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  2. Internet company still banned in Columbia after gas leaks ...

    www.aol.com/internet-company-still-banned...

    The company has still not been permitted to resume its work laying promised fiber optic cable in Columbia. In the meantime, though, the company is moving ahead with work in Lexington County.

  3. Internet company was banned from burying cable in Columbia ...

    www.aol.com/internet-company-banned-burying...

    The internet company Lumos based in North Carolina began work last week to bury fiber optic cables in the Murraywood neighborhood near Irmo. ... start laying 1,200 miles of fiber-optic cable ...

  4. Internet company previously barred from Columbia breaks five ...

    www.aol.com/internet-company-previously-barred...

    Lumos announced last fall that it had received the proper franchise agreements with Columbia, West Columbia and Irmo to start laying 1,200 miles of fiber-optic cable between Richland and Lexington ...

  5. Google Fiber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Fiber

    In order to avoid underground cabling complexity for the last mile, Google Fiber relies on aggregators dubbed Google Fiber Huts. [23] From these Google Fiber Huts, the fiber cables travel along utility poles into neighborhoods and homes, and stop at a Fiber Jack (an optical network terminal or ONT) in each home. [24]

  6. Direct-buried cable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct-buried_cable

    Most cable of this kind is coaxial or bundled fiber-optic cable. In the 20th century much of it was filled cable. Direct-buried cable is cheaper and easier to lay than other kinds of cable that require protection from the earth. [1] However, DBC is also easily cut during digging or other excavations.

  7. European Union submarine internet cables - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Union_submarine...

    Laying cables is part of the "freedom of the seas" (article 87). The location of submarine cables was considered a core element of negotiations. It established delimited areas such as the EEZ. [7] It is therefore authorized everywhere except in territorial waters, where Coastal states edict their own rules.

  8. ‘Like a wrecking ball’: Concerns spread in Columbia after ...

    www.aol.com/wrecking-ball-concerns-spread...

    Lumos announced in late September that it had received the proper franchise agreements with Columbia, West Columbia and Irmo to start laying 1,200 miles of fiber optic cable between Richland and ...

  9. Terrestrial cable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrestrial_cable

    A terrestrial cable is a communications cable which crosses land, rather than water. Terrestrial cable may be subterranean (buried) or aerial (suspended from poles ), and may be fiber or copper . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The term "terrestrial cable" is principally used to distinguish it from submarine cable , [ 3 ] although some overlap exists between the two.