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#21
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On 22 Sep, 21:21, "Steve Dulieu" wrote:
"Roy Badami" wrote in message ... [X-posting to uk.telecom.mobile] On 22/09/10 11:24, Recliner wrote: Bad news -- it looks like mobile phones may work on the Tube after all, according to that ever accurate source, the Evening Standard. So no more cutting off of noisy phone callers as the train enters the tunnel. __________ http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23880176-boris-johnson.... Perhaps the Londoners here can set me straight on this. Back when One2One first launched, it launched as a London-only network. Its selling point, apart from being cheaper than Cellnet and Vodafone, was that it claimed better coverage in the capital than the two national networks. I have strong recollections that part of that claim was that it worked on the tube. *I remember quite specifically reading about this, down to (at least some) discussion about the technology and the use of leaky feeders. Am I mistaken? *Did One2One ever work on the tube, or was that just a plan that never came to fruition? *And if it did work on the tube, what happened to that infrastructure and why and when did it stop working? Sadly you are mistaken, One2One never worked on the tube. The only customer facing mobile telecoms that have ever worked on the LUL deep level tubes was the old Rabbit network which had base stations on a lot of our platforms. I remember my boss being stunned when I demonstrated my Motorola Silverlink handset making calls to our depot at Arnos Grove from the platforms at Hyde Park Corner and Wood Green stations on the Piccadilly line, back in the early nineties before One2One were even online. Of course, that all got knocked on the head when Hutchinson killed Rabbit to roll out Orange. Us tube train drivers were some of the few people that though this was a retrograde step. But there are isolated places where they work now. In the deep passageways at Hampstead, for example, and a lot of the tunnel towards Bank on the DLR (but not Bank itself). |
#22
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#23
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"tony sayer" wrote in message
... In article , Steve Terry scribeth thus "Roy Stilling" wrote in message ... On 22 Sep, 11:55, "Recliner" wrote: "Roy Badami" wrote in message On 22/09/10 11:24, Recliner wrote: snip Have they got the emergency services' Tetra radios working in the Tube yet? This was one of the recommendations post 7/7. Presumably it'd be relatively easy to piggy-back civilian mobile traffic onto that infrastructure if it has actually been completed. Roy If the emergency services had adopted GSM Pro instead of Tetra, they could have added leaky feeder down the tube for all to use at least 10 years ago. Steve Terry ISTR we had this argument somewhile ago and did we came to any conclusion why it wasn't done?.. I mean sound engineering reasons?.. Tony Sayer Tetra has nothing to do with sound engineering reasons, it's entirely political and a means of funnelling large quantities of taxpayers money to O2 Airwave. It's commercial equivalent "Dolphin" has been an economic failure and went bankrupt. Steve Terry -- "I would like to plead for my right to investigate natural phenomena without having guns pointed at me. I also ask for the right to be wrong without being hanged for it." - Wilhelm Reich, November 1947 |
#24
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Steve Terry wrote:
"tony wrote in message ... In , Steve Terry scribeth thus "Roy wrote in message ... On 22 Sep, 11:55, wrote: "Roy wrote in message On 22/09/10 11:24, Recliner wrote: snip Have they got the emergency services' Tetra radios working in the Tube yet? This was one of the recommendations post 7/7. Presumably it'd be relatively easy to piggy-back civilian mobile traffic onto that infrastructure if it has actually been completed. Roy If the emergency services had adopted GSM Pro instead of Tetra, they could have added leaky feeder down the tube for all to use at least 10 years ago. Steve Terry ISTR we had this argument somewhile ago and did we came to any conclusion why it wasn't done?.. I mean sound engineering reasons?.. Tony Sayer Tetra has nothing to do with sound engineering reasons, it's entirely political and a means of funnelling large quantities of taxpayers money to O2 Airwave. Some fairly bald assertions, there. And wrong, too. Firstly, perhaps you can point us at a capabilities specification for GSM Pro and take us through how it meets the requirements that Tetra meets to match the ERC specification. Secondly, the TfL Tetra rollout doesn't involved Airwave, other than requiring interworking. |
#25
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Greetings.
