On the topic of static ip... as a Net Eng of an ISP, and seeing the pains that we have to endure with our static ip customers , I wonder if static ip customers actually inadvertently get less optimal treatment than more flexible, agile and dynamic ip customers ?
I’m saying that since over the years as I have migrated from one router to another, from one technology Ethernet/IP, mpls/ip, it’s more difficult to move those static customers subnets around, and sometimes easier just to leave them on an old router where they’ve been for years. Aaron > On Dec 28, 2018, at 12:32 PM, Jared Geiger <ja...@compuwizz.net> wrote: > > I found horrible routing with a static IP setup with T-Mobile. The device was > located in Ashburn, outbound routing would go out via Dallas and inbound > would come in via Seattle. So ping times and usability was rough. Tried it on > the west coast and the same problem. T-Mobile support said this was by design > and they couldn’t change it. > > I decided to switch to a regular consumer AT&T data sim without a static IP > and set up a small router to initiate a VPN tunnel out to wherever I need it. > It turns out to be cheaper and reliable for us. > > ~Jared Geiger > >> On Fri, Dec 28, 2018 at 11:53 AM Ryan Wilkins <r...@deadfrog.net> wrote: >> You mention your connection is 4G. On T-Mobile 4G is UMTS whereas LTE is, >> well, LTE. Are you really on UMTS (which I would expect to have much >> crazier RTTs and jitter like you report) or did you mean LTE? >> >> Ryan >> >> > On Dec 28, 2018, at 7:06 AM, Dovid Bender <do...@telecurve.com> wrote: >> > >> > Hi All, >> > >> > I finally got around to setting up a cellular backup device in our new >> > POP. I am currently testing with T-Mobile where the cell signal strength >> > is at 80%. The connection is 4G. When SSH'ing in remotely the connection >> > seems rather slow. Ping times seem to be all over the place (for instance >> > now I am seeing: rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 174.142/336.792/555.574/99.599 ms) >> > . Is that just cellular or is that more related to the provider and the >> > location where I am? I could in theory test with VZ and ATT as well. With >> > Verizon they charge $500.00 just to get a public IP and I want to avoid >> > that if possible. >> > >> > Thanks and sorry in advance if this is off topic. >> > >> > >>