California
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2004
- Messages
- 15,041
- Location
- An hour north of San Francisco
- Tractor
- Yanmar YM240 Yanmar YM186D
I've run out of patience with ATT U-Verse FTTN, both here at the ranch, and the installation at our home in town. We arrived at the ranch this afternoon and the modem returns 'broadband service not available' as its panel lights flash red. This is Tuesday afternoon, phone support tried everything then said a tech can't visit before Thursday 4~8pm.
So I tried a feature advertised on my MetroPC LG phone: the hotspot came up as soon as I turned it on. I'm impressed, pages load on my laptop faster than they did on the sometimes 10mbps rural FTTN. I'm going to run this way until ATT gets here and am thinking seriously about buying a hotspot gadget so I don't have to leave the phone in the house.
Antenna TV is sufficient for our rare TV watching. We don't have the TV half of U-Verse and aren't moving much data through our internet connection. I think overall cost would be less by dropping the $55 ATT service and buying more phone data. I hate to give up the landline phone # the family has had here for 70 years but maybe that's not important.
I'm interested in any advice anyone has about this phone hotspot/wifi transmitter configuration as contrasted to FTTN. The whole topic is new to me. My specific question of the moment is does my phone still function as a phone when the device is in use as a hotspot? Comments on that and any other aspect would be appreciated.
So I tried a feature advertised on my MetroPC LG phone: the hotspot came up as soon as I turned it on. I'm impressed, pages load on my laptop faster than they did on the sometimes 10mbps rural FTTN. I'm going to run this way until ATT gets here and am thinking seriously about buying a hotspot gadget so I don't have to leave the phone in the house.
Antenna TV is sufficient for our rare TV watching. We don't have the TV half of U-Verse and aren't moving much data through our internet connection. I think overall cost would be less by dropping the $55 ATT service and buying more phone data. I hate to give up the landline phone # the family has had here for 70 years but maybe that's not important.
I'm interested in any advice anyone has about this phone hotspot/wifi transmitter configuration as contrasted to FTTN. The whole topic is new to me. My specific question of the moment is does my phone still function as a phone when the device is in use as a hotspot? Comments on that and any other aspect would be appreciated.