High Speed Internet Project
High Speed Service Providers
Progress:
2004:
Sep: ORCnet news - Roger, AccessTNG,
VOIP, City of Ottawa
Sep: AccessTNG replace Osgoode/CGYC equipment: Letter
Aug: Rogers Cable service
July: AccessTNG wireless service Tower photo
July: Anik F2 launched (Telsat Canada satellite-based service by autumn)
July: City of Ottawa paving of Marina Drive at same time as cable upgrade
causes delays.
Jun: AccessTNG wireless announcement: Letter
| Letter-PDF | Info
& Sign-up
May 31: Rogers cable upgrade to begin (high speed projected late summer):
Letter-2, Letter-1
May 4: Rogers Cable Digital TV service
starts
May: AccessTNG is building a 70' (21m) tower on the golf club property
to provide fixed wireless broadband.
Apr: Mark Thevarg, Rogers Cable planning coordinator says CGYC-Kars will
get broadband service by the end of September, and digital TV service (Pay Per
View, Video on Demand, PVR 50 hr recorders) in the spring.
2004 Feb: A letter from Baycadd Solutions
(761-7175) on behalf of Rogers was delivered to homes about spring digging on
streets to lay new cables.
2003:
Oct: Letter from ORCnet - High-speed
Wireless Internet coverage Nov/03
Oct: Letter from AccessTNG ~ Response
from a resident
Sept: AccessTNG's agent TML Wireless
site testing. It appears a 68 ft (20m) relay (currently about 40 ft) is required
to provide a good signal for all homes.
Sept: Northern Wireless Internet
did an evaluation and suggested a community non-profit model where we own and
maintain the distribution system ourselves. They would connect us to a wireless
feed and distribute it via a tower. Suggested $300 modem, $50 installation,
various monthly plans.
July Site testing shows most homes cannot get service. Update
from AccessTNG
May Installations scheduled.
Mar. Installation planning. 15 homes committed and another 10 interested
- very strong numbers of interested residents for a community this size.
Feb. AccessTNG relay tower installed at golf club. Fees announced.
Jan. AccessTNG confirmed plans to install a repeater tower to service
CGYC.
Storm Internet service in North Gower is not available to CGYC because
of a hill on Roger Stevens Drive between here and the tower.
2002:
Nov: High speed demo Osgoode
Initial talks with AccessTNG at the Osgoode open house about service for CGYC.
Oct News from Chris Cope,
ORCnet coordinator
2002 Jul News from Chris Cope,
ORCnet coordinator
AccessTNG / Arryba Communications
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UPDATE: 2005 Oct 30
AccessTNG Inc. (<http://www.accesstng.net> becomes www.broadbandlearning.com) has
reached an agreement with another Ontario company, Arryba Communications Inc. to take over their wireless internet service and existing customer
accounts in our area. Billing will be from Arryba beginning November 1, 2005.
Arryba Communications www.arryba.com (613) 821-9990
In 2005, Arryba Communications began service to Vernon and other rural Ottawa areas. Their network uses fibre, copper and wireless, and offers
these services: broadband, VOIP, VPN, network design, and technical services.
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www.accesstng.net Tel: 1-866-262-2864
Email: info@accesstng.net
Customer support: 1-877-888-1263 Fax: 416-352-5837
AccessTNG, 170 University Avenue W, Suite 12-152, Waterloo, ON N2L 3E9
Fixed wireless high speed Internet service "line-of-sight" from the
tower (site test required). Speed is 1.5 Mbps download (read mail, Web)
and 500 Kbps for upload (send mail, FTP). Unlimited connection is "always
on". Up to 6 E-mail addresses. Installation fee for antenna, box, cables,
labour, and setup. Monthly service and equipment rental about $50-$60. A pizza-size
antenna on your wall or roof has a cable led to a small box inside your home.
This is connected to an ethernet network card (about $20) in your computer or
a wireless or cabled network (router and network cards for each computer sharing
the service) and requires power.