In article , Recliner wrote: Bad news -- it looks like mobile phones may work on the Tube after all, according to that ever accurate source, the Evening Standard. So no more cutting off of noisy phone callers as the train enters the tunnel. I think the tunnel itself will be enough to make the noisy callers stop. At least on the Central Line, when the train's in the tunnel, you need to shout to be heard by, and strain to hear, a person sitting next to you. I can't imagine it would be possible to carry on a telephone conversation under those conditions, unless you are happy with the entirety of the dialogue being, "What? What did you say? I can't hear you." Regards, Tristan -- _ _V.-o Tristan Miller Space is limited / |`-' -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- In a haiku, so it's hard (7_\\ http://www.nothingisreal.com/ To finish what you |
#26
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On Sep 23, 1:12*am, "Steve Terry" wrote:
Tetra has nothing to do with sound engineering reasons, it's entirely political and a means of funnelling large quantities of taxpayers money to O2 Airwave. FYI: O2 sold Airwave to our friends at Macquarie in 2007: http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/networki...wave-39286784/ |
#27
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"martin" wrote in message
... On Sep 23, 1:12 am, "Steve Terry" wrote: Tetra has nothing to do with sound engineering reasons, it's entirely political and a means of funnelling large quantities of taxpayers money to O2 Airwave. FYI: O2 sold Airwave to our friends at Macquarie in 2007: http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/networki...wave-39286784/ Which demonstrates the ludicrous amounts of public money wasted, so much so that investment companies bought it. Steve Terry -- "I would like to plead for my right to investigate natural phenomena without having guns pointed at me. I also ask for the right to be wrong without being hanged for it." - Wilhelm Reich, November 1947 |
#28
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"Rupert Moss-Eccardt" wrote in message
... Steve Terry wrote: "tony wrote in message ... In , Steve Terry scribeth thus "Roy wrote in message ... On 22 Sep, 11:55, wrote: "Roy wrote in message On 22/09/10 11:24, Recliner wrote: snip Tetra has nothing to do with sound engineering reasons, it's entirely political and a means of funnelling large quantities of taxpayers money to O2 Airwave. Some fairly bald assertions, there. And wrong, too. Firstly, perhaps you can point us at a capabilities specification for GSM Pro and take us through how it meets the requirements that Tetra meets to match the ERC specification. That would be the ERC spec that allows Tetra multiplexing at 17.6Hz that the Police Association are litigating for health damage to their officers. A problem that wouldn't exist with GSM Trower report: http://www.tetrawatch.net/papers/trower_report.pdf Secondly, the TfL Tetra rollout doesn't involved Airwave, other than requiring interworking. Let me guess, you work for Airwave Tetra or TFL Tetra? And Turkeys don't vote for Christmas. In 2000 whist visiting Sweden i spoke to police officers about their new GSM Pro personal radios (at the time using waterproof Ericsson R250s) and they were very satisfied with them. (retail price for Ericsson R250s at the time was around £100 each) http://www.gsmarena.com/ericsson_r250s_pro-119.php Also if required additional encryption can be added to each phone. We of course years later had to reinvent the wheel, at the cost of billions to the public for the benefit of private companies, and to the detriment of the public allowing them to share an improved GSM network. Steve Terry -- "I would like to plead for my right to investigate natural phenomena without having guns pointed at me. I also ask for the right to be wrong without being hanged for it." - Wilhelm Reich, November 1947 |
#29
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"Neil Williams" wrote in message
... On Wed, 22 Sep 2010 13:56:56 +0100, "Steve Terry" wrote: About ten years ago Orange put leaky feeder in the tunnels on the West coast line out of Euston at least as far as Northampton Are they still present? If so that might explain why it is sometimes possible to hold a signal all or most of the way through some of the tunnels. Neil AFAIK, I can't see why Orange would remove them after spending money on installing them. I could hold a conversation from Euston to at least Northampton on my Orange ED50, whilst others on other networks couldn't. Steve Terry -- "I would like to plead for my right to investigate natural phenomena without having guns pointed at me. I also ask for the right to be wrong without being hanged for it." - Wilhelm Reich, November 1947 |
#30
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Steve Terry wrote:
"Rupert wrote in message ... Steve Terry wrote: "tony wrote in message ... In , Steve Terry scribeth thus "Roy wrote in message ... On 22 Sep, 11:55, wrote: "Roy wrote in message On 22/09/10 11:24, Recliner wrote: snip Tetra has nothing to do with sound engineering reasons, it's entirely political and a means of funnelling large quantities of taxpayers money to O2 Airwave. Some fairly bald assertions, there. And wrong, too. Firstly, perhaps you can point us at a capabilities specification for GSM Pro and take us through how it meets the requirements that Tetra meets to match the ERC specification. That would be the ERC spec that allows Tetra multiplexing at 17.6Hz that the Police Association are litigating for health damage to their officers. A problem that wouldn't exist with GSM Trower report: http://www.tetrawatch.net/papers/trower_report.pdf Well done. How about the actual operational needs. To pick a simple example. Tetra works on the TGV, GSM doesn't Secondly, the TfL Tetra rollout doesn't involved Airwave, other than requiring interworking. Let me guess, you work for Airwave Tetra or TFL Tetra? And Turkeys don't vote for Christmas. Actually I don't and have never done so. However I have been involved in training, supporting and managing 'blue light' and other emergency organisations. So have an appreciation of what is needed and, indeed, provided some input into the requirements spec some time ago for a particular application. In 2000 whist visiting Sweden i spoke to police officers about their new GSM Pro personal radios (at the time using waterproof Ericsson R250s) and they were very satisfied with them. (retail price for Ericsson R250s at the time was around £100 each) http://www.gsmarena.com/ericsson_r250s_pro-119.php Yes, GSM Pro does provide PTT, but there are the well-known shortcomings, as I hope you know. Also if required additional encryption can be added to each phone. We of course years later had to reinvent the wheel, at the cost of billions to the public for the benefit of private companies, and to the detriment of the public allowing them to share an improved GSM network. But GSM isn't the right answer. And _we_ didn't reinvent the wheel. Tetra is an ETSI standard. |
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