Thread regarding CenturyLink layoffs

Really important post about the new technology that is coming. Need to read this and get a cue.

ew tech is 5G, provides 1-10G to a home or business. For $370 in labor and $240 in material, the new tech will generate $90 a month in revenue, but...that $610 is split 255 ways, because you can get 255 customers per $240 card.

The customer will but there own 5G router for $800 or $900.

Or they can finance just like a cell phone.

CTL does not have 5G, but we have the strong fiber back bone. ATT, VZ will use as well as Sprectrum and Comcast.

It's new ERA boys, invest your money in yourself. Get debt free, have cash in savings.

I am serious. Too many people thing old ways will work with new tech. It will not. Whenever new technology presents itself before deployment the most efficient manner is planned and discussed and then deployed.

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| 1001 views | | 3 replies (last June 8, 2018) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+TzeRlno

3 replies (most recent on top)

http://www.telecompetitor.com/will-5g-enable-wireless-replacement-home-broadband-disrupt-ftth/

https://www.lifewire.com/5g-internet-wifi-4156280

https://www.forbes.com/sites/washingtonbytes/2017/09/22/the-dawn-of-5g-will-wireless-kill-the-broadband-star/#2cd9b39ffd7f

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Post ID: @jkz+TzeRlno

5G is an urban solution that doesn’t do much for hooking up rural people to the Internet. So articles that compare and contrast 5G with FTTH are about urban settings. The technology of the present and near future in rural America is fixed location LTE. This is a 50 Mbps technology today with an quick upgrade path to 100 Mbps.

The magic of rural LTE is that carriers go into the market with even more spectrum than they have in urban markets and many fewer people to serve. They have more spectrum available because there aren’t as many active TV channels and not as much division between competitors.

But there will be 5G applications in rural markets, probably smart farms that find 5G and 5G-ish systems such as LTE-U better for outdoor systems than Wi-Fi. I’m suggesting that farms of 1000 acres or more may be better off with privately-owned 5G networks for Internet of Farms applications than with Wi-Fi. The reasoning for this is complicated, but it comes down to reliability, coverage and stability.

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Post ID: @bsq+TzeRlno

As I said before you sir deserve a cigar it is here it is now

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Post ID: @yom+TzeRlno

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