Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => Hardware and Software => Topic started by: Gooss on May 26, 2018, 03:24:53 PM
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My Frontier DSL is limited to 7mb with no FIOS in sight.
My alternative is Spectrum. Is their service satisfactory for AH?
Thanks for any tips.
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I have had it here at this house for around 8 years. Absolutely no issues for speed/lag/ping, etc
Without getting way too technical over things, if you go that route and you choose to supply your own router, make sure it is gigabit rated for ethernet and wifi. For the speed packages they offer in your area, the speed advertised is the speed you would get over ethernet. Nothing is guaranteed over wifi
And make sure anything ethernet is gigabit rated also. I can go into a ton more detail/logic from what I see on service calls for slow speeds
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I just switched to Spectrum from Frontier DSL (used to be Verizon) in January 2018. The DSL connection averaged 7 to 9 mbps with slow downs to 2 mps (lasting several days) at least once a year. This required a tech to come out and adjust their setting at the switching station. The service was always a headache, because they are required to come to the house first despite there never having been a problem at the house.
Spectrum has been rock steady at 114 mbps and I am really kicking myself for sticking with Frontier for as long as I did. It actually is just a few dollars cheaper for me and I get a speed improvement of 10X.
Hope this helps
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Have had charter/Spectrum for almost 20 years. My sons where hoping we'd switch to FIOS just for the extra band width.... never needed it. 3 computers full time, a couple laptops on and off, and 3 gaming systems, not to mention streaming on the TV. Solid and steady all the time. Had to replace the modem twice in all that time and had not trouble with the service in setting them up.
Remember, connection for the game not only relies on you service provider (Spectrum) but also your location and the route your signal takes to HTC. Im in New England and have rarely had a connection issue to HTC.
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I also have Spectrum and it works Great.
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Our cabling here is above ground and the only service issues we have had occurs when there is a thunderstorm. We lose service for about 24 hours each time one of those storms hits.
When it is working, it works well. Outages seem slow to be cured.
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Thanks for the reviews and heads up.
I forgot to ask about phone service. Preference for or against cable for telephone?
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Gooss, it all works great... the main thing I would recommend is read and watch your monthly bill religiously
reason I say that, I had Time warner cable ( Spectrum ) and my bill would gradually climb from having cable TV, internet, phone for $107.00 a month upwards of $386+ a month
I had to get down right rude and really angry with a top tier supervisor to reimburse me 3 separate times since I moved back to NC in 2009.... the owed back over charges were well over $1,100 each
Spectrum ( TWC ) is a great service, but they will take advantage of you if you don't stay on top of them
just a heads up ( PS- I never had Spectrum, even when they changed to spectrum, I was still on Time Warner cable )
Hope this Helps
TC
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Thanks for the reviews and heads up.
I forgot to ask about phone service. Preference for or against cable for telephone?
I don't use Spectrum. I have Comcast but... at one point I bundled my TV, Internet and cable with them. Guess what. If cable service went out I had no contact with the outside world. I dropped the voice service and got a smart phone on another network and now if one network drops out (Comcast seems to go down weekly for hours at a time where I live) I still have two of three services available (and even three with video on demand to compensate for TV or a Skype type service to substitute for voice).
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Thanks again for the responses. My wife is questioning the need to switch TV from DirecTV. That may not be a fight I want to enter. I may start with Internet and add services down the road. I hate missing out on introductory package deals.
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Spectrum is miles above both DirecTV and Dish Network and a lot cheaper
Edit: the only thing I know for sure that beats all 3 above for TV is our 10ft C-band/KU-band Sat dish with a HD4TV tuner with mpeg2 sidecart and digital signal box......even with 24+ inches of snow on it the signal is crystal clear and can pick up all the different types of satellites
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Yes Gooss. What TC said is true. Watch your bill every month and see if there are any price jumps. I had to call them a couple times and correct a few things with them and they reimbursed me credit for my upcoming bills. Now I pay less and I get more channels than when I was paying a higher amount. I guess all providers do the same thing. You need to keep updates on things or they take advantage. But overall Spectrum is great!
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Thanks again for the responses. My wife is questioning the need to switch TV from DirecTV. That may not be a fight I want to enter. I may start with Internet and add services down the road. I hate missing out on introductory package deals.
You'd probably get a good deal on internet+tv to start, but you could also try it for a month and see how you like it, and afterwards drop the TV. I have always had good luck with Spectrum/TWC. As mentioned though, do watch your bill.
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We cut the cable long ago on television. We have FireTV, which uses DirecTV Now and allows you to install apps to get other channels that may not be allowed in your area. For instance, I installed an app for ABC New York to watch the Indy 500, and CBS All Access to allow the wife to watch her shows. Many networks now have their own apps, but the cable companies have existing contracts that force stations like ABC to block streaming in some areas, unless you have a pay-for-television account. Something even cheaper might be Hulu, or YouTube TV if available. Either way, you need to have the fastest Internet you can get, because the more people (including neighbors) that use streaming the slower and more buffering you will see.
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Spectrum is miles above both DirecTV and Dish Network and a lot cheaper
Edit: the only thing I know for sure that beats all 3 above for TV is our 10ft C-band/KU-band Sat dish with a HD4TV tuner with mpeg2 sidecart and digital signal box......even with 24+ inches of snow on it the signal is crystal clear and can pick up all the different types of satellites
What type/model receiver you have? I have a 7 1/2ft winegard that I still use alongside a 36" ku band dish for wildfeeds, backhauls, and live feeds when storm chasters are out and about
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What type/model receiver you have? I have a 7 1/2ft winegard that I still use alongside a 36" ku band dish for wildfeeds, backhauls, and live feeds when storm chasters are out and about
I'll shoot that info to you later in a PM, after I get back from my primary Doctor and then got to go to my Spine Specialist for some decisions that him and I have to discuss and figure out what and how each of us (him and I) can formulate an agreeable plan......just talking/texting about it floods my Anxiety and depression...
Back to the original thread topic:
I've had friends and family (including myself) that has tried using DirecTV and Dish network digital satellite TV...
- it is not very reliable when it is raining outside when the rain starts coming down in a medium non-stop down pour (screen signal starts getting blocked, TV show starts freezing up and becomes block, until you completely lose the SAT signal! This happens for all Digital Satellite TV companys every since the beginning)
- Depend on the Satellite TV company, when you lose your weather induced lose of television, you are given 3 options: 1- watch something on your DVR, 2- turn your TV off & find something else to do
3- this option is the one that might really get under your skin! but this 3rd option is to use your "Dish-on-Demand" which will work only if you have cable(or dsl) internet service.... note: SAT DL / phone land line UL will not work (note: I'm going off of older info on this, but haven't heard of any new news on the matter)
So with option 3, if you are a DirecTV customer with cable internet connection, they piggyback/use your internet connection everytime you use "on demand". I don't guess it is too bad since they are practically the same company/group... But if you are using DishNetwork, they do the same thing but don't cut any breaks on price when they offer "On Demand" but don't bother to tell their customers that they are using your own separate cable internet connection to give you "on demand" which is straight up BS....
Running late for my appointments... Just wanted to point this stuff out
I'll shoot you a pm later when I get home Meatwad. ~S~
TC
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Thanks
Hope all goes well with the doctor visit! :salute