Main > Everything Else
Home Network
Ridgefire:
I work for 911. So that would be wireless on the other side of that wall is a 75 foot radio tower, so steel tower, radio antennas, and lightning. = bad things
Sent from my DROID3 using Tapatalk
ark_ader:
--- Quote from: Ridgefire on January 21, 2012, 05:19:57 pm ---Glad I have you all on here to help me. This is what I have to use for reference. And yes these are real photos taken from our server area.
--- End quote ---
The tech has job security going for him, or the sack if I was his manager. 911 eh? So a serious fault goes down and the tech is on holiday and your friendly contractor tech has to find the fault? Ka-ching!
I have seen installations like this before. I just look at it and go ".....uh huh! Well that is one of your problems." Please do not get this tech to do the cabling in your house.
If you are the tech in question, then I suggest at least some cable ties and proper trunking, a marker pen and a multimeter. ;D I hope you got clearance to publish these photos if you work in a secure environment. ::)
--- Quote ---I work for 911. So that would be wireless on the other side of that wall is a 75 foot radio tower, so steel tower, radio antennas, and lightning. = bad things
--- End quote ---
Me too I have a lot of devices that provide the wrong environment, thus the Powerline solution. You could go wireless in your house and use 802.11A that uses a higher frequency, less people hack it and most devices support it.
J_K_M_A_N:
I just installed some wiring at work and I used 2 of these. It looks very nice. Then I also bought a bunch of 2' patch cables from them to hook from those to our switch. They are probably too long but you will not want to make a bunch of those. Especially with the stiff cat5e cable that you run in wall. The patch cables from them are much more flexible.
J_K_M_A_N
Ridgefire:
--- Quote from: ark_ader on January 22, 2012, 08:23:35 am ---The tech has job security going for him, or the sack if I was his manager. 911 eh? So a serious fault goes down and the tech is on holiday and your friendly contractor tech has to find the fault? Ka-ching!
I have seen installations like this before. I just look at it and go ".....uh huh! Well that is one of your problems." Please do not get this tech to do the cabling in your house.
If you are the tech in question, then I suggest at least some cable ties and proper trunking, a marker pen and a multimeter. ;D I hope you got clearance to publish these photos if you work in a secure environment. ::)
--- End quote ---
I'm fine with posting those photos. There is nothing in them that falls under secure environment protocols. Now if I show you the combination to get into that vault. I would be in trouble. The scary part of those pictures....we just went through a computer upgrade and the IT department "CLEANED" up the vault.
Ed_McCarron:
--- Quote from: Ridgefire on January 21, 2012, 06:45:39 pm ---I work for 911. So that would be wireless on the other side of that wall is a 75 foot radio tower, so steel tower, radio antennas, and lightning. = bad things
--- End quote ---
Yup. I install antennas for SCADA systems -- on top of water tanks. That's why I recognized the surge protectors. We try to keep the radio and computer stuff in different rooms. The IT guys don't like it when you blow their stuff up.
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
[*] Previous page
Go to full version