Time to get out a shovel <g>
Darin.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2005 12:30 PM
Subject: RE: [Declude.JunkMail] Way OT: Future Broadband - Verizon
Business Fios Service
I am in the same
boat. For my workstation, I have to use Adelphia Cable. L I am too far for
normal DSL, and a business class IDSL for my backup server is over $100 for just
192 Kbps, which is the max I can get.
Oh, BTW, 2 blocks
over they have Fiber in the street. But not my street.
-----Original
Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dave Beckstrom Sent: Tuesday,
December 13, 2005
9:20
AM To:
Declude.JunkMail@declude.com Subject: RE: [Declude.JunkMail] Way OT:
Future Broadband - Verizon Business Fios Service
Dave,
I assume you have to be
in an area with fiber to your building. Im in a residential area with a
T-1 in my house. Its about $800 a month. Id certainly like to find
something faster and less costly. But I doubt anything will be available
here fore a few years.
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Dave
Doherty Sent:
Tuesday,
December 13, 2005
9:42
AM To:
Declude.JunkMail@declude.com Subject: Re: [Declude.JunkMail] Way OT:
Future Broadband - Verizon Business Fios Service
I was paying $85 for 384
DSL, so for me it's a serious "perfomance / cost"
improvement.
With the 2mbps up
bandwidth, this could _theoretically_ replace a T1 at less than 20% of the cost.
Still not sure I'd bet the company on THAT, though, and I'd need a lot more than
eight IPs.
----- Original Message -----
Sent:
Tuesday, December 13,
2005 10:36
AM
Subject: RE:
[Declude.JunkMail] Way OT: Future Broadband - Verizon Business Fios
Service
Dave,
What was
the rate for this business level service?
Sincerely,
Support
Department Global Web Solutions®, Inc. 804-346-5300
x112 877-800-GLOBAL (4562) x112 http://globalweb.net
Richmond's Internet Source
since 1996! WEB HOSTING including EMAIL beginning at $29/month! DSL
Starting at $39.95/month! Non-Profits - receive a 25% discount on most
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"Global Web Solutions" is a registered trademark of Global
Web Solutions, Inc., Glen Allen, VA
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Dave
Doherty Sent:
Monday, December 12,
2005 11:53
PM To:
Declude.JunkMail@declude.com Subject: [Declude.JunkMail] Way OT:
Future Broadband - Verizon Business Fios Service
I signed up for
Verizon's Business Fios (fiber optic broadband) service a couple of weeks
ago, and they installed it last week.
Now let me start
by saying that if I can buy the equivalent service for ANYTHING
from anybody BUT Verizon, I do it. Overall, their customer service
stinks. I was an early adopter of Vonage, just to get away from Verizon's
phone service. And my company was a victim of Verizon's hideous
network design in hurricane Floyd, during which I never lost
connectivity but I could not move a packet because their billing center
drowned.
So when the consumer
Fios advertising blurb arrived a couple of months ago, announcing megabits
of connectivity for under $100/month, I was skeptical. I reviewed the TOS
and found that they specifically prohibit servers of any kind, and will not
provide static IPs. That killed the service for me, because I run a couple
of backup servers at home and I need the static IPs. There were other
problems, but the no-server and no-fixed IP policies were deal
breakers. I called and asked about a business grade service, and was told on
no uncertain terms that business Fios was a concept, but it was at least
three years away from implementation.
But a friend of mine
down the street called around and found a Verizon person who was empowered
to create Fios business accounts. I called her and got a static block of
five IPs with 15mbps download and 2mbps upload. Straight pipe, no port
blocking, no SMTP "you gotta host with us" BS.
The order process was
very easy, and the order taker was great. She wanted to be sure she
understood what I needed, and she needed to be sure that there was a good
match between my needs and their offering.
The installer was
gracious from the start to the end, even to the point of asking me for a
brush so he could clean the snow off his shoes before he entered the house.
I could not ask for a better installer. He spent four hours setting up the
physical stuff, but he had only done non-business installs before. Not
surprising, since they are still not promoting Fios as a business
service. I spent two minutes setting up the router for a static IP, another
two showing him how to do it, and about ten to fifteen minutes explaining
the difference between dynamic and static IPs and the like. (The installer's
lack of experience was the only negative I can point to, and I expected
it since Fios is primarily a home service.)
I am not easily
impressed, but I have only one word to describe this service:
WOW!
I am getting 15+mbps
consistently from test sites. My VPN to the data center runs almost as fast
as my LAN here at home. My backup mail server is running without a hitch, as
is my backup DNS. I have had zero downtime since the service was installed,
unlike my Covad DSL service which had downtime several times a
week.
Anyway, sorry for the
length of this, but I thought it would be interesting to all to see where
the telcos are going for broadband. Their future clearly is fiber, and so
far it looks really, really good, at least at
Verizon.
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