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Make Your Own DSL

Logic Bomb writes: "Robert Cringley's latest is a striking set of instructions on how to create your own DSL service, or even your own "socialist Internet Service Provider". A cookie goes to whomever manages to implement this first! :-D" Cringley is on a roll.

4 of 268 comments (clear)

  1. Tried to Order one of these ckt's by bruceg · · Score: 3, Informative

    I tried to order one of these circuits about three months ago, and apparantly the telco's are on to this. I wanted to connect two buildings, so I tried ordering a "dry pair" from Verizon, and they said they didn't do those anymore.

    I ended up ordering a PtP T1, which is only going to increase the cost of replacing the aging 56k circuit, now connecting the two buildings, by $110. Not bad considering the increase in bandwidth.

  2. WHOA! Cringely Got It Right! BUT........ by darkPHi3er · · Score: 4, Informative

    Cringely got it right, in my last business, the area was out of dedicated "Data Lines", so PB had to send out an install tech who really knew what he was doing, i was looking over his shoulder and noticed that he was using our alarm lines...the tech told me almost exactly the same story as Cringely, including that if you called PB and asked for a pair of "guard lines" you'd be told they didn't exist or that they were all assigned in your area.

    SOME THINGS TO NOTE:
    since this is a point-to-point connection, your throughput will vary with the quality of your wire pairs

    you might also need to perform line balancing, as some of these wire have been in the ground/air for a LONG time

    if you have big power transformers or other "leaky" devices near your wires, your S/N ratio could be terrible

    AND, LAST BUT NOT LEAST, anyone can just simply t-splice your line to get 100% access to your communications, with maybe just having to perform a simple impedence adjustment...

    BUT, still cool for all of that BTW, when "Boardwatch Magazine" still had Jack Richards they ran a very similar (but more detailed) piece on this about 3 years ago

    Peace, Love to my Homies

    --
    Ten quid, she's so easy to blind. And not a word is spoken...
  3. Old news, here's here's why you don't do this by Kagato · · Score: 3, Informative

    The alarm line trick as been around for ages. Usually using the line to cross connect a CSU/DSU like it was a frame circuit. The problem isn't technology, it's quality. High speed datacomm expects certain line quality in order to do what it needs to do. Things like quality of the line, minium data throughput, etc are all defined in the tariff. Problem with these types of lines is that the tariff basically says the line should pass a simple continuity test and that's it. Afterall, that's all an alarm needs. So, if you get a real noisy line, you're sunk.

    As an experiment that's fine, but don't let a business depend on this because you'll have no recourse with the Telco.

  4. Re:what a bunch of bull by Tim+Doran · · Score: 4, Informative

    I work at a phone company (a big, big one, with an ampersand in the name) and this is absolutely not BS.

    In fact, we're now selling voice services over dry pair lines using DSL. If we can do it, you certainly can. As long as you don't give up before you even start...