alf the time I have no idea what you guys are talking about, but it sure sounds cool!
There's a ATT tower less than 1/4 as the crow flies and the TMobile is 2.5 miles, not sure how close that is in latency terms.You definitely are close to a tower that has lots of C-Band or midband bandwidth.
Cost - you have great prices and I see competition which is T-Mobile and ATT.I genuinely don't know why people choose to go with a cellular hotspot, if they have reasonably priced fiber available.
In my case, I have three fiber operators and two coax operators available in my neighborhood... yet I often see neighbors with default TMOBILE or ATT SSIDs (AT&T is not our ILEC, so it's 100% 5G cellular). Our ILEC (Frontier now known as Verizon) offers 500mbps for $30/month, which is more than enough for most homes, and typically more performant than cellular.
Lucky you, I only wish.Recently went from ATT fiber to T-Mobile 5g. My speeds from the Wi-Fi box are almost identical. Most of the time it is hard to distinguish between them. Had ATT till recently. They are a horror to deal with. The other option is Google Fiber. No experience but is double what I am paying T-Mobile. My old ATT wi-fi box only delivered 220-250 mbps. here is a pic of my speeds a few minutes ago. 08:30pm during primetime.
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$95 after the 1st year unfortunately. Our Google fiber has been $70.. well $71.50 now for years.$70 for fiber/1GB is pretty good. Even here in South Carolina I pay $89 for 600MB. What is the price after 1 year?
If you are getting that much throughput using higher frequencies, the tower you connect to is much closer than 2.5 miles. C-band and midband become pretty useless at distances > 1/2 to 1 mile even with line of site. If you add some trees and houses into the mix, the distance is even less. T-Mo is probably on the close tower as well.There's a ATT tower less than 1/4 as the crow flies and the TMobile is 2.5 miles, not sure how close that is in latency terms.
A typical HD stream is 10 Mbps. 4K stream is 25 Mbps. So even with multiple concurrent video streams, it should still leave plenty of bandwidth for other activities.Yep 250/250 is plenty fast unless you have multiple people in the house streaming and gaming at the same time.
Yep 250/250 is plenty fast unless you have multiple people in the house streaming and gaming at the same time.
Even then it is fast enough. There are very few people that need faster than that if all other aspects of your network are working correctlyYep 250/250 is plenty fast unless you have multiple people in the house streaming and gaming at the same time.
Nothing on the property, the only thing on it right now is the RV, container and one camera. After thinking about the monthly cost and how much it is after a year I might start out with TMO, the price is quite a bit cheaper and truthfully fiber will be way more than I'll need. The straight Talk hotspot worked fine for VPN when I'm on call and streaming but it's limited. It's $25 for 10Gb where TMO will be $35 for the lowest but unlimited.So just clarifying, the house is built but there's no utilities running there yet? Utility installers should carry insurance in case they break any other utility lines if you're worried, but I understand.
If you don't need low latency or extremely high speeds, I suggest starting out with TMO and see how that service goes for you. If you like it, then that's perfect and you can stay with them if you're satisfied. If you're not satisfied, move towards the fiber. Personally I'd start with the fiber anyways; I've never had good dealings with 5G "home internet" with the ones I ordered for project sites or employees use at home.
Wow. My promo rate on my 1G symmetrical fiber was $55 and now it's been at the "normal" rate of $60 for some time.$95 after the 1st year unfortunately. Our Google fiber has been $70.. well $71.50 now for years.
Guess that would of been a smart thing to do.. Our address is fairly new so doesn't always show up so thought I'd have to call. But I did put in the neighbors around and nope it isn't. So much for that I guess. The fiber is available though, lines across the street and least verified the neighbors can get it.T-Mobile will only sell the Home Internet to addresses that are suitably close to a tower. Have you checked that yet?
You can try it free.8MB down, 0.5 up, 70 per month. CenturyLink can eat rocks. I'd like 5G but I don't know how well it'll bounce off the hills I live in.
Anything over a Gbps is mostly marketing. There are very few people that could even utilize that amount of bandwidth without expensive enterprise class networking hardware and wiring in your house. Most inexpensive home networking equipment is Gbps with 2.5Gbps getting a little more affordable. Most people's perception of bad internet comes down to poor equipment or configuration problems.I just checked my old address of 16 years. We were stuck with Spectrum at the time, obnoxious at over $80 for 300/300 however our Electric Co-op was laying fiber at the time just over 2 years ago. I waited 6 years for them to get to us and then when they do we were moving *LOL*
I only wish I had that here $50 for 350/350... but I am shocked that you can get up to 8Gbps service where I used to live. Up near Lake Murray, SC (yeah recent earthquake yesterday 3.0 centered near the dam)
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What matters for online gaming is low latency. One should check for buffer bloat in this case to make sure your router isn't a roadblock when the link gets saturated...
https://www.waveform.com/tools/bufferbloat