Are you using cable? I had trouble with cable all the time.
Since I've been using fiber the last few years I've been outage-free - to say nothing of the big boost in bandwidth I got when I made the switch, though I guess some folks on cable have access to a healthy pipe.
EDIT:
There was one outage. It involved my shovel going through the fiber line! Sure, I should have had them come by and mark it; but to be fair they told me it was 2 feet deep - turns out the contractors that put it in only dug a trench about 5 inches down. I didn't think I'd be even close.
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Tue May 31, 2011 4:48 pm
by owlice
I'm on DSL... unless a squirrel scratches himself in Bethesda, in which case I'm waiting for DSL to come back online...
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 12:21 am
by emc
There are worse things one can lose other than the internet connection… not that it qualifies, but I accidently threw my car keys into the trash can once and didn’t remember until a few days after trash pickup that I had bundled them with some trash from my vehicle… actually what I remembered was the sound of the keys dropping inside the can… funny how the brain works… or not.
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 3:26 am
by geckzilla
So the moral of the story is... never accumulate enough refuse in one's vehicle to lose one's keys in. Or, perhaps, never throw away the refuse.
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 3:53 am
by orin stepanek
owlice wrote:I'm on DSL... unless a squirrel scratches himself in Bethesda, in which case I'm waiting for DSL to come back online...
About a year ago I lost connection every time it rained. Turns out that the squirrels ate through the insulation on the cable at the pole. After the cable company replaced the cable the problem went away.
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 7:08 am
by Beyond
geckzilla wrote:So the moral of the story is... never accumulate enough refuse in one's vehicle to lose one's keys in. Or, perhaps, never throw away the refuse.
Or just refuse to put your keys in the refuse!
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 9:49 am
by Star*Hopper
owlice wrote:... and I lose my internet connection, can anyone hear me scream?
If a man speaks in a forest but no woman hears him, is he still wrong?
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 10:32 am
by owlice
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 12:44 pm
by Star*Hopper
But why is it that rain drops, but snow falls?
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 2:22 pm
by Beyond
Why is it that someone cuts a tree down and then cuts it up??
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 2:37 pm
by Star*Hopper
'Cuz ya'd look pretty dumb cutting it up then trying to cut it down's what I figger.
But I never could figger why they got Interstate Hiways in Hawaii.
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 2:41 pm
by Chris Peterson
emc wrote:There are worse things one can lose other than the internet connection… not that it qualifies, but I accidently threw my car keys into the trash can once and didn’t remember until a few days after trash pickup that I had bundled them with some trash from my vehicle… actually what I remembered was the sound of the keys dropping inside the can… funny how the brain works… or not.
Personally, I'd much rather lose my car keys than my Internet connection. It's no problem at all getting by without a car, but without connectivity... no way.
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 2:55 pm
by neufer
Star*Hopper wrote:
But why is it that rain drops, but snow falls?
http://blueridgeblog.blogs.com/blue_ridge_blog/2009/01/snowy-distractions.html wrote:
<<I am obsessed with falling snow. Often I stand amid a flaky chaos, hypnotized, as snow tumbles to its eventual destination. Sometimes when I am out in a storm I feel my world is a Dreamswork creation (think Polar Express) and I fixate on an individual snowflake way up in the sky and follow it's journey until it becomes part of the blend. The other day, when it was way too cold, I stood outside my office and watched as the sun was a backlight to a blizzard. This snowy abstract is the playful result of using a rather small aperture and long-ish shutter speed.>>
Re: If a raindrop falls to the ground...
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 5:46 pm
by BMAONE23
Star*Hopper wrote:But why is it that rain drops, but snow falls?