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

From "Flyiñg Ñuñ 2°18 + on netbook" <flyingnun@tiscali.co.uk>
Newsgroups uk.telecom.broadband, uk.politics.misc, uk.finance, uk.misc
Subject Re: How does a shiiite BT (British Telecum) engineer make a mobile call underground?
Date 2018-11-07 17:41 +0000
Message-ID <g4gmefF4md1U1@mid.individual.net> (permalink)
References <g4gg06F38snU1@mid.individual.net>

Cross-posted to 4 groups.

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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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Thread

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
    Re: How does a shiiite BT (British Telecum) engineer make a mobile call underground? "R. Mark Clayton" <notyalckram@gmail.com> - 2018-11-08 05:26 -0800

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