The community would like to thank the Carleton
Golf and Yacht Club for arranging with AccessTNG to host the relay and tower
on the CGYC maintenance building, which will serve the entire community.
Rogers Cable
Wired network of fibre-optic cable (on Rideau Valley Drive) and coax cable
(within CGYC) provide (simultaneous) high speed Internet and digital television
services. ShopRogers.com
- Internet service is "always on"
- Requires special cable modem (rent or buy)
- 3 service speeds, bundled pricing with mobile phone and/or digital TV.
LinCsat
Satellite-based service. LinCsat dealer, Andre Lahaie, is a local CGYC resident.
Call Andre at 247-8023 or andre@digital-city.ca.
Contact Digital City at 727-0741 or
merivale@digital-city.ca. Lincsat
is a DirecWay reseller.
Prices are residential service only and may be out of date
- please contact the company for fees or other services.
Two options for installation/hardware and Internet service (approximate pricing):
- About $127/month all-inclusive - hardware and installation is $39/month
on the lease plan - add Internet service at $59/month for first 3 months,
$89 per month after that.
- $400 to $1000 for residential installation plus $89/month (based on 4-year
contract quoted Nov/2002).
DIRECWAY
Hughes Network Systems launches DIRECWAY
the Industrys First Satellite-based Wi-Fi Solution in 2003.
TELSAT CANADA
July 2004
A new satellite "Anik F2" was launched that will enable a new Satellite-based
high speed Internet service anywhere in North America by this fall by Telesat
Canada). Telesat said cost will be about $500 for the satellite dish and hardware,
plus $60 a month for service - about 2 Megs down and just under 1 Meg up, comparable
to DSL or high-speed cable.
Problems to watch: The new Ka band may not support VoIP and VPN solutions.
Similarly, the encryption technology in VPN solutions may not make it through
the unique routing arrangements of Ka band. Until solved, these issuges make
it less useful for SMEs (small or medium sized enterprise).
ORCnet News
- ORCnet - Ottawa Rural Communities Network
- Nov. 2002 High speed demo Osgoode
- Oct. 2002 News from Chris Cope, ORCnet
coordinator
- Jul. 2002 News from Chris Cope, ORCnet
coordinator
- Jan. 2002: Following a Storm Internet information meeting in North
Gower, about 160 people requested site surveys to see if they could access
the service. Surveys indicated that houses in CGYC are not "line of sight"
to the tower at the North Gower Client Service Centre due to the "hill"
in between.
November 6, 2001: ORCnet High Speed Project
ORCnet is a group dedicated to getting broadband Internet services in the rural
areas of Ottawa. Councillor Brooks, City staff, people from high tech companies,
local residents, and two people from Storm Internet were at the November meeting.
A pilot project in the North Gower area is just getting underway
to connect about 40 locations (homes, businesses, etc.) using a transmitter/receiver
on the tower behind the Client Service Centre for the City of Ottawa (former
Rideau Township offices on Roger Stevens Dr., North Gower). Storm Internet Services
is to get a lease from the City to install the equipment. This technology is
known as fixed wireless and does not require a telephone or cable line, but
requires a computer network card to connect to the external rented equipment
that is then connected to the roof antenna. It's a shared 2MB two-way service.
CGYC is inside the pilot coverage area and you should be able to participate
unless your house has high trees blocking line of sight to the town
hall tower. (There is already a tower in Kemptville but that is too far away)
The cost for a home will be about $400 including antenna, computer equipment
and installation. A computer with a network card is required. Service will cost
about $50/month for 120 hours including rental of equipment. If a site survey
by Storm Internet finds that your house is
not "line of sight" from the tower, you would need to install a tower on your
home to raise your antenna at additional cost. This is the least expensive wireless
option currently available in our area.
High speed Internet (broadband) service is not only about accessing
Web pages faster - it is about having access to a public utility that supports
transmission of Voice Over Internet (VOIP), video, music, and technologies not
yet in common use. Modern businesses including people who telecommute will not
locate in areas without this important service. This reduces your home's real
estate value.
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