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COMMUNICATIONS
Newspapers: Morgan Messenger, weekly 258-1800
Journal, Martinsburg, WV, daily 1-800-448-1895
Herald-Mail, Hagerstown, MD, daily 1-800-626-6397
Washington Post 1-800-477-4679
Radio: WCST@ 1010AM & WDHC@ 93.5FM
Cable TV: Eastern Morgan County -Comcast, phone 678-5043 In Paw Paw, TCI, phone 301-722-6553.
Internet: Several Dial Up Services available: Verizon, Earthlink, AOL,
PeoplePC & others. In Paw Paw, Frontier. DSL & Cable Internet
high speed are available in some areas.
From an article printed in the Morgan Messenger:Verizon DSL
Verizon DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) is a technology that allows high
speed data transmission and reception over an existing telephone line.
There are several levels of service.
Residential customers can subscribe to a 768 Kbps (kilobits-per-second)
service which is 15 times faster than dial-up, or a 3.0 Mbps (megabits-per-second)
service which is about 50 times faster than dial-up service.
Rates are comparable to dial-up internet service rates. Verizon also
offers broadband packages that bundle DSL Internet with unlimited long
distance telephone and satellite television for a fixed monthly rate.
At this time, Verizon DSL is only available in Berkeley Springs and down
U.S. 522 to Cacapon State Park. Verizon says two additional installations
are planned for the county in the future.
SkyWeb, Inc.
SkyWeb is currently in the process of installing antennas and communications
equipment that will provide Wireless High Speed Internet access to most
of Morgan County. SkyWeb needs to secure rights to mount antennas on
existing towers, or build their own towers.
SkyWeb is not signing up subscribers until the antenna work is completed.
Antennas are planned for installation near Coolfont, Great Cacapon and
in South Morgan.
SkyWeb expects to start signing up customers April 2007. Several levels
of service, from 512 Kbps to 1.5 Mbps, will be available. Rates are somewhat
higher than DSL.
World Airwaves
The Morgan County Commission has entered into a contract with World Airwaves
of Winchester, Va. to bring Wireless High Speed Internet Service to the
U. S. 522 Business Park in the southern part of the county. Once there,
the company plans to expand service to a wider area.
County Administrator Bill Clark said work has not yet begun in the county.
He said World Airwaves needs to complete work on a microwave tower in
Hampshire County before a signal can reach the industrial park.
World Airwaves is focused on building the next generation internet service
using IPv6 (Internet Protocol version 6). Current technology uses the
earlier IPv4. It may be some time before this service is available.
One internet service that is available anywhere in Morgan County (provided
you have an unobstructed view to the southern sky) is a satellite-based
offering from Hughes (formerly Direcway).
Like satellite TV, the HughesNet Broadband Satellite system requires
a satellite dish mounted on or near the home or business. Again, several
levels of service and pricing are available.
My experience with this service is that it is very reliable, reasonably
fast, but more expensive than the other services mentioned. Subscribers
must purchase the satellite dish and associated modem equipment.
In addition to a monthly service fee, there is an additional cost of
about $400 for the equipment and installation. Other satellite services
such as StarBand by Spacenet are also available.
One caveat is that certain types of internet services do
not work over satellite. This is due to slow upload speeds
and propagation delay.
All non-military communications satellites orbit the earth 22,000 miles
above the equator. A time delay of several seconds elapses in each direction
during transmission and reception.
Since the satellite dish is only a little bigger than a TV
dish, it doesn’t
emit enough power to transmit at high speeds. The Hughes system
receives at speeds from 700 Kbps to 1.5 Mbps, but only transmits
128 Kbps
to 200 Kbps.
Therefore, transmitting voice over internet (VOIP), playing interactive
games and sending large files or streaming video is prohibitive.
So, for some, satellite internet service may be the answer, but many
people may choose to keep limping along on their existing low speed dial-up
until other high speed internet services become available.
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