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Gita56 12-07-2015 06:13 PM

high speed internet
 
I started a new post because the most recent I could find searching the topic was over a year ago. Looking for alternative to Comcast (North of 466A) that does 25mp. Comcast increasing bill 30+% Jan 1. Need high speed for VPN connection for business in home.

Brighthouse not available north of 466A; Prism not fast enough; Fios not here yet; .... HELP!

OpusX1 12-07-2015 06:52 PM

You need that speed you have one choice I think. Pay up at least you can write it off.

Bryan 12-08-2015 06:34 AM

Check with CenturyLink. I know you said Prism was not fast enough byt if you are in one of the areas north of 466 where CenturyLink has installed fiber optic cable, Prism runs at about 40.

ureout 12-08-2015 07:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bryan (Post 1155861)
Check with CenturyLink. I know you said Prism was not fast enough byt if you are in one of the areas north of 466 where CenturyLink has installed fiber optic cable, Prism runs at about 40.

im N of 466 and have century link.....40mbps paying $41 a month for 2 years

capecoralbill 12-08-2015 07:29 AM

Ouch, seems like Comcast just boosted me 10 dollars two months ago, now we're in for anew increase in January?
Has anyone had any success with Verizon or other "hotspot" devices?

spturnip 12-22-2015 02:38 PM

North of 466A houses should have connections with both Comcast and CenturyLink. Since I get TV from an antenna (that I use with TiVo devices and supplement with streaming movies from Netflix and Amazon Prime), I only subscribe to Internet only.

During 2015, I had Comcast 75 Mb/sec internet, which more often tested at 90 Mb/sec, for $40 / month. When my "new customer" special ran out, they were going to increase to $60 / month, but offered me this year's new customer special of $50 /month when I asked to cancel.

I am in the process of canceling Comcast and returning to CenturyLInk for their 40 Mb/sec service at $35 / month (Internet only). They also offer 100 Mb/sec service at a higher price.

Note that CenturyLink has a fiber optic network in this area, where as Comcast still uses copper. Some year from now CenturyLink will be offering fiber network customers 1 Gb/sec internet, but price has not been disclosed.

JerryLBell 12-22-2015 03:13 PM

What are the higher-speed options for south of 466A? We bought a house there this year that we are retiring to in a year or so and are curious about the options. Where we live now in North Carolina, we've got options for 300 Mbs from Time Warner and gigabit from AT&T and (soon) Google. I hear of 40 Mb/s, 75 Mb/s and 90 Mb/s and they just sound so slowww.... But then, maybe I won't be in such a hurry then!

dbussone 12-22-2015 04:32 PM

BrightHouse has 100, 150, and 300. I find 150 to be very satisfactory. I have two smart TVs, 2 iPhones, 2 iPads, 2laptops and a printer all running off our network. No issues at all.

Bosoxfan 12-22-2015 08:27 PM

Any of you here know anything about WIFI? I'm having a terrible time with ours.Its sporadic .Some nights we have absolutely no problem but others Carol could be using her Kindle without a problem but I have problems using my tablet. We just recently added speed to our connection .It didn't help.Any suggestions would be appreciated

zcaveman 12-22-2015 09:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bosoxfan (Post 1162042)
Any of you here know anything about WIFI? I'm having a terrible time with ours.Its sporadic .Some nights we have absolutely no problem but others Carol could be using her Kindle without a problem but I have problems using my tablet. We just recently added speed to our connection .It didn't help.Any suggestions would be appreciated

Changing the channel number helped me at one time:

Change Your Wi-Fi Channel Number to Avoid Interference

Write down the old number and change the channel number to see if it helps. If it doesn't you can always change the number back.

Z

biker1 12-23-2015 06:30 AM

I believe the 1 gigabit/sec is available now from Century Link (fiber only). When I asked, the price was over $100/month. I currently have 40 megabits/sec download and 20 megabits/sec upload for $35/month.

Quote:

Originally Posted by spturnip (Post 1161902)
North of 466A houses should have connections with both Comcast and CenturyLink. Since I get TV from an antenna (that I use with TiVo devices and supplement with streaming movies from Netflix and Amazon Prime), I only subscribe to Internet only.

