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It's how Marshall

Done. Well, not quite. To make it work De Salis needs about 10 surrounding farms to do the same. He”ll then liaise with  local lines company, Counties Power, to extend its existing fibre-optic network a couple of extra kilometres to a point where he can hook everyone up. In the process, he”s hoping to bring broadband to the local school. The result: community-owned access. Each farmer has property rights to the fibre on their land and provides an easement – for data – to cross over to Are you stuck using the ‘old skool’ way of advertising and marketing your best-driving-school.com school, e. the neighbour.

It”s how Marshall, who lives in the old Post Office building If the Federal Reserve were the only bank in America, then bad credit loan would be money and the Fed would truly invent the money out of nothing (as it does already with outside money). at Hastwell, near Eketahuna, was able to give his partner Janet a fabulous ducting birthday present. Marshall, a naval reserve officer running a Finnish Landrace sheep farm, says the idea cable duct emerged from a discussion with De Salis at the Trentham Officers Mess in 2008.

“Janet was doing a masters at Otago Medical School and it was absolutely hopeless for her on dial-up over the old copper lines,” he recalls. “She would get on to some information from a university website and it would drop off halfway through. Telecom said it was going to be years before we would get broadband.”

De Salis then hatched his cable channels community access idea – convincing Marshall and eight neighbouring farms to plough in about five kilometres of cable to connect to FX Networks” fibre backbone. For the farmers, it didn”t seem that complicated – laying fibre wasn”t that different from laying irrigation pipe.

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