This was 12 hours ago, on my way to work. The dirt road is so full of potholes you have drive slowly and are forced to enjoy the scenery of the Polesie National Park.

We were supposed to start early with installations, but it turned out that a public 20 km away lost its connection. This was not my business, but my technician knew about the problem, knew the place, knew how to fix it. We also knew that people responsible for fixing it wouldn't get there earlier than late next week. We lost an hour and a half, drove extra 40 kilometres, and had to tell one customer that they'd have to wait for their Netflix until Monday. But the library is back online.

Then we got to work here. Trees. We hate trees. People buy a house surrounded by trees and then want stable Internet. We usually have two suggestions. Could they please move the house a bit, some three or flour hundred metres to the left? Or build a 20 metre mast. And then we get to work with what we have.

Sometimes our clients run for their chainsaws on hearing that trees are blocking the signal. They want to cut everything down to get their cat pictures and porn faster. I hate trees (in those situations), but I hate cutting them down even more. So I usually tell them that we don't know which tree is blocking the signal. Or point to trees on their neighbour's plots, where they can't do anything about them.

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The last one today was easy. No thinking, just hard physical work, so our brain's didn't have to use all the 10% of neurons and 20% of body's energy. Clear path to the BTS. Just a few mosquitoes, and they don't bite IP packets at the frequency we use.

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