All you people that left Comcast must have finally made them improve their customer experience. I've been with them for more than two years now, and both my Internet and phone service are a vast improvement over CenturyLink DSL and hard wired voice lines. The only outage I've had was a preplanned one to make some improvements on my network. I now have Gigabit speed and am still paying the same as I was when I "only" have 600 Mbps. Plus my upload speed went from 25 to 100 Mbps, so better for playing Plex when I'm traveling. 🙂
There were a lot of outages that were not planned and I I had to reboot the xfinty router way too often to in order for the wireless to connect. I currently have a verizon ax router that I had to reboot one time in 3 years that I have had the router. Once you get used to fiber it is a game changer that I can't live with out. I get outstanding pinging time, even on wireless devices.
I've never had to reboot my Xfinity Gateway modem, but I also run it in bridge mode and use my own router. I could never get port forwarding to work with their gateway, so I gave up and went to bridge mode. The only reboots mine has had has been an occasional power failure for my home and it lasted too long for my UPS to keep it running. Fiber isn't available in my neighborhood, so Comcast is the only option I have for anything faster than 100 Mbps, which is what I had with CenturyLink DSL. My brother retired as a CL line technician, and his opinion is the company is trying to get rid of their home customers and concentrate on business users. Based on my experience the last year I had their service, I would agree with him. Their service really went downhill the last couple of years I had them.
@atc98092don't give up hope on fiber, because Google Fiber is planning on speeding up the pace of fiber deployments and expand into new areas.
https://www.lightreading.com/finance/alphabet-on-the-hunt-for-gfiber-investors-report#close-modal
Our neighborhood is all underground utilities. It would be cost prohibitive for them to come in and add fiber, unless CenturyLink decided they could pull it through their existing conduit. The did make the effort to add DSLMs throughout the neighborhood, which is why we could get DSL at the speeds we could. But while I could get 108 Mbps (only 5 Mbps uplink) my daughter and son-in-law, who only live about a half mile deeper into the neighborhood (really just up the street from us) could only get about 65, and that was with a bonded pair of wires.
Unless another provider such as Google or Verizon bought out the existing CL infrastructure throughout the entire neighborhood, I see no options other than Comcast, CL (or any company that takes the phone services over) or Starlink satellite service.
Where I live now this neighborhood is all underground utilities too. It is not too costly for Verizon to run fiber through my conduit.
I have my own modem and router on Xfinity. In 7 years, I think there have been 3 reboots – all due to power failures. I’ve never manually rebooted it. I suspect a lot of this stuff (especially the Wi-Fi) has a lot of environmental variables though like what devices you have, what kind of stuff your neighbors have etc.
My neighbors went from Comcast to FIOS. When the FIOS went in, it took 3 days to trench from the street down the side and then under their driveway – about 250 feet in all (flag lot) through rocky ground. I wonder if Verizon made money because within in 2 years, they went back to Comcast. And now it’s not Verizon anymore – they sold that business to another company and only do wireless in this area.
@Laxmom806 you didn't ask anything, so we don't know what you are looking for. As mentioned, if Verizon wants an app for Roku devices to stream their cable TV content, they have to create it themselves. Roku does not create apps for 3rd party providers.
There is, but it's not on Roku and there are restrictions even if you have the right equipment...or you can buy theirs. When i got away from comcast i tried switching over but no point with multiple rokus tvs. so i have fios internet and directvnow stream whatever its called.
Fios TV Home App | Verizon TV Support