Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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$$ For Internet only??
We already are using Magic Jack for home phone and love having no phone bill.
Where we live now each home has WiFi via fiber optics into each home. It is part of our HOA fees. So we are only paying for Direct TV. We hope to get rid of the dish when we move to TV and have a HDTV antenna and use Hulu plus, Amazon Prime, Netflix etc for viewing options via Apple TV or Roku. Do any of you have Internet only? Rather than bundling services? If so, what can we expect the monthly cost to be for broadband WiFi only? Thanks!!! |
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#2
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We have comcast/xfinity cable for internet only and have been paying only something like 35 or 40 dollars per month on some kind of extended introductory offer. Don't know how long that will last. I was unable to get anything with an over-the air antenna inside the house, even with an amplifier. Perhaps you might get some stations, depending on where your house is located. We use Directv for TV.
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#3
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We have Internet only with Centurylink and have been very pleased. STarted with a $40 promo rate for a year and when it expired it went to $75. I called and told them I would not pay $75 so they put me back down to $40!
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#4
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Mini Handsfree Home Telephone w Head Phone Microphone | eBay |
#5
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I also pay around $60 through comcast and I also have Direct TV. I've found it to be reliable and the speed is good most of the time. I have found if you call and ask for an introductory rate because the normal rate is too high they may give it to you for about 6 months. After that you have to call again and ask. Sometimes you have to speak to a supervisor.
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#6
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A family member here in The Villages has a Verizon WiFi hotspot. It is awful! It is slow, requires frequent fiddling to reset or to address various connection problems, and required a 2-yr contract. To cancel service would cost a $350 cancellation fee. He couldn't be more unhappy with it.
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#7
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We use the Verizon MiFi card and love it. It's a 4G LTE, and we consistently have a 4 bar/4G signal. I think a lot of it has to do with where your home is located. The MiFi card is great to use when travelling...I don't have to rely on hotel and/or public connections. I pay $53 a month.
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#8
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You get what you pay for. I would check out Comcast.
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Jacksonville, Florida Andover, New Jersey The Villages Second star to the right, then straight on 'til morning. |
#9
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We have Century Link
Lately it has been down 3 times.Mostly late night early morning .This is happening since We've moved to Gilchrist.Also we have a wifi set up and I'm not happy with the bandwidth. When trying to watch Direct TV on demand on my tablet I get a message that the bandwidth isn't sufficient enough for video that audio would be the only thing playing.I don't know enough about wifi . Is the problem with my ISP or is it in my router?
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#10
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#11
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We Have Century Link
Lately it has been down 3 times.Mostly late night early morning .This is happening since We've moved to Gilchrist.Also we have a wifi set up and I'm not happy with the bandwidth. When trying to watch Direct TV on demand on my tablet I get a message that the bandwidth isn't sufficient enough for video that audio would be the only thing playing.I don't know enough about wifi . Is the problem with my ISP or is it in my router?
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#12
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First, you need to check the router model. If it's 802.11B it's old and slow. G is faster and N is even better. BUT your network will drop to the slowest device on it. Also, signal strength drops greatly the further you get from the router. Try to get the router up high (like on top of a cabinet) to help.
Second, DSL speeds are dependent on distance from the phone company hub. In a given neighborhood (village) the residence closer to that hub will get better signal than one at the far end. (Understand this is simplistic and there is much more technical stuff involved) Centurylink claims "up to 40Mbps". Comcast claims "up to 50Mbps. I can guarantee that you won't come close to that. Google "bandwidth tests" to get a number of free test sites. (speedtest.net, cnet.com/internet-speed-test, etc). Comcast gets a lot of bad rap here, but cable will probably give the highest bandwidth and speed. DSL and cable both can give high rates, but both (providers) can and will cap the bandwidth in order to accommodate more customers and higher use at certain times. As ZCaveman said,You will get what you pay for. I have Comcast and Directv, and usually get download near 30Mbps, but tonight I'm only getting 15.
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Steve <aka doccrocker> You can't laugh at the same things again and again, but why do you keep crying over the same things again and again "If life hands you lemons, make lemonade" Personally, I'll go for a Tom Collins. Last edited by doccrocker; 07-01-2013 at 10:55 PM. Reason: addition to entry |
#13
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says I'm getting 2.5 MBPS...not goood! |
#14
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RE: HDTV antenna. I tried several expensive HDTV antennas' in our Buttonwood home and none were able to grab a signal. My guess is most stations that broadcast over the air are from Orlando and it is too far away from TV.
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Regards: Dan Natick, MA Village of Buttonwood 1/12/11 |
#15
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We can pick up the Fox station in Ocala with an indoor directional antenna with two pre-amps. We are in St. James and get some drop outs from time to time. We finally went with Comcast.
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Closed Thread |
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