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$45.00 centurylink internet for life
Please pay close attention to your Centurylink high speed internet bill. Many of you may see a spike in your billing. This may be due to your two year agreement has expired. Mine went up to over $70 from the previous monthly bill of $42. I called their customer service to complain about this huge hike. After a few minutes of being put on hold I was told I qualified for their new "internet price for life" promotion. So, I will be paying $45 a month as long as I keep their service.
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I had it for a week, and went back to Comcast.
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Centurylink game time.
Raise the price when the person complains sell them another plan. Or the other thing they like to do is come up with silly reasons why they raised your price and then tell you how they can save you so much money . The next bill gets mixed up because of another mistake and so on. Until you either pay for the overprice or take a plan you don’t want. Of course always saying how sorry they are about all the errors. I now say get a ruko or equivalent devise and stream all your programs. You can get you internet from any company since they all will try the same tacktic on billing to make money . |
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Centurylink is not broadband it's DSL .
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Comcast and Centurylink are both commonly referred to as broadband. Comcast is via coaxial cable and Centurylink is DSL via copper wire. |
In some parts of TV (but not all), CenturyLink is fiber optic via a fiber optic cable. I have that and the internet service is great - customer support not so much so.
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They raised our price from $36 to $67 all in, taxes and all the B.S. I called to cancel and was put back to $35 plus the taxes and B.S. I'm going to stay with them it has been very reliable for the past year and a half. It is DSL and I did purchase the router from them day one which saves a $10 per month rental fee.
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Price is set for life as long as you keep the plan. Does not say they can't change the plan. We are in an area where it is DSL and it is painfully slow. We are switching to Comcast next week.
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$45 is not a good deal for their slow speeds. It will be an even worse deal in a few years when everyone else has at least 100 mg and you're stuck at snail speed.
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I tried to see if Centurylink has fiber optic Pinellas but I get no results. Maybe it's not available there.
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I believe everyone south of 466a already has access to the fiber optic infrastructure. I also believe a good chunk of the rest of The Villages also has access. One way to know for sure is if you see a fiber optic cable loop on the outside of your house by your electric meter. If you don't, then you should call CenturyLink to find out.
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The speed you have access to is a function of whether you have access to the fiber optic infrastructure or the older copper based DSL. If you have fiber, $45 per month gets you 25 megabits per second download with their new price-for-life pricing structure. This is actually more than sufficient for most people. For example, streaming Netflix at 1080p Hi-Def resolution only needs about 5 megabits per second. You are also not committed to stay at that speed. Higher speeds, such as 40 megabits per second, 100 megabits per second, and 1000 megabits per second (1 gigabit per second), are also available if you have fiber.
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They upgraded here to fiber optic two years ago and the speed now is very high.
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what about Specctrum?
Does anyone have Spectrum?:gc:
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Switched to CenturyLink 1 1/2 years ago after suffering wih Comcast for the first 2 years here. Comcast internet was going down 4 or more times a day when i made the switch, one outage in all the time with CL and that was in the first few weeks before the cable was buried and some critter took a liking to it. Only have internet TV is OTA and streamed. I'll probably never go back to cable TV after 3 1/2 years without it. |
Wow, gullibility personified! Yes Centurylink has dreamed up another scam. No more discount for autopay, they reduced my internet speed. As much as I do not think highly for Comcast, if you look and compare what you get for the approximate same price....it's easy to decide. Bottom line is...."they both suck!"
Best bet is the other provider however, this provider is not available in my area....so much for no more monopolies......!!! |
Can anyone tell me which services are available in coumtry club hills
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Is there an advantage of broadband over dsl? I’ve only had DSL. I pay $40 (in WA) for 100 Mbps. Now that I think about it the rate may have gone up, it’s been more than 2 yrs at that price. Also, here locally CenturyLink offers 1 Gbps at $85.
Is broadband a higher “quality” signal? I’ve never had a cable modem because I’ve always had sat. TV in this house, Dish for 10 yrs and Directv for the last 10 yrs. My DSL has never been out, as far as I know, so reliability when I’ve needed it has been 100%. Other than one being from cable and the other over a phone line, can someone tell why one might be preferred over the other? Thanks. The rate for life deals can be wonderful. I took advantage of an ATT cell phone, 500 minutes at $15/mon. deal. The catch, ANY changes – i.e. new phone, change of minutes, change of address, adding features etc and the deal is off. I paid $15/mon for about 12 years till they no longer supported my phone. |
I switched here in Stonecrcest from Marion County Cable to CenturyLink $45 for life. I ordered 25 Mbps. The service is actually running at 29 Mbps. Works great. And the price is $45, no other cost. I saw some comments about slow internet. If everything you access is running slow then its time to check your speed. However if somethings are slow and some normal, it could be the server at the other end. Don't just assume its your ISP (Internet Service Provider).
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You can think of broadband as a capability and DSL as one of the possible technologies being used to implement broadband. Broadband can be loosely defined as "high bandwidth" internet access capability that is connected all the time. In The Villages, broadband is implemented over various different mediums: copper cable (DSL from CenturyLink), fiber optic cable with coax cable from the street to the house (from Comcast and Spectrum), and fiber optic cable all the way to the house (from CenturyLink). Bandwidths with DSL are limited based on your distance from the nearest switching station. Fiber optic based systems can support higher bandwidths. How much bandwidth you require is another discussion. Few, if any, would have a need for 1 gigabit per second.
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My $19 Comcast internet bill allows me to flawlessly stream Netflix, Amazon Prime and anything else in 1080p. My laptop and phone work without any problems. Why would anybody need more speed and pay a higher price? Do we have that many "gamers" here in TV? Or are we all watching tv in 4K?
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Snail speed? I get 40-45 MBPS, which is plenty fast for all of my streaming, for $43 a month. We have fiber optic service.
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I recently got Spectrum select triple play for about $100 per month. Internet speed on my hardwired desktop averages 110 mbps to 115 mbps.
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I checked the $19.99 Comcast deal. After the first year it goes to $49.99 pule taxes.
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