Aaron, One simple question. Why on earth would you offer free internet service? How and why? Your site show 1 Gig symmetrical for free when you should be a minimum of $65 per month to be competitive.
On Sat, Dec 26, 2020, 12:31 PM Aaron Wendel <aa...@wholesaleinternet.net> wrote: > We run MikroTik RB4011s for residential speeds between 1G and 10G or just > supply a media converter. For residential 40G and 100G we just drop in > Arista or Extreme switches. SMBs are normally just a media converter or > direct fiber handoff. > > https://mikrotik.com/product/rb4011igs_5hacq2hnd_in > > There are not a lot of options for good, off the shelf 10G CPE equipment. > The handful of 10G residential customers we have seem to be happy with the > tik. The couple that don’t use it have rolled their own solution. > > Like anything, I’m sure once the major home broadband providers start to > catch up with us smaller guys the vendors will catch up as well. > > https://www.kcfiber.com/residential > > Aaron > > > On Dec 26, 2020, at 11:53 AM, Mel Beckman <m...@beckman.org> wrote: > > > > i really don't get what the problem is. it's like they're being > deliberately obtuse. > > > Michael, > > If vendors saw a 10GbE CPE market, they would serve it. Obviously they > don’t see a market. Why don’t people insisting vendors build their hobby > horse see that? It’s like they’re being deliberately obtuse :) > > -mel via cell > > On Dec 26, 2020, at 9:16 AM, Michael Thomas <m...@mtcc.com> wrote: > > > > > On 12/26/20 8:00 AM, Valdis Klētnieks wrote: > > > Anybody got a feel for what percent of the third-party gear currently sold > to > > consumers has sane bufferbloat support in 2020, when we've *known* that > > de-bufferbloated gear is a viable differentiatior if marketed right > (consider the > > percent of families that have at least one gamer who cares)? > > > I don't know percentages, but just trying to find cpe that support it in > their specs is depressingly small. considering that they're all using linux > and queuing discipline software is ages old, i really don't get what the > problem is. it's like they're being deliberately obtuse. given all of the > zoom'ing happening now you think that somebody would hit them with the > clue-bat that this is a marketing opportunity. > > > Mike > > >