|
NATCO
Tech Training Employees On Satellite Internet
September
2005

Internet
by Satellite Comes to Rural Areas
Employees
of Northern Arkansas Telephone Company (NATCO) recently were trained
to install WildBlue Internet service via satellite in northern Arkansas
and southern Missouri. Shown are three of the six who were trained:
(from left) Russell May, Brad Wiseman, and David Carson, who is
outside plant supervisor. For more information, contact NATCO at
1-800-775-6682. |
Employees of NATCO
Technologies have received training to install high-speed Internet service
by satellite. NATCO is one of 280 rural telephone and electric companies
nationwide that will provide wireless Internet service through WildBlue,
a Colorado company, and the National Rural Telecommunications Cooperative.
"The first Internet
customer of WildBlue and NRTC received service in Strasburg, Colo., and
we are just waiting for more equipment to get our satellite Internet customers
online." said Steven G. Sanders Jr., vice president of NATCO Communications,
the parent company of NATCO Tech.
The satellite Internet
service is about 30 times faster than dialup Internet. Its speed is comparable
to the NATCO Tech DSL Internet service now available to some customers,
but not all, depending on their distance from telephone switching equipment,
Sanders said. The download speed will be up to 1.5 Mb at the top tier
of service.
NATCO employees who
completed the training are: Russ May, David Carson, Brad Wiseman, Eddie
Duke, Jamie Ward, and Mike Worley. Carson and May had hands-on training
in Albert Lea, Minn., while Wiseman, Ward, Duke, and Worley had hands-on
training in Little Rock. All completed a three-part online training course
as a requirement and are now certified.
Sanders, of NATCO,
said customers will receive the "always on" Internet service
like NATCO DSL customers do. No additional phone line is necessary.
WildBlue satellite
Internet service was established to provide broadband access to the Internet
in smaller cities and throughout rural America. WildBlue CEO Tom Moore
said when the first customer received service in June, "This is a
truly historic moment as we make affordable broadband available to virtually
every home and small office across the U.S." Moore said the company
is helping to "begin smashing the digital divide in rural communities
across the country."
NRTC President and
CEO Bob Phillips stressed the economic benefits to rural America. "If
we want to attract people and business to rural America, we need to ensure
that rural America is totally connected, just as it was in the days when
our members first brought electricity and telephone service to rural areas."
Nationwide, NRTC members,
such as NATCO, will offer three basic service packages to consumers and
small business with graduated speeds and monthly rates. Customers will
receive the WildBlue equipment and professional installation for a "market-leading
low price of $299," which is a savings of nearly $180 over nationally
advertised installation prices, Phillips said.
For more information,
contact NATCO and NATCO Tech toll free at 1-800-775-6682 or visit the
Web site at www.natcotech.com.
NATCO, or Northern Arkansas Telephone Company, is a family owned and operated
independent company providing telephone service in six exchanges: Bull
Shoals, Flippin, Diamond City, Lead Hill, Omaha, and Pyatt.
|
|