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Just a quick reference. | |||
These prices are monthly, unless otherwise noted. | |||
Verizon Fiber (fios) home internet has three tiers. | |||
$40, $60, $80 (gigabit). | |||
This is internet only. They will not require purchase of phone or television. | |||
There is a $15 charge for a router. You can provide your own and skip this. | |||
There is a $100 one time service charge for setup. | |||
Home requires that you have a 'home' (which means you have a kitchen and bathroom onsite). | |||
I guess if you own a residential building, and have a downstairs shop, you can save dosh by using | |||
home internet for everything. maybe. | |||
You cannot get a static ip via home. | |||
This is pricing for no contract, and month to month payments. Contracts aren't needed, | |||
because these companies print money. Do they really need contracts? They are doing | |||
ok. | |||
Business: | |||
business pricing: | |||
$80 base level. (200down/100up) | |||
Gigabit, I think $120 | |||
Again, $15 for router, monthly. | |||
$50 one time setup fee, this time. | |||
Static IPs: Packs of 1,5, and 13. | |||
1 static ip == +$20 | |||
5 static ips == +$40 | |||
13 static ips == +$60 | |||
5 Static ips, and base level internet: $120 | |||
This is month to month pricing. No contract. | |||
There is a discount if you agree to a two year contract. A contract almost | |||
exclusively benefits the phone company. You get very little out of it, and | |||
run the risk of cancellation fees. | |||
Again, this is internet only. They do not require purchase of tv, or phone. | |||
If you are a new customer, they may give you a $10 discount for a couple months. | |||
On the other side: the local cable company: comcast, I can't quote exacts, but | |||
I know the following: | |||
Business Internet | |||
35/35 | |||
w/5 Static IPs | |||
$112 | |||
cable tv | |||
$40 (I think this is right) | |||
As you can see, the pricing is comparable for internet. Verizon would be $120, | |||
for base level with internet. Slightly more money, but faster promised speeds. | |||
@ -0,0 +1,78 @@ | |||
Just a quick reference. | |||
These prices are monthly, unless otherwise noted. | |||
Verizon Fiber (fios) home internet has three tiers. | |||
$40, $60, $80 (gigabit). | |||
This is internet only. They will not require purchase of phone or television. | |||
There is a $15 charge for a router. You can provide your own and skip this. | |||
There is a $100 one time service charge for setup. | |||
Home requires that you have a 'home' (which means you have a kitchen and bathroom onsite). | |||
I guess if you own a residential building, and have a downstairs shop, you can save dosh by using | |||
home internet for everything. maybe. | |||
You cannot get a static ip via home. | |||
This is pricing for no contract, and month to month payments. Contracts aren't needed, | |||
because these companies print money. Do they really need contracts? They are doing | |||
ok. | |||
Business: | |||
business pricing: | |||
$80 base level. (200down/100up) | |||
Gigabit, I think $120 | |||
Again, $15 for router, monthly. | |||
$50 one time setup fee, this time. | |||
Static IPs: Packs of 1,5, and 13. | |||
1 static ip == +$20 | |||
5 static ips == +$40 | |||
13 static ips == +$60 | |||
5 Static ips, and base level internet: $120 | |||
This is month to month pricing. No contract. | |||
There is a discount if you agree to a two year contract. A contract almost | |||
exclusively benefits the phone company. You get very little out of it, and | |||
run the risk of cancellation fees. | |||
Again, this is internet only. They do not require purchase of tv, or phone. | |||
If you are a new customer, they may give you a $10 discount for a couple months. | |||
On the other side: the local cable company: comcast, I can't quote exacts, but | |||
I know the following: | |||
Business Internet | |||
35/35 | |||
w/5 Static IPs | |||
$112 | |||
cable tv | |||
$40 (I think this is right) | |||
As you can see, the pricing is comparable for internet. Verizon would be $120, | |||
for base level with internet. Slightly more money, but faster promised speeds. | |||
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reference: wikipedia on VOIP: | |||
"Communication on the IP network is | |||
perceived as less reliable in contrast to the circuit-switched public | |||
telephone network because it does not provide a network-based mechanism | |||
to ensure that data packets are not lost, and are delivered in | |||
sequential order. It is a best-effort network without fundamental | |||
Quality of Service (QoS) guarantees. Voice, and all other data, travels | |||
in packets over IP networks with fixed maximum capacity. This system may | |||
be more prone to data loss in the presence of congestion[a] than | |||
traditional circuit switched systems; a circuit switched system of | |||
insufficient capacity will refuse new connections while carrying the | |||
remainder without impairment, while the quality of real-time data such | |||
as telephone conversations on packet-switched networks degrades | |||
dramatically.[16] Therefore, VoIP implementations may face problems with | |||
latency, packet loss, and jitter.[16][17]" | |||
Based on my own experience | |||
I've seen VOIP have occasional dropouts. | |||
I've seen copper be bombproof. | |||
When copper was laid, it was done with care, | |||
and it was built to last. VOIP is tacked onto internet connections as an | |||
afterthought. It can work, but it can certainly not work. Where | |||
on the other hand, copper will always work. Even if the power or internet | |||
goes down. | |||
Verdict: VOIP or Copper is ok, but copper will always be more reliable. | |||