I don't own a 4K TV so have no earthly need for a 1Gb connection. I think for many users 1Gb internet has become a fad, they believe they need it because of marketing when in reality 100Mb would meet their actual needs with ease.
Why would someone need a Corvette? A Ferrari? A Lambo? A Lincoln? Etc.Wondering why someone would need super high speeds when something like 100/200 Mbps would be acceptable?
Do you have it? How do you use it?
Um most cable is asymmetric. Fiber is usually symmetrical because of how fast and quick it goes.Uploads speeds is what I'm after. I'm not sure why upload and downloads cannot be asymmetric on cable, apparently its only possible with fiber optic to you door, which is rare.
My mistake, I meant symmetric!Um most cable is asymmetric. Fiber is usually symmetrical because of how fast and quick it goes.
They make it incredibly easy, I just had to upgrade from my trusty old SB6141 modem to a SB8200. Plug it in, wait for it to boot, then go into the Xfinity app on your phone and select activate new equipment. You’ll need a modem that does both internet and voice though, something like the Arris T25.I have 300meg Comcast.
Except my cablemodem is only 8 downstream channels so it maxes out at 275meg or so.
It's also a voice cablemodem so I have to see if Comcast will let me connect another cablemodem with more downstream channels to use for data and just keep the other one for voice.
275 megs is enough for what I do.
They make it incredibly easy, I just had to upgrade from my trusty old SB6141 modem to a SB8200. Plug it in, wait for it to boot, then go into the Xfinity app on your phone and select activate new equipment. You’ll need a modem that does both internet and voice though, something like the Arris T25.
I was wrong about them pushing away from DOCSIS 3.0, you can still use them. If they won’t let you use 2 modems anymore Amazon has a Arris SBV2402 for $107 right now, they also have a “renewed” option for $65. Not saying that’s cheap, but it’s far better than some of the $200-$300 options I saw while looking.Modems that do both internet and voice are pretty expensive.
I've heard that Comcast will allow you to use two cablemodems, one for voice and one for data. That, in fact, was my setup 5 years ago, before I moved. But I was renting a cablemodem back then.
I already have a 16 channel cablemodem, but it's not voice. If Comcast would let me use that one in addition to the voice modem I already have, that would be great.
When you get real sustained throughput of 9.6Gb/s, you let me know.If your router and device are Wi-Fi 6, you can theoretically download at up to 9.6 gbs.
Let your ISP know you are coming!When you get real sustained throughput of 9.6Gb/s, you let me know.![]()
For a home user downloading files over the Internet, these kinds of speeds are not going to make any difference at all because the uploaders are limiting their upload speeds. I very rarely see download speeds over 20Mbps, and most of the time I see 10Mbps or less. Furthermore, most home networking equipment is limited to 1Gbps. We're now seeing the rollout of consumer hardware supporting Multi-Gig home networking, but, it is expensive, most consumer equipment is not equipped with it, and it is unnecessary unless you are using a Multi-Gig speed nas device and are able to use (and actually using) it's potential.If you require a large file to download quickly, then go for the 1Gb /s, 2.5Gb/s, or even 5Gb/s speed.
Agreed.Great performance comes from low latency, low packet loss, and low jitter.
That is part of the reason I initially signed up got the 1G tier - to get the faster gateway. Then, when you downgrade you keep the same unit.I have 1/2 gig AT&T fiber. The provided wi-fi box is 300 mbps max and is usually in the 180-200 range most of the time. The biggest difference I notice is on the scrollers at the bottom of the screen. Goes blurless almost instantly. Amazon movies go into the best res almost immediately. My $45 rate for this service is locked for life and no commitment contract. I have had it a year and by far the best internet I have had. Strong and reliable.
I'll be contacting you in 2040 when Comcast upgrades their hardware.When you get real sustained throughput of 9.6Gb/s, you let me know.![]()
Those are amazing speeds, I presume this isn't your regular business class ISP service? This has to be some high end fiber optic service and I can't imagine the costs for the hardware!Each 100Gb/s point to point is about $10k/mo and a couple years ago were $25k/mo. We have customers with 100Gb/s internet connections, those run about $40k/mo.