Thanks for the input, Karl.
Hopefully someone from Apple is around here and can get some ideas on
how to fix this particular problem set.
Mark.
On 10/31/20 11:37, Karl Auerbach wrote:
Let me jump in and add a bit more information.
I am not an RF guy - I stopped playing with radios [and TV]
att 1Gb/sec symmetric fiber is about $70/month.
their “business class” service costs >10x that price.
if i don’t want an SLA, does anything keep a non-profit organization from
ordering (from att or sonic) residential service at what normally would be
considered a business location?
sonic seems
On 11/1/20 8:20 PM, Mark Seiden wrote:
(would this violate some tariff? could they refuse to install?)
AT&T's fiber service is not a tariffed service anywhere that I know of.
They absolutely could refuse to install it at what they deem a
"business" location and likely would. I know Comcast
> On Nov 1, 2020, at 5:32 PM, Fletcher Kittredge wrote:
>
>
> Sonic builds their own fiber; they are insurgents. This is a good thing and
> society would be better off with more competition among infrastructure
> providers. It needs to be funded somehow.
>
in san francisco, i know sonic wa
On Sun, Nov 1, 2020 at 5:22 PM Mark Seiden wrote:
> if i don’t want an SLA, does anything keep a non-profit organization from
> ordering (from att or sonic) residential service at what normally would be
> considered a business location?
Hi Mark,
Generally speaking, the residential and business
> On Nov 1, 2020, at 5:32 PM, Fletcher Kittredge wrote:
>
>
> Sonic builds their own fiber; they are insurgents. This is a good thing and
> society would be better off with more competition among infrastructure
> providers. It needs to be funded somehow.
>
> You can cheat, but if you are a
In article <098f44b7-3779-4aad-bfbe-ccaec8c3c...@seiden.com>,
Mark Seiden wrote:
>> You can cheat, but if you are a nonprofit doesn't that kinda go against
>> mission?
>
>well, depends what you think the mission of an arts organization or a library
>is in these troubled times.
>
>thatâs why i
Their site is confusing - they were historically (and still are, in most
places) a DSL provider using AT&T for the last hop into the house. Over the
past few years they’ve built out their own fiber network which currently has a
much smaller footprint. Definitely by far the best residential inter
Sonic both has their own FTTH and layers on top of ATT FTTH with Fusion IPBB I
think it’s called. I don’t know the resale agreement details in place but it’s
openly advertised as such on Sonic’s site.
Waiting for the true deal to land in my neighborhood ...
-George
Sent from my iPhone
> O
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