At this point, IMO, the providers overhype the bandwidth requirements nowadays. We've had our family of 5 (two have since moved out) sharing a 200Mb/s or 300Mb/s connection with zero issues. Three TVs that are either smart or have Rokus, multiple smartphones, a couple tablets, smart home devices, etc, etc, albeit almost never are all of them in use at the same time.We have three smart TVs, lots of devices, and when the kids are visiting, up to dozens of devices connected, never any lag or buffering for streaming.
Is that speed with your fiber optic ISP ? I'd hope not !We got fiber optic internet a couple years ago in NH.
Depending on your area, you can call them and ask them to for the free bump to 500 Mb/s. You'll get it eventually if you don't call but who knows when they will automatically increase all existing customers.Charter / Spectrum 300mbps download, 15mbps upload $49/month. More than fast enough for us. Good service too.
if you have wifi calling you shouldn't need a landline.. of course you need decent wifi coverage at your house for that too.DOWNLOAD Mbps
115.69
UPLOAD Mbps
284.96
Ping ms 5 30 88
Fiber optic through Vermontel is our only option right now. We are retired so we don't need blazing speed and have the cheapest and slowest plan but we keep a landline because we are constantly dropping calls out here in the middle of nowhere.
It averages around $85 a month for internet and the basic landline.
2.5Gbps ports are becoming increasingly popular on routers and mesh systems. I have a 2.5Gbps WAN port on my TP-Link, granted the LAN is all gigabit still. I didn’t spend much either.Just curious how people are getting over 1 gbit/sec tested. I looked at the price of Wi-Fi boxes with even 2.5 gbit/sec inputs and they're really pricey. I'm not even sure what computers, tablets, and phones can handle that speed. I suppose it could make a difference if there are lots of users.
I have a cable modem with 2.5G port, a udm pro with 2x 10gbit sfp+ ports and a PC with 2.5G port.Just curious how people are getting over 1 gbit/sec tested. I looked at the price of Wi-Fi boxes with even 2.5 gbit/sec inputs and they're really pricey. I'm not even sure what computers, tablets, and phones can handle that speed. I suppose it could make a difference if there are lots of users.
At least Cox gives us a little more than advertised speeds, but their 1.25TB per month limit is pretty restricting with all the streaming we do anymore. I can't wait for unlimited bandwidth from IdeaTek.At the moment Cox cable is our only option. $70/mo for 250Mbps/25Mbps. But we have a data cap that we often exceed, so price can be anywhere from $70 to over $100/mo. We have a small company called IdeaTek running fiber in our town and as soon as it's live, I'm switching. 1Gbps up and down with no data caps for $90. Or 250Mbps up and down for $75. I'm switching to 1Gbps the moment I can.