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How does a shiiite BT (British Telecum) engineer make a mobile call underground?

Started by7 <7@enemygadgets.com>
First post2018-11-07 15:51 +0000
Last post2018-11-07 17:41 +0000
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  How does a shiiite BT (British Telecum) engineer make a mobile call underground? 7 <7@enemygadgets.com> - 2018-11-07 15:51 +0000
    Re: How does a shiiite BT (British Telecum) engineer make a mobile call underground? "Flyiñg Ñuñ 2°18 + on netbook" <flyingnun@tiscali.co.uk> - 2018-11-07 17:41 +0000

#18653 — How does a shiiite BT (British Telecum) engineer make a mobile call underground?

From7 <7@enemygadgets.com>
Date2018-11-07 15:51 +0000
SubjectHow does a shiiite BT (British Telecum) engineer make a mobile call underground?
Message-ID<g4gg06F38snU1@mid.individual.net>
How does a shiiite BT (British Telecum) engineer make a mobile call 
underground?
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Why he takes a plane to China, get into the underground, turns on
his roaming and make a call from China underground!!!!

Thats what it means to be shiiite BT engineer, or a shiiite Ofcum thick
shhit regulating the UK telecum market, or DCMS wahahahanking on
about UK connectivity, or shiiite Openroach engineer spanking
his krone tool instead of installing fiber.

Nothing new here I guess.

Other than UK is now 4000% more expensive per bit of Internet
than the developed world.

Why doesn't offcum deregulate immediately? Because offcum is
manned by ex BT staff with master bation fantasies of protecting
their bosses in BT whilst pretending to serve Offcum interests.

The history of mass Internet is not the history of phone companies, 
wireless/mobile Internet companies, cable companies or media companies 
despite their total and presently pointless dominance in the field along 
with regulators that identify themselves as phone experts, culture 
experts, media experts and sports experts.

The history of mass Internet begins with the availability of cheap 
modems used to connect back to data centers where the routers were 
available. It was a hard fought battle by Internet engineers to roll 
them out initially because phone companies were totally uncooperative 
about digital signals being sent over their phone lines instead of 
embracing it as a revenue stream.

Then cable TV companies entered the scene with faster Internet because 
their TV data bandwidth were faster any way inside a dedicated coax 
cable and more reliable than a phone line connection, and extra 
bandwidth beyond TV need was present in the cable. This allowed Internet 
engineers to really push up the quality of the Internet that was 
delivered. All of a sudden email, web pages and file servers were better 
than snail mail and shopping. Huge transformational changes were taking 
place with the use of cable delivered Internet by Internet engineers.
Then media companies entered the market putting in the investments 
needed to roll out cable everywhere behind the Internet demand that 
fueled it.

Then came wireless phone Internet which now make Internet available all 
the time for personal use through a mobile phone connection made 
possible by connecting wireless towers to fiber modems to handle the 
enormous data bandwidth.

Then came fiber Internet. Fiber Internet for the masses which was better 
than phone Internet, cable Internet and wireless phone Internet, and 
since its introduction it has seen costs fall to 20x less than either 
cable Internet or phone Internet while at the same time its speed has 
pushed past terabits per second. So mass Internet wants to move from its 
humble beginnings with telephone modems, then cable modems and now fiber 
modems.

So the history of mass Internet begins with Internet of phone lines, and 
then shifts to era of Internet of cable, and now we are moving into the 
age of Internet of Fiber, some 50 countries behind world leaders in 
Fiber Internet technologies. What this is going to do the City, London,
etc no one knows. Without good connectivity, their relevance would
easily become lost in a Digital World. For example, it is easier
to get connected in China, and stay connected while moving
through underground, rail networks, and streets. And its some 400% 
cheaper. No need to take cards or cash - everything now paid for
by Fintech technologies which relies on mobile and 100% connectivity.

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#18654

From"Flyiñg Ñuñ 2°18 + on netbook" <flyingnun@tiscali.co.uk>
Date2018-11-07 17:41 +0000
Message-ID<g4gmefF4md1U1@mid.individual.net>
In reply to#18653
7 wrote:
> How does a shiiite BT (British Telecum) engineer make a mobile call
> underground?
> -------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Why he takes a plane to China, get into the underground, turns on
> his roaming and make a call from China underground!!!!
>
> Thats what it means to be shiiite BT engineer, or a shiiite Ofcum
> thick shhit regulating the UK telecum market, or DCMS wahahahanking on
> about UK connectivity, or shiiite Openroach engineer spanking
> his krone tool instead of installing fiber.
>
> Nothing new here I guess.
>
> Other than UK is now 4000% more expensive per bit of Internet
> than the developed world.
>
> Why doesn't offcum deregulate immediately? Because offcum is
> manned by ex BT staff with master bation fantasies of protecting
> their bosses in BT whilst pretending to serve Offcum interests.
>
> The history of mass Internet is not the history of phone companies,
> wireless/mobile Internet companies, cable companies or media companies
> despite their total and presently pointless dominance in the field
> along with regulators that identify themselves as phone experts,
> culture experts, media experts and sports experts.
>
> The history of mass Internet begins with the availability of cheap
> modems used to connect back to data centers where the routers were
> available. It was a hard fought battle by Internet engineers to roll
> them out initially because phone companies were totally uncooperative
> about digital signals being sent over their phone lines instead of
> embracing it as a revenue stream.
>
> Then cable TV companies entered the scene with faster Internet because
> their TV data bandwidth were faster any way inside a dedicated coax
> cable and more reliable than a phone line connection, and extra
> bandwidth beyond TV need was present in the cable. This allowed
> Internet engineers to really push up the quality of the Internet that
> was delivered. All of a sudden email, web pages and file servers were
> better than snail mail and shopping. Huge transformational changes
> were taking place with the use of cable delivered Internet by
> Internet engineers. Then media companies entered the market putting
> in the investments needed to roll out cable everywhere behind the
> Internet demand that fueled it.
>
> Then came wireless phone Internet which now make Internet available
> all the time for personal use through a mobile phone connection made
> possible by connecting wireless towers to fiber modems to handle the
> enormous data bandwidth.
>
> Then came fiber Internet. Fiber Internet for the masses which was
> better than phone Internet, cable Internet and wireless phone
> Internet, and since its introduction it has seen costs fall to 20x
> less than either cable Internet or phone Internet while at the same
> time its speed has pushed past terabits per second. So mass Internet
> wants to move from its humble beginnings with telephone modems, then
> cable modems and now fiber modems.
>
> So the history of mass Internet begins with Internet of phone lines,
> and then shifts to era of Internet of cable, and now we are moving
> into the age of Internet of Fiber, some 50 countries behind world
> leaders in Fiber Internet technologies. What this is going to do the
> City, London, etc no one knows. Without good connectivity, their
> relevance would easily become lost in a Digital World. For example,
> it is easier to get connected in China, and stay connected while 
> moving
> through underground, rail networks, and streets. And its some 400%
> cheaper. No need to take cards or cash - everything now paid for
> by Fintech technologies which relies on mobile and 100% connectivity.

Can't do that by wifi from the London Underground these days.   It says 
so on my EE tariff.  And it would save on the air fare.  :)
-- 
Heard messages are sweet but those Unheard are sweeter
flyingnun@roseofwhite.plus.com FN 2º18+. Mungo Brandybuck of Buckland 



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