Fiber is more reliable, seldom (if ever) has issues.Which is the preferred technology for an Internet connection, fiber or cable? I think fiber usually offers symmetric UL/DL, but that is not an issue for me. Why would someone prefer one technology over the other? (price not being a factor)
Yeah. Many people underestimate the importance of upload speed, but it does matter. Visiting a typical web page involves dozens to hundreds of request/reply cycles, so the requests have to go through quickly if you don't want a perception of lagginess.Symmetrical line is better,
This. In the city where I live, the cable plant is decades old, and it had a thoroughly earned reputation for flakiness even when it was new. I've had fiber service (Verizon FiOS) for over a dozen years now, and never had any problems that seemed to trace to the wiring. The first-generation ONT that they originally gave me had its share of issues and needed periodic rebooting, but the newer ones have been solid as a rock.... the equipment to your place will be perhaps newer.
Can't say about other fiber ISPs, but Verizon gives out separate ONT and router boxes, and they are totally cool with it if you'd rather bring your own router. I don't know if they'd be happy if you wanted to bring your own ONT, but I can't see a reason to want to, either. The ONT is basically just a modem and has no functionality that you should need to mess with.The only bad thing about fiber is quite a few ISP's mandate you use their ONT/Gateway.
Bragging rights. Or a new AWS-competitor startup in a garageI have no clue what residential customers will do with 25G/25G let alone Verizon believing 40G/40G will be in demand any time soon.
AFAICT they are still in the early stages of upgrading from GPON to NG-PON2. The new spec will let them offer better-than-1Gbps service, but you can't get that yet in most places (including where I live).Looks like Verizon uses NG-PON2.
You missed that they're using the same fiber network for residential and business customers. I agree that few residential customers will want better than 10G anytime soon, but business is a different story.I have no clue what residential customers will do with 25G/25G let alone Verizon believing 40G/40G will be in demand any time soon.
[ shrug... ] The 2G service that they're deploying in New York right now has a separate ONT still. Who can say what the future holds, of course.A forced ONT/gateway sure looks to be in your future with NG-PON2 on Verizon. If you are lucky, there will be a passthrough mode.
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