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Broph:steveonz:marmel: As a farmer you no doubt have more skills than MacGyver. Get out there and dig it up, take a length of number 8 wire, a small knife which you no doubt would have in your pocket anyway as all farmers do, a length of string and some duck tape.
Within an hour or so I'm sure you will be connected to the main line, maybe an hour and a half if you have to keep yelling at your dog.
edit: the above advice should only be taken if you are actually a farmer and not a townie with a "lifestyle" farm and a ride on mower.
Love it!
1) I'm not a farmer
2) It appears you know nothing about farmers/farming
3) Any farmer would have more life-skills/enginuity than non-farmers.
4) What are you, 10?
5) It seems you don't even know the basics; 'DUCK tape'?? WTF is that (Townies version of 'Duct' but they just hear it and think it's 'DUCK'
6) Funny how you wasted time typing that up to get to no point what so ever just to look like a right arrogance.
. Connecting to what is likely to be a major long-haul fibre is not the least of your worries: it's easy enough, as you can probably just hang the cable to your house on some poles rather than burying it. That Telecom fibre will be single mode and is likely to be carrying traffic/data @ 1330Nm wavelength (could be 1550Nm but doubt it). Cutting into that will require optical-electrical hardware which is not cheap and which Telecom is likely to charge to you, and then there is the optical budget constraints which Telecom might not want to meddle with too much for a one-off drop.
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