T1 (Business) question

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drebo

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2006
7,034
1
81
Nah, metro E is overtaking that with VLAN routing and MPLS in the core.

Metro Ethernet isn't available for almost everyone.

For people who *gasp* don't live in a major metro area, T1s are still the only reasonably reliable option.
 

Glob

Member
Jan 4, 2008
72
0
0
Ah, you again.

Just about every cable company is offering ME, they have a pretty large footprint, and businesses requiring that kind of bandwidth typically aren't in the sticks.

What are you, a professional troll?
 

jlazzaro

Golden Member
May 6, 2004
1,743
0
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Ah, you again.

Just about every cable company is offering ME, they have a pretty large footprint, and businesses requiring that kind of bandwidth typically aren't in the sticks.

What are you, a professional troll?

ME is readily available in NFL cities and other large metropolitan areas, but you're wildly overplaying their availability. Given the geographical dispersity of the US, high-speed Ethernet services are no where close to readily available. DS1/DS3 services will continue to dominate until MAJOR investments are made. This isn't the freakin Netherlands...
 
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drebo

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2006
7,034
1
81
Ah, you again.

Just about every cable company is offering ME, they have a pretty large footprint, and businesses requiring that kind of bandwidth typically aren't in the sticks.

What are you, a professional troll?

Why did I feed the troll? Why oh why?

:|
 

Glob

Member
Jan 4, 2008
72
0
0
ME is readily available in NFL cities and other large metropolitan areas, but you're wildly overplaying their availability. Given the geographical dispersity of the US, high-speed Ethernet services are no where close to readily available. DS1/DS3 services will continue to dominate until MAJOR investments are made. This isn't the freakin Netherlands...

Not really. Just about any area with a DOCSIS system has ME available, and the cable companies are doing the same things with Ethernet that the tier 1 carriers are doing.
 

RebateMonger

Elite Member
Dec 24, 2005
11,586
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ME is readily available in NFL cities and other large metropolitan areas, but you're wildly overplaying their availability. Given the geographical dispersity of the US, high-speed Ethernet services are no where close to readily available. DS1/DS3 services will continue to dominate until MAJOR investments are made. This isn't the freakin Netherlands...
About three years ago, I had a client in a year-old three-story office building in downtown Phoenix (population about 5 million). Not only did the building not have any cable modem service, but when we had Qwest install a Business DSL connection, Qwest had a hard time getting a clean enough signal and put the entire building on a blacklist for DSL service. Qwest took their modem back and said "Goodbye". The client had to get a wireless broadband connection to the Inernet.
 

Emulex

Diamond Member
Jan 28, 2001
9,759
1
71
yup comcast will roll out a truck to a business park and qualify it for metro-e then hit everyone hard to sell since profits skyrocket if they get more customers.

I wish they would sell it with a CIR (5meg guarantee 50 meg peak) like old frame relay.
 

Fardringle

Diamond Member
Oct 23, 2000
9,200
765
126
Not really. Just about any area with a DOCSIS system has ME available, and the cable companies are doing the same things with Ethernet that the tier 1 carriers are doing.

The city that I live in has Cable and DSL internet access available pretty much everywhere including the suburbs. However, only a VERY small portion of the city (about 5% geographically) has ME available. So, no, having DOCSIS equipment in place (which we do for cable access) does not necessarily mean that ME is available as well.
 

Lithium381

Lifer
May 12, 2001
12,452
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My company is running a bonded pair of T-1's and a 3mb/1.5mb DSL connection. So long as your company just needs e-mail, a 1.5 link is suitable. The second you get a cat video on youtube, your connection is hosed. Monitor the traffic and block appropriatly. Look into getting a second t1 line bonded to the first.
 

Glob

Member
Jan 4, 2008
72
0
0
The city that I live in has Cable and DSL internet access available pretty much everywhere including the suburbs. However, only a VERY small portion of the city (about 5% geographically) has ME available. So, no, having DOCSIS equipment in place (which we do for cable access) does not necessarily mean that ME is available as well.

Ah, but it is ME essentially, since you make an Ethernet connection to a cable modem, and you can have the ISP do many things with that connection - it can be point to point, internet access, point to multipoint, etc. I guess it depends on your cable provider, but the ones I've dealt with here (tier 2 city and suburbs) have those services available.
 

Zargon

Lifer
Nov 3, 2009
12,218
2
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Ah, but it is ME essentially, since you make an Ethernet connection to a cable modem, and you can have the ISP do many things with that connection - it can be point to point, internet access, point to multipoint, etc. I guess it depends on your cable provider, but the ones I've dealt with here (tier 2 city and suburbs) have those services available.

they are just starting to roll that type of stuff out by me(MAYBE). My comcast business rep is being rather coy with me about it.

comcast is far from 24/7 reliable, even with business cable services :whiste:

My AT&T T1 has been down zero times in 2.5 years, my cable has gone down 5 times, for atleast an hour, in the last 8 months...
 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
Not really. Just about any area with a DOCSIS system has ME available, and the cable companies are doing the same things with Ethernet that the tier 1 carriers are doing.

Our company was in downtown Minneapolis in an office building and had ME. But when we moved to a 1st ring suburb we had to move to bonded T-1s or a DS3 unless we wanted to foot the cost of running the line and then sign some long term contract with Time Warner.
 

ScottMac

Moderator<br>Networking<br>Elite member
Mar 19, 2001
5,471
2
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Ah, but it is ME essentially, since you make an Ethernet connection to a cable modem, and you can have the ISP do many things with that connection - it can be point to point, internet access, point to multipoint, etc. I guess it depends on your cable provider, but the ones I've dealt with here (tier 2 city and suburbs) have those services available.

But they usually don't offer QOS, and rarely guarantee proven availability better than ~98%.
 

imagoon

Diamond Member
Feb 19, 2003
5,199
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I would also offer, after being a Comcast Business user in the past, that even their business teams consider being down for 2 weeks acceptable. When I exercised my clause to recover the services fees, it took 2 years to get a check. Also the initial problems were never resolved and I have since moved on. I didn't even consider it good enough to put internet "trash" on. They also told me that 8000+ ms pings was normal. For business critical, anything on big cable co's services doesn't compare yet (that I have found).
 

Emulex

Diamond Member
Jan 28, 2001
9,759
1
71
COAX= best effort
METRO-E = SLA (totally different ARM). Christ you can run BGP4 on metro-E - try to get comcast coax business to give you BGP4 lol. heck they have a totally separate block of ip's comcast metro-E uses versus comcast business coax.

don't confuse the two.

business coax isn't going to work if you live near a neighborhood or apartments. You need a dedicated tap for your building and you'll get decent uptime.

but who would use a $89 service for primary?

you get a T-1 and 8 lines for $495 from cbeyond; back that up with comcast biz and a dual-wan router - done.