Some of the rates I posted assumed the installer was already on site
for an installation. I'm just need to consider trouble calls so I
revised the schedule below. I used to give $25 per service call but
the problem I ran into was that they would go out to a customer's find
nothing or perhaps someth
I think most of the items you are proposing to pay less than $30 dollars
for are too cheap. I wouldn't want to do those things for those amounts.
Especially if I have to drive to the customer's home to do them.
John
RickG wrote:
> OK, back to my original question: Does anyone have a fee schedule
http://projects.asn.pl/ara/
Not the "best" product out there and a little outdated but worked for us in
the past.
--Nick
On Mon, Oct 12, 2009 at 11:50 AM, Mark McElvy wrote:
> I am running FreeRadius and FreeSide usinf PPPoE. Freeside currently
> does not give me the reports I need for my acco
Unless you are paying mileage or providing a vehicle, some of those #'s
are too low.
When I was a contractor, I would not drive to a site for less than $15
within a 25 mile radius of the shop.
RickG wrote:
OK, back to my original question: Does anyone have a fee schedule for
their installe
OK, back to my original question: Does anyone have a fee schedule for
their installer/repair subcontractors?
I'm trying to cover every possible scenario. Here is what I've put together:
Subcontractor Fee Schedule
$75 – Standard installation of KyWiFi customer premises equipment
according to manufa
It sounds like you are a "character"!
I'm glad your marketing and service efforts are paying off.
I actually have had much the same results.
Good work and Thanks!
-RickG
On Wed, Oct 14, 2009 at 7:25 AM, Mike wrote:
> Actually, since they are a cellular company and can have unlimited
> bandwidth,
We're in Southern Ohio and I've always put low voltage cable just under the
sod. Time Warner does the same, they use a small slitter that slits the sod
and runs the cable just under it for running to homes with underground
utilities. We have no gophers, just ground hogs but still haven't had any
I'm installing an AP soon on a grain leg that has one of those on it. What
type of problems have you seen with them? First one I ever have come
across, had to ask farmer boy what the heck it was.
Bob-
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.or
- Original Message -
From: "Mike"
To: "WISPA General List"
Sent: Tuesday, October 13, 2009 8:25 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] billable fee schedule
> Sorry Marlon; you'll have to show me. Not only is there no burial
> depth requirement for limited energy circuits, such as telephone, and
>
I've run into that problem before. I explained to them that the average
cell site does 10s of thousands of dollars per month in revenue. Yet my
average tower only does a thousand or two. I also took the time to go to a
city council meeting and answer any questions about my income and net
rev
Heya Jeremy,
Use a known gain antenna (I don't know what the ns2 is), get to where you
are looking right into the main beam of their antenna exactly 1 mile (or two
or whatever, but an exact distance in even miles) away. Send me the rssi
value and I'll run the calcs to figure out what their eir
Actually, since they are a cellular company and can have unlimited
bandwidth, they are faster right now. That will change as they build
out. The customer money stays local instead of going out of town
when they "shop" with me.
I write a weekly column for the paper so am well known in the area
There was discussion regarding this system a few days ago. It has
absolutely wrecked havoc on 900 MHz in many rural areas. It really
is gee whiz technology however/
At 07:41 PM 10/13/2009, you wrote:
>How many of you have run across the John Deere RTK GPS Repeaters? those are
>really fun too.
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