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I’ll caveat by saying I don’t understand how this **** works, but I just “upgraded” my phone and I’m apparently on 5G now. I’m less than impressed.
View attachment 97176
Just took that while on a teams call. It destroys Satellite man and 99% of American connections.
5G internet is worth it, just be careful of data caps
View attachment 97176
Just took that while on a teams call. It destroys Satellite man and 99% of American connections.
5G internet is worth it, just be careful of data caps
I was on a teams call as I was running this.That ping time is horrific.
View attachment 97176
Just took that while on a teams call. It destroys Satellite man and 99% of American connections.
5G internet is worth it, just be careful of data caps
I have the same latency, but @ISUCyclones2015 has a download that is 10x mine, with a much better stability number. Has better upload than me too, but not much.That ping time is horrific.
Verizon and T-Mobile currently have no data cap.Yes it's good but what's the data cap and price? For home internet with multiple users, a wired connection if available will usually be better due to the data caps. And that latency is pretty poor
70MBPS with Centurylink??? I have someone coming to push mine to 40MBPS tomorrow. They say that is the best they have for me.I don’t and probably will never have fiber to my house. We’ve got 70MBPS Century Link right now. The 5G unit is about 5 houses down the road straight in front of my house. We do not have any 5G devices to test speed or anything.
Anyone switch over to using 5G home internet? I saw a crew hang a 5G unit off the light pole near our house a few weeks back and it looks like it might be available through Verizon now.
Great point about geolocation for your locals via streaming service. Probably something most people don’t think about.We have Verizon 5G in conjunction with our cell phone plan. It's not bad, although other options would probably be better. Whenever I run games I'm pinging something like 25-35 ms, and that's even with everyone in the house streaming something in nearly every room. The biggest pain was getting Hulu live TV to work with it - the geolocation of our ZIP code was like 30 miles away from where we live, which was a big problem in trying to get to get the live TV automatically set up through the internet. We had to have someone set it up manually on their end, but once that happened, it's worked just fine.
I dropped flaky ATT 15meg service (in WI) for cheaper TMobile home Internet (usually ~200meg) and haven't looked back. But services often think we're in other neighboring states, which has been a problem for mlb.tv. YouTube tv hasn't been an issue though -- it doesn't seem to have a problem getting our correct location.Great point about geolocation for your locals via streaming service. Probably something most people don’t think about.
I just checked and neither Verizon nor T-Mobile home internet are available where I live.I dropped flaky ATT 15meg service (in WI) for cheaper TMobile home Internet (usually ~200meg) and haven't looked back. But services often think we're in other neighboring states, which has been a problem for mlb.tv. YouTube tv hasn't been an issue though.
I have 550 upload and 560 download mbps with Metronet in Ames. No clue what they mean or what my ping is(can't find it). All I know is my internet is fast.
I dropped flaky ATT 15meg service (in WI) for cheaper TMobile home Internet (usually ~200meg) and haven't looked back. But services often think we're in other neighboring states, which has been a problem for mlb.tv. YouTube tv hasn't been an issue though -- it doesn't seem to have a problem getting our correct location.