Let's see what Jow Forums's got when it comes to home internet service.
>Post your speed. >Post your ISP and location if it isn't visible in your screencap. >Post your monthly cost. >Are you happy with your service?
I pay $70/month for this, service rated for 200Mbps down. I'd be happy with the service if I didn't get random connectivity drops in the late afternoon. I think it's network congestion, they told me to upgrade my modem to one supplied by them.
I wish I could get gigabit fiber in my neighborhood. Spectrum is virtually the only choice, I could go up to 300Mbps service but that's the most offered.
Otherwise there's only DSL service that caps out at 100Mbps for more than I'm paying now.
Julian Taylor
Telia fibre, 100/10, 5 euros a month
Wiring inside the apartment building is copper VDSL2. I have wired up ethernet sockets in the walls that aren't working since the >boomers in my building elected not to upgrade the DSLAM in the basement.
Verizon has surprising FTTH penetration in this area, i've moved 3 times in the last decade all within a 30-40 mile area and every house i've moved to has been hooked up with FTTH fiber from Verizon.
Gigabit has only been available since 2017 though. Before that I was on 150mbps and before that was 50mbps.
Lately Comcast has come in the area and started offering 2gbps fiber service, but I have no need for that, especially since it would require a local network upgrade since nothing I have has anything besides 1gbps ethernet NICs.
Elijah Johnson
>Oi, Belo Horizonte, Brazil >16 USD for DSL and 4 for a landline >No, since its ADSL. Terrible upload.
0ms isn't possible unless your ISP is doing some BS behind the scenes.
It says you're testing to a server ~250 miles away. Around 400km.
Every 100km of distance is ~0.5ms (speed of light) for your ping.
So the MINIMUM ping for you to a server 250 miles away would be roughly 2ms, and that's assuming NO latency introduced via networking equipment, which is always going to add another few milliseconds since you DON'T have a direct fiber link to that server without ANY other equipment in-between.
Jason Parker
>thinking he can ignore the laws of physics
I mean, you can try.
Grayson Jones
Comcast offers 2 Gbps symmetrical fiber in my area. I tried to get it, but they don't offer the service to apartment buildings which is retarded.
Because it requires installing a rack mount Juniper ACX 2100 switch. And requires a dedicated SFP+ fiber drop to the switch.
Simply not feasible in an apartment.
Though if you happen to live in seattle there IS a single apartment building that Comcast has hooked up with 10gbps fiber (yes, 10gbps per customer). But it's basically a PR stunt, as it's ONLY available in that single building.
Estonia 26€ per month just for the internet. Overall i'm fine with it, don't need much faster than that. Sadly the price per Mbit is quite high compared to some other nearby countries.
That's my free™® internet connectivity. An MNO called aero2. A single upfront payment of 20 PLN (5,43 USD) for the simcard, gets you a cellular connection of up to™ 512kbps for as long as the commie government of Poland permits it.
At my cousin's home, pretty good considering I'm about 60 meters from their AP. They use fiber if I'm right, using LAN would enable me to achieve even higher speeds.
>950/950 >Verizon, Greater Boston, MA >$105/month >Never seen the full speeds, but still a massive upgrade from my previous 25/25 speeds for the same price.
>950/950 >Verizon, Greater Boston, MA >$105/month >Never seen the full speeds, but still a massive upgrade from my previous 25/25 speeds for the same price.
Mine is the sucky kind. 10/1 = @$46.00 (tax + fee included). Really bad part is that the ISP is really only game in the city. They offer higher speed but the price is around $90 plus they got bandwidth issues. So even if you got fastest plan you'd never see it 24/7. So why pay more for something if you'd not get it.
Colton Barnes
Boston gets fucked with Verizon infrastructure development, so i'm not surprised you've never seen full speeds.