Most of it was already sold off a long time ago. Qwest recently picked
up most of what we had left. For most of the US fiber routes Enron only
kept a few strands (12-36) of what they actually laid in the ground. Of
those 12-36 strands, Enron was only using 2-4 strands of it on any given
route. My guess is they will try to dump whatever broadband assets they
have left.
As far as what Enron was doing in the broadband business, they had this
dream of offering bandwidth on demand and trading bandwidth as a
commodity. But that didn't work out.
Chuck
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-nolug@patientcarerx.com
> [mailto:owner-nolug@patientcarerx.com] On Behalf Of matthew
> Sent: Wednesday, January 09, 2002 12:14 PM
> To: nolug@patientcarerx.com
> Subject: RE: [Nolug] Tons of DHCPREQUEST messages in syslog
>
>
> What is happening with ENRON's fiber are they going to have
> to sell it off?
> I never could figure out what ENRON was doing in the
> broadband business.
>
> Matt
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-nolug@patientcarerx.com
> [mailto:owner-nolug@patientcarerx.com]On Behalf Of Chuck
> Sent: Wednesday, January 09, 2002 12:01 PM
> To: nolug@patientcarerx.com
> Subject: RE: [Nolug] Tons of DHCPREQUEST messages in syslog
>
>
> You got another one over here. I was recently laid off from Enron
> Broadband Services.
>
> Chuck
>
>
> >
> > Wow! Another broadband guy.
> >
> > Good to see broadband techs involved in the community for a change.
> > Thank you and Charles for being concerned. It really is
> > lacking in the
> > broadband community.
> >
> > --JMS
> >
>
>
>
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>
>
>
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>
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