We did for a few years until abvout a year ago. Used Smarty. It was very good at first, but degenerated to not able to watch video, although even then it was better than the shocking copper connection we had previously for many years. I don't know if this was from everyone in the locality jumping on, or Smarty throttling it. Have fibre now, not at speeds you see advertised, but, apart from when it goes off, adequate.any one here use radio broadband rather than a fibre or landline cable ( in the UK)? ie a router with a sim card.
Did he not install an incoming service duct?My sister and niece both got on reasonably well with it. My sister now is on fibre broadband as Openreach replaced the old copper recently (previously speeds were in low single figures). My niece is sticking with the radio service as her husband doesn't want Openreach drilling holes in their new self build house.
When they were building, fibre was not on the horizon. Probably the last thing on Darren's mind. Not sure if they even put in a landline.Did he not install an incoming service duct?
I would look at Starlink if you’re serious about off grid broadband. Great product. £75/month, but FTTP speeds.
Bought stacks of them for work. Even the ISP hardware is rock solid. And an absolute synch to set up.
Fine if you have a mobile signal, useless if you don't.absurd price. maybe if you are a business but not Fred Bloggs. I am trying Smarty in a TP-Link MR500 router and does a good job for general internet. 50Gb for £8pm
Starlink makes no sense if you can get a good 5G signal. Weather can impact Starlink and the folks I know who have it are getting quite a variation in speeds.absurd price. maybe if you are a business but not Fred Bloggs. I am trying Smarty in a TP-Link MR500 router and does a good job for general internet. 50Gb for £8pm
Starlink makes no sense if you can get a good 5G signal. Weather can impact Starlink and the folks I know who have it are getting quite a variation in speeds.absurd price. maybe if you are a business but not Fred Bloggs. I am trying Smarty in a TP-Link MR500 router and does a good job for general internet. 50Gb for £8pm
Maybe the case with 5G cells in very heavily populated areas but hopefully not that common. Also, you can get a 5G data contract with prioritised bandwidth. £30 -£35 for unlimited data.Any radio system, and that includes Starlink, is shred by everyone in the cell. Several users on at once and the speed collapses