kaspaas
Expert Member
From the GLUG-tech mailing list. [
]
See the bold part at the bottom
> In my experience with wireless solutions, is that they arent as stable
> as a fixed line and simple things like the weather will leave you with
> no connectivity
Their frequency licence allows them to broadcast at a far higher power
than say, traditional wifi, and they are covering distances of 3 to 5km,
instead of the hundreds or thousands of km that are involved with
satellite connections. I doubt weather will be an issue.
> what type of upstream connectivity does sentech have, no point having
> 1000 512k subscribers with a 2mb international pipe/sat. (clearly they
> do have bigger, just an example)
Apparently they have 14MBps to europe.
It all depends on whether they know how to build networks. <b>ZA engineers are notorious for spending more money on slowing the service down than the on the bandwidth they buy</b>. ZA bandwidth is only expensive and slow because the engineers who built the network designed it that way.
South Africa needs World Class Broadband at World Competitive Prices.
See the bold part at the bottom
> In my experience with wireless solutions, is that they arent as stable
> as a fixed line and simple things like the weather will leave you with
> no connectivity
Their frequency licence allows them to broadcast at a far higher power
than say, traditional wifi, and they are covering distances of 3 to 5km,
instead of the hundreds or thousands of km that are involved with
satellite connections. I doubt weather will be an issue.
> what type of upstream connectivity does sentech have, no point having
> 1000 512k subscribers with a 2mb international pipe/sat. (clearly they
> do have bigger, just an example)
Apparently they have 14MBps to europe.
It all depends on whether they know how to build networks. <b>ZA engineers are notorious for spending more money on slowing the service down than the on the bandwidth they buy</b>. ZA bandwidth is only expensive and slow because the engineers who built the network designed it that way.
South Africa needs World Class Broadband at World Competitive Prices.