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Scott Ehrlich <scott-DPNOqEs/LNQ at public.gmane.org> > Now, DSL is phone-line offered. If the central office has its own power > source, and I have mine, if power did go out, I should still have > uninterrupted Internet service unless/until my UPS dies. Yes or no? Hmm, your post got me to wondering what the applicable DOCSIS standard is on this particular matter. But I came up empty trying to find it (at cablemodem.com and/or Google). I know the service here (Comcast in Cambridge) works when the power's out. But I don't know for how long, and I don't know if it meets the same standard as telco distribution equipment standards (12 or 24 hours of battery time, I think). Very likely you'd have to have a monster UPS to last longer than the ones installed by cable companies. Footnote 1: the Xantrex Powersource 400 units I bought last year have been a very satisfactory purchase. I still get hours of backup time with them (I forget how many, I think it was 7 or 8 hours for my 48-watt Samba server). Nothing I've ever bought before those has come anywhere close. Wish I'd kept my Windows PC hooked up to one of them, I lost a lengthy email composition earlier this evening when NSTAR winked out on me for a brief time. Footnote 2: a few more days remain on the NSTAR discount deal for those PowerCost Monitor units for the energy-conservation fanatics among us (especially those who, like me, have a half-dozen Linux boxes lying around sipping and/or chugging the juice). I got a couple of them and installed them a couple days ago. I'd like them better if they had a computer interface so I could make up a little web page to present the data, but alas all these consumer electronics companies build fancy little LCD wall displays that can't be connected by anything less than a webcam. That said, they should prove to be a useful purchase. -rich -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.
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