 1 edit | I think cable offers the fastest speeds in the US. Who is it that offers 105Mb?
Found it: »www.wcfcourier.com/news/local/ar···286.html |
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 | Actually there's Paxio in the bay area that offers 1GB symmetrical.
But they are not a mainstream provider like Verizon and I doubt you'll be seeing that kind of speed from FiOS anytime soon. |
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 | said by fifty nine:Actually there's Paxio in the bay area that offers 1GB symmetrical. But they are not a mainstream provider like Verizon and I doubt you'll be seeing that kind of speed from FiOS anytime soon. Seems like Paxio uses an all fiber network which makes AstroBoy's point mute. |
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 Reviews:
·CenturyLink
·Verizon Wireless..
·Mediacom
| reply to AstroBoy The service is being offered in the next 4-6 weeks right here in my hometown. It is 105/10 and will cost $150 a month to start (for 12 months) and then rise to around $200. They will also offer a 50/5 package (also DOCSIS3) for around $90 per.
Pretty impressive for a lot of old coaxial lines but it remains to be seen whether performance matches expectations (and is sustainable). |
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 joebarnhartPaxio evangelist join:2005-12-15 Santa Clara, CA | reply to fifty nine Right you are. Paxio is all FTTH and offers up to 1000M/1000M. They are, however, only in the S.F. Bay Area at present. They have some footprint in Emeryville, Santa Clara, Sunnyvale, Brentwood (N. Cal.), San Jose, etc.
Paxio's 100/100 plan is under $95/mo. so it compares very favorable to cable. Plus, it's not "up to" or any such nonsense -- it's full speed, all the time, no excuses.
I wish everybody could get Paxio.
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 | I inquired with Paxio. They need a "community" to connect before they can hook you up. Not exactly sure what that means. |
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 joebarnhartPaxio evangelist join:2005-12-15 Santa Clara, CA | From what I understand, the "community" aspect is a common group of people who can help fund the building of the network to your home(s). Like a homeowner's association or a condo association who can assess a special fee to connect to the fiber.
Paxio doesn't have the capital to build fiber everywhere so they strike deals with "communities" to bring the fiber out. The up-front money helps construct the fiber and it gets you benefits for x number of years on the back end. When I bought my home, Pulte basically paid the upfront cost to get us connected to fiber during the construction phase.
The toughest case is single family homes with no association. There's no critical mass of users to negotiate with and it makes it very hard to bring a fiber to the neighborhood. |
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