Friday, 10 June 2011

Deferral Account Information as of 08 Jun 11

Readers interested in the latest information on the Bell Canada Deferral Account project for the areas of Echo Bay, Goulais River, St. Joseph Island and SSM – Airport should refer to the ADnet website where I posted the latest information available to me as of 8 Jun 11.

Monday, 6 June 2011

It’s Magic – Tbaytel Grows a Generation

Tbaytel has now joined the other cellular companies and Xplornet Communications in calling their networks 4G HSPA+ as shown in this extract from their website.

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To read my opinion of this change, see the blog entry The Latest on 3G and 4G Terminology.

Tuesday, 31 May 2011

Additional HSPA Sites Operational Along Hwy 17 North

The following cellular sites along the Hwy 17 corridor north from the Sault towards Thunder Bay are now operational in both the 2/2.5G CDMA (Bell, Telus and Tbaytel compatible hardware only) mode and the 3G HSPA (Rogers and Tbaytel compatible hardware only) mode. A single handset capable of both 2/2.5G CDMA and 3G HSPA operation is not available :

  1. Bellevue
  2. Michipicoten
  3. Wawa
  4. Marion Lake
  5. White River

Additional sites are scheduled for commissioning between now and September 2011.

Monday, 30 May 2011

Bellevue and Heyden Canopy Wireless Broadband Operational

Tbaytel has confirmed in writing that the Bellevue and Heyden broadband (high speed Internet) Canopy systems are now operational effective Monday, May 30, 2011 at 12:30 pm. Residents of the North Sault area within range of one of these towers can now get better access to the Internet.

The area installer has also confirmed that he has received the go ahead from Tbaytel.
To order the service, contact Tbaytel customer service at 1-800-264-9501 or customercare@tbaytel.net

I hope some of you will have service in the next few days. I would be interested in hearing if and when you get access and what you think of the service. Either contact me directly or use the comment section below.

Thursday, 26 May 2011

North Sault Broadband Installations To Start 30 May 11

Tbaytel has started to contact users who registered for the Canopy wireless broadband (high speed Internet) service to arrange site visits to confirm the availability of the signal and to carry out installations.

Tbaytel uses computer generated coverage projection models to determine which access point provides coverage in the user’s area. For the initial phase, areas covered by the Bellevue and Heyden access sites will be contacted followed shortly by people in the Goulais (Buttermilk) area. As previously reported, there is considerable pent-up demand and it may take a while to get around to all potential users.

The visits are scheduled to start the week of 30 May 11.

These new access point sites join the Batchawana and Searchmont sites that have been providing service for nearly a year.

Bellevue HSPA Operational

Tbaytel informed me that the Bellevue HSPA cell site is now operational.

This means users with Rogers or Tbaytel 3G HSPA hardware i.e smart phones should be able to get service in the coverage area. The site will not work with Rogers 2/2.5G GSM hardware. 

Bell and Telus 3G HSPA will not work with the new service.The site will continue to provide Tbaytel and Bell/Telus 2/2.5G CDMA service. In other words, if you were able to use your cell phone previously, the new HSPA service will have no effect.

Tbaytel will be providing more details on the HSPA service in due course and I will provide particulars as they become known.

Wednesday, 25 May 2011

Stats Can Internet Survey

Statistics Canada has released its most recent Canadian Internet Use Survey. the full report is available at http://www.statcan.gc.ca/daily-quotidien/110525/dq110525b-eng.htm.

In my opinion, this is probably the single most important document affecting national policy decision about the roll-out of universal Internet access in Canada.

There are some interesting conclusions in the report about availability. access, and usage. I am sure the report will generate a lot comments in various places.

This is a major note from the report. Note the definition of CMA.

Note to readers

The 2010 Canadian Internet Use Survey, sponsored by Industry Canada, was conducted in October and November as a supplement to the Labour Force Survey.

Redesigned for 2010, this survey now consists of a household component, which measures home access, and an individual component, which measures online behaviours.

This release features home Internet access, based on a sample of about 30,000 households. Data on individual online behaviours will be released later in 2011.

Definitions

The "Home Internet access" rate is the proportion of households with access to the Internet from home.

The survey asked about the type of "devices" used to access the Internet, including a desktop or laptop computer; a video games console; a BlackBerry, iPhone or other wireless handheld device; and other devices.

The "Home high-speed access" rate is the proportion of households with a self-reported high-speed connection to access the Internet from home.

A census metropolitan area (CMA) and a census agglomeration (CA) consist of one or more neighbouring municipalities situated around a major urban core. A CMA must have a total population of at least 100,000, of which 50,000 or more live in the urban core. A CA must have an urban core population of at least 10,000.

The rate of home Internet access also varies by household size and composition