Entries Tagged 'cables & Wiring' ↓

Is there something that I can use to connect two Ethernet cables together to make one cable?

My house is kinda wired for DSL. the cords actually come out of the walls and just sort of hang there. One of the cords is not long enough to reach my on-demand box. I don't have the guts to try to see if there is some slack behind the wall and was wondering if there is something I can use to connect to Ethernet cables together to make one? if so what is it called, and where can I get it?

You can use a switch that can be bought at bestbuy, circuitcity etc. You will need the switch and other cat5 cable that will reach to your box.

bestbuy.com/site/olspage.jsp?…
just buy the cheapest one you can find.

Also you could buy a coupler mwave.com/mwave/Skusearch.hmx…

no you have to by a new cable from home depot it is very cheap like
$3 per piece and wide and length as hell

Use a female to female connector, make sure it is a straight connector, not cross-over. From experience the losses on these are minimal. a better long term answer is to have proper wall outlets fitted, but this requires test and connection equipment you will not have.

They make female to female coupler/connectors, although you may experience a bit of signal loss.

Something like this is what you want (although I am not promoting this ebay seller)

cgi.ebay.co.uk/RJ45-LAN-Ethernet-…

Who writes pro-cable Internet legislation? Cable does

A month ago, we covered the news that a long-simmering municipal broadband bill had been taken off North Carolina’s legislative stove and (to continue the metaphor) jammed back into Raleigh’s government deep freeze. the bill targeted North Carolina communities who thought that broadband ought to be a public utility, and it sought to make such community-owned networks much more difficult.

“An Act to Ensure that A Local Government that Competes with Private Companies in Providing Communication Services Has the Support Of its Citizens” was sponsored by a prominent state lawmaker and backed by incumbent ISPs, including the cable lobby. but it’s not like those ISPs actually wrote the now-discarded bill, right?

Local TV station WCNC almost single-handedly makes me want to take back every bit of whinging I’ve ever done about the idiocy of local news, because they approached bill sponsor David Hoyle this week and came back with the sort of quotes journalists would trample their mothers for:

In the last legislative session Sen. Hoyle tried to put a moratorium on any more local governments expanding into municipal broadband.

When the I-Team asked him if the cable industry drew up the bill, Senator Hoyle responded, “Yes, along with my help.”

When asked about criticism that he was “carrying water” for the cable companies, Hoyle replied, “I’ve carried more water than Gunga Din for the business community—the people who pay the taxes.”

Yikes. In Hoyle’s defense, this sort of practice is not uncommon—legislators often work with interest groups on particular pieces of legislation or on letters that go out under their name. but letting those who stand to benefit financially sit down and actually draft the bill protecting their interests, then bragging about how you carry more water for them “than Gunga Din”—well, you don’t see that nearly as much.

The whole process echoes similar bill-writing exercises across the countries, where the cable and telecommunications companies boast powerful influence in state capitols. when AT&T got furious at local Illinois communities who were demanding build-out requirements on its U-Verse IPTV/Internet service, the company helped rewrite state law to bypass these local communities.

In 2007, wireless expert and New America think tanker Sascha Meinrath wrote, “I’ve just learned that AT&T lobbyists are holed up in state legislators’ offices and are rewriting state laws that they will attempt to get passed in the dead of night. one might think that this is some sort of nefarious plot to some Gotham City corruption scandal, but it’s happening right now in the State of Illinois… this late-night switcheroo is a blatant attempt to change State laws without public comment or input—it’s a power-play by a telecom incumbent whose purpose is to maximize corporate profit margins at the literal expense of Illinois residents. As I’ve been warning for several months, AT&T is hellbent on having its way with the Illinois legislature.”

The issues are complex (the AT&T-backed franchise laws, passed in numerous states, may bring more competition to the local cable providers, though at the expense of tough build-out rules and local control), but it’s not hard to see the dangers in letting lobbyists go so far beyond just offering information and perspective that they actually draft the bills that regulate their behavior.

Perhaps it’s worth taking the long view, though. Hoyle identifies with Gunga Din, but where did Gunga Din end up?

So I’ll meet ‘im later onAt the place where ‘e is gone –Where it’s always double drill and no canteen;’E'll be squattin’ on the coalsGivin’ drink to poor damned souls,An’ I’ll get a swig in hell from Gunga Din!