happy success stories to share about service in Qwest 
 service area post Centurylink acquisition?

yes.  switched my WA residential to comcast.  *much* happier.

randy



Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread William Allen Simpson

On 1/28/13 8:06 PM, Randy Bush wrote:

Anybody have some happy success stories to share about service in Qwest
service area post Centurylink acquisition?


yes.  switched my WA residential to comcast.  *much* happier.


Thanks, that made me laugh.  Myself, for residential, have long left
ATT/SBC/Ameritech behind, and used Comcast (nee MediaOne) for years,
but am now happiest with WOW (wowway).

On the ATT front, I had a campaign this past fall that setup its
headquarters in a strip mall.  Very time sensitive, campaigns need short
term office space for about 2 months.  Actually, *this* campaign (you
really want to watch this video):

  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v52FLMOPSig

No Comcast or anything other than ATT available.  But the site was a
former bank (it moved to the other end of the strip mall), and there are
lots of T1 terminal blocks all ready to go, and the site has lots of
wiring in place.  So, no problem?  HA!

Getting them to sell you service:  No, sorry, no actual T1s anymore.  No
U-Verse available (yet I can see the U-Verse labels in the neighborhood
on the other side of the fence), they only offer business ADSL over those
lines now, 3 times the price of U-Verse at less than half the speed.

(We didn't want ADSL, because we're running our own VoIP phones and
Google Voice, so preferred symmetric bandwidth.)

Getting them to install service: I can read them the block and circuit
labels 'til I'm blue in the face, but they have to roll a truck.  The
order specifically says they have to call my cell an hour in advance so
I can get there and have maintenance open the dmarc.  They don't call.
Heck, they don't come to the right place -- apparently something in the
master list tells them the bank has moved, so they go to the bank --
wrong location and different dmarc door.  Again, and again, and again!

Finally, after daily calls for a week, and 30+ hours of my time, a very
helpful customer support Democrat in Las Vegas puts all the right things
in place, and helpfully calls me during the install to ensure it's
actually starting, as the truck rolls up.  Bless her!!!

The installer also explains that nobody likes to call in advance,
because those trips cut down on their daily total, and lots of them
are really treated like independent contractors.  Unlike the old days,
they don't have any responsibility for their own areas and that's why
the dmarcs have fallen into utter disrepair.

It's not the longest or worst install I've ever had -- that prize goes
to the old Bell South -- but pretty high profile nerve wracking.

Yet ATT kept trying to bill for the week without service.

Anyway, she did win the election :-)




Re: Looking for success stories in Qwest/Centurylink land

2013-01-28 Thread Rob McEwen
On 1/28/2013 4:57 PM, david peahi wrote:
 and underscores the need for a national broadband buildout in the USA, funded 
 and run by the Federal Government

Maybe Australia has a better track record... but over the past few
decades, the US Federal government:

(A) ...cannot do a darn thing without MASSIVE graft  corruption... plus
massive overruns in costs... including a HEAVY dose of crony
capitalism where, often, the companies who get the contracts are the
ones who pad the wallets of the politicians in charge. About the ONLY
thing the Feds do efficiently is write  mail checks.

(B) In the US, we have this thing called the 4th amendment which
ensures a certain level of freedom and civil liberties and privacy.
Unfortunately, 4th amendment rights essentially disappear if the US
Federal government owns and operates broadband access. Additionally,
such ownership will then allow them to control/regulate the
information... to ensure that information damaging to the incumbent
politicians is minimized, especially close to election times. (as they
did with campaign finance reform!) And their ability to eavesdrop
increases exponentially, as legal and technical hurtles significantly
lessen!

(C) This allows them to do what the FCC ACTIVELY trying to do recently,
but hasn't yet found a way.

Ya think this is conspiracy hysteria? Again, look at aspects of
campaign reform law, which limited certain ads close to election time in
a manner which disproportionately benefits incumbents! Furthermore, when
the Federal Government proposes atrocious things like the proposed
Disclose Act (from just a few years ago), then you have to wonder
about their true motivations. Here is an article written by 8 former FCC
chairmen about the Disclose Act:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703460404575244772070710374.html
...can any sane person read that article... and then trust the US
Federal Gov't motives with owning/operating vast amounts of Broadband?

Finally, while I've witnessed incompetence amongst certain unnamed baby
bells, there ARE... MANY... bright spots in Internet connectivity.
Frankly, we're spoiled by our successes. And the worst of the baby
bells, like all baby bells, do NOT have a monopoly. Often, they must
compete with (at minimum) the local cable access provider. For example,
in many areas that the baby bells failed to provide competent service,
the local cable access provider filled the void, and did much better.
I'm trying to not name  shame... but I've seen THAT... FIRST HAND.
The market will eventually sort this out... and in many cases already
has! Meanwhile, Amtrack and the Post Office show no signs of ever making
it without their MASSIVE taxpayer subsidies. And the Department of
Education continues to not know where billions of dollars goes each
year... Yet, in contrast, Enron execs in are jail and Enron is no longer
in existence. As I said, the free market tends to sort these things out
over time. (especially when crony capitalism is NOT a part of the mix.)

-- 
Rob McEwen
http://dnsbl.invaluement.com/
r...@invaluement.com
+1 (478) 475-9032