Phones Going Fibre

When I saw this thread title "Phones Going Fibre" - visualised a mobile phone user holding their phone... with a loooong bit of fibre coming out of it! 😁
I take it you're a lot younger than most of us here then. if to you "phone" is synonymous with "mobile". Personally I think it's throwing the baby out with the bathwater if a home phone doesn't work in a power cut.
 
I take it you're a lot younger than most of us here then. if to you "phone" is synonymous with "mobile". Personally I think it's throwing the baby out with the bathwater if a home phone doesn't work in a power cut.
I may be wrong but I think he already mentioned that he is in his 70's or there abouts.
EDIT I may be thinking of that other newbie who posted about the EZ several times.
 
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I take it you're a lot younger than most of us here then. if to you "phone" is synonymous with "mobile". Personally I think it's throwing the baby out with the bathwater if a home phone doesn't work in a power cut.
I suppose I just move with the times. Nothing against people who insist on having a 'wired' telephone - even though it is now becoming wired to a router (and won't work in a power cut). The more disturbing thing is that in a bad (more widespread) power cut, I've had the mobile providers go off-air as well... that's dangerous (no 999 calls)! If you are considered vulnerable, I think your ISP (or the local power distributor?) are supposed to provide you with a UPS if your phone service is delivered by broadband.
But wired phones have long been considered redundant for me - and even more so if it's not bundled with your broadband. Also, as my phonebook is in my phone (mobile 🙂 ) and syncs with my behemoth's online contact 'app' that comes with their email... I'd need to look at my phone for my contacts anyway (or laptop as a backup). Everything in one place, but available everywhere - even that's a concept that not everyone's happy with.
 
999 calls can be made via any mobile network even without a SIM. The question then is - is there UPS to at least one network's transmitter within an area? If not there will be a problem with a wide scale power outage.
Good point! But still quite bad how many networks actually went down during the widespread power cut my area previously had.
 
Found this:-
If you use a landline phone service that relies on the internet - such as Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) - you may not be able to call 999 during a power cut or if your broadband connection fails. To ensure continued access to emergency services, communications providers are required to offer a back-up solution that enables calls to 999 for at least one hour during a power outage. This must be provided free of charge to customers who rely solely on their landline.
The provider's system must then legally be resilient (e.g. UPS's/BBU where necessary) for at least 1 hour. BBU = Battery Backup Unit.
 
Good point! But still quite bad how many networks actually went down during the widespread power cut my area previously had.
Isn't there some work being done on connecting newer mobiles via satellite in difficult reception areas and anywhere else in an emergency.?
 
Isn't there some work being done on connecting newer mobiles via satellite in difficult reception areas and anywhere else in an emergency.?
Starlink mobile service. It is already being trialled for text messages. EDIT: And data, it seems...
 
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This is all nonsense, copper was resilient, and then got replaced with crappy aluminium. It's just that the telecoms companies have been allowed to cut costs by our useless governments.
 
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