During 2015, I had Comcast 75 Mb/sec internet, which more often tested at 90 Mb/sec, for $40 / month. When my "new customer" special ran out, they were going to increase to $60 / month, but offered me this year's new customer special of $50 /month when I asked to cancel.

I am in the process of canceling Comcast and returning to CenturyLInk for their 40 Mb/sec service at $35 / month (Internet only). They also offer 100 Mb/sec service at a higher price.

Note that CenturyLink has a fiber optic network in this area, where as Comcast still uses copper. Some year from now CenturyLink will be offering fiber network customers 1 Gb/sec internet, but price has not been disclosed.


biker1 12-23-2015 06:40 AM

I work from home (software development, I am ssh'd into multiple remote systems all day and move some pretty big tarballs around) and stream to two TVs using Roku boxes. I have 40 megabit/sec and it is overkill. Netflix in HiDef only uses 5 megabits/sec. I suspect most people probably pay for more bandwidth than they need and may only have access to a portion of the bandwidth because of poor WiFi performance.

Quote:

Originally Posted by JerryLBell (Post 1161916)
What are the higher-speed options for south of 466A? We bought a house there this year that we are retiring to in a year or so and are curious about the options. Where we live now in North Carolina, we've got options for 300 Mbs from Time Warner and gigabit from AT&T and (soon) Google. I hear of 40 Mb/s, 75 Mb/s and 90 Mb/s and they just sound so slowww.... But then, maybe I won't be in such a hurry then!


JerryLBell 12-23-2015 11:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by biker1 (Post 1162108)
I work from home (software development, I am ssh'd into multiple remote systems all day and move some pretty big tarballs around) and stream to two TVs using Roku boxes. I have 40 megabit/sec and it is overkill. Netflix in HiDef only uses 5 megabits/sec. I suspect most people probably pay for more bandwidth than they need and may only have access to a portion of the bandwidth because of poor WiFi performance.

I bumped up from 15 Mb/s to 300 Mb/s and the difference was night and day. I could not stream Netflix or Amazon with anything remotely like HD resolution and even then the image was pixelated as could be. Even YouTube spent way too much time buffering (and these were hard-wired connections, not WiFi). Maybe 300 Mb/s is overkill and 40 Mb/s is entirely adequate, but 300 Mb/s is pretty sweet.

HimandMe 12-23-2015 01:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by biker1 (Post 1162108)
I work from home (software development, I am ssh'd into multiple remote systems all day and move some pretty big tarballs around) and stream to two TVs using Roku boxes. I have 40 megabit/sec and it is overkill. Netflix in HiDef only uses 5 megabits/sec. I suspect most people probably pay for more bandwidth than they need and may only have access to a portion of the bandwidth because of poor WiFi performance.

How can I fix wifi performance. In the last ten minutes, this has flickered on and off six times! We have one of the larger Comcast packages for internet, even the supervisor out and have just about had it. HELP!

biker1 12-23-2015 07:12 PM

Before moving to 40 megabits/sec, we had 10 megabits/sec download. We had no issues streaming Netflix in 1080p HiDef on 2 sets at the same time. The move to 40 megabits/sec was motivated by an attempt to improve the voice quality of my Voice-over-IP phone (via the associated increase in the upload bandwidth). The phone issue was resolved and didn't appear to be bandwidth related but we kept the 40 megabits/sec. I see faster scps of larger files but Netflix quality is unchanged as 10 megabits/sec is sufficient to sustain two HiDef streams. Century Link is pretty solid. Perhaps your problems were Comcast quality of service issues and not bandwidth.


Quote:

Originally Posted by JerryLBell (Post 1162252)
I bumped up from 15 Mb/s to 300 Mb/s and the difference was night and day. I could not stream Netflix or Amazon with anything remotely like HD resolution and even then the image was pixelated as could be. YouTube spent way too much time buffering (and these were hard-wired connections, not WiFi). Maybe 300 Mb/s is overkill and 40 Mb/s is entirely adequate, but 300 Mb/s is pretty sweet.



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