How low can you go... time to downgrade?

Started by zappaDPJ, Apr 01, 2021, 15:40:10

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zappaDPJ

According to today's KentOnline nobody can go as low in Kent as me. Our little area's broadband speed is listed as the lowest in Kent @ 36.6 mbps. I actually get slightly above that but it's got me wondering if I should save quite a bit of money by ditching the phone and switching to SoGEA 40/10.
zap
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Simon

I have no clue on this new fangled phone that isn't a phone stuff.  I really need to look into it before it catches up and bites me.
Simon.
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

zappaDPJ

It simplifies things for me because the only people that contact us on the land line are scammers and the mother-in-law :evil:
zap
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Simon

Simon.
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

nowster

32Mbps? Luxury! My parents can only get 3-4Mbps, and no possibility of FTTC never mind FTTP, unless they want to spend something like £20,000 for a bespoke build.

zappaDPJ

I'm familiar with a couple of connections running at similar speeds. I wonder what OpenReach will do for them when they switch off PSTN and ISDN.
zap
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Technical Ben

#6
Quote from: zappaDPJ on Apr 01, 2021, 15:40:10
According to today's KentOnline nobody can go as low in Kent as me. Our little area's broadband speed is listed as the lowest in Kent @ 36.6 mbps. I actually get slightly above that but it's got me wondering if I should save quite a bit of money by ditching the phone and switching to SoGEA 40/10.
Been using 3 (though going to a reseller this week) for 12 months now. Apart from the horrendous 5g network upgrade week/month, it's been flawless. Mileage may change as others call blue murder on reception, throttling and, in my experience though to be fair DNS problems.

Gonna be paying £16 a month for around 10mb up and 24-39mb down. More than enough for me. Only problem is gaming sees a lot of jitter, as the signal/packets start and stop for the mobile network throughput (fine for streaming and webpages, but latency/ping dependant games don't like pings changing multiple times between packets :P ).

Hoping to go off grid living in 6 months time or so, so have made plans to setup my networking and pc for running off a battery. XD
I use to have a signature, then it all changed to chip and pin.

nowster

For casual use, Three reselling itself as "Smarty" often has some interesting deals, eg. 50GB for £12/month. Their standard unlimited scheme is £20/month, but they often have deals on that. SIM only, one month rolling contract.

They've recently added VoLTE and WiFi calling (they're essentially the same technology). As usual with mobile networks, latency can be a problem, and everyone is behind CGNAT.

Technical Ben

The wifi calling seemed trash. :P So I made sure to turn off wifi when phoning.  :laugh:
I use to have a signature, then it all changed to chip and pin.

robinc

Tried 3 which does v good Wifi Calling but cr*p mobile in rural area.

Switched mobiles to BT.
VoLTE and Wifi Calling both work on non BT phone.
Mobile is good enough if needed.
Still keep a £5.00 / month account with Tesco Mobile for where EE/BT is not available. ;D
If we tell people their brain is an app - they might actually start to use it.

nowster

Tesco Mobile is a MVNO using O2's network.

3's problem is that they never had a 2G network on either band. Low band 4G ought to be good for rural use (but it does require working VoLTE).