[BBLISA] business class ISP recommendations
Jon Young
jon at network-plumbers.com
Fri May 16 10:45:23 EDT 2014
FWIW, I installed comcast's metro ethernet product at my office in Concord
and I have to say that I've been very impressed. The product is and
support/management is entirely separate from the cable modem
(business/residential) group. Cost is more on par with a typical business
class ethernet circuit. I pay $2k/month (about a year ago) for a 50Mb
(sync) metro ethernet service at my office that has been as reliable as any
other office circuit I've bought over the years and was price competitive
with the various other options considering the cost to build out
connectivity to that office space.
I agree with the various other comments about if true business class
service is what you need. BTW, I don't consider comcast/rcn business to
really be business class service but that is very much a matter of
semantics and business needs.
Hope this helps.
Jon
On Thu, May 15, 2014 at 3:22 PM, Brian O'Neill <oneill at oinc.net> wrote:
> On 5/15/2014 3:00 PM, Steve Meuse wrote:
>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Thu, May 15, 2014 at 2:22 PM, Rich Braun <richb at pioneer.ci.net
>> <mailto:richb at pioneer.ci.net>> wrote:
>>
>>
>> Honestly, at this point the epitome of price/performance is a race
>> between
>> DOCSIS-3 and FIOS. But I think a whole lot more construction is
>> taking place
>> with DOCSIS-3 than FIOS, probably because there are several
>> companies using it
>> whereas only one company supports FIOS. DOCSIS-3 has the advantage
>> of lower
>> cost: it's exceedingly expensive to run fiber to every end-point,
>> whereas
>> running RG-6 from a pole-mounted fiber box to several nearby
>> buildings is
>> quite inexpensive.
>>
>>
>> (Disclosure: I work for Comcast)
>>
>> I believe I read that FIOS is not expanding to any new markets (towns),
>> but only expanding within towns they currently cover. The same article
>> stated that the cost had more to do with the capital costs of the
>> house/curb units vs. the fiber deployment costs.
>>
>
> I recall this as well. They even sold off some markets, like Northern New
> England went to Fairpoint.
>
> Astound's consumer-grade service is a tad nicer than Comcast's in
>> one area:
>> Comcast does port blocking (including the all-important port 80),
>> and as near
>> as I can tell
>>
>>
>> 80 is open, I don't know the complete list, but it was orignially
>> intended to block SMB mounts 137-139, etc.
>> -Steve
>>
>
> FiOS Residential blocks port 80 inbound, and port 25 outbound. I vaguely
> recall port 80 being blocked for the Code Red malware, and since running
> your own server was technically against the TOS, they left it in place.
>
> -Brian
>
>
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