PS -  The landlady downstairs has Charter's lowest (slowest) tier of internet service, with a wireless modem/router (some kind of little white Netgear box) that they supply. It's usually okay on a wired connection, but I've tested the wireless on it, & while it serves webpages okay (usually), it's really, really slow downloading anything. Even sitting 4 feet away from the box, with nothing but air in between. Maybe she got a bad unit, but I'd recommend avoiding that setup.

The other thing to watch out for if you rent a modem from the company (any company) is to make sure they give you a brand-new unit, and not some half-dead unit they just swapped out of someone else's house.
EJ

On 23 November 2011 19:15, E Johnson <iris.gates@gmail.com> wrote:
I've had very good success with Charter over 9 or 10 years or service by them. When I lived at Newton Square it took some time (many moons) to convincve their techs that the draggy internet was because of a suspersaturated node, but they regularly gave me rebates for poor service & finally did get it fixed & working well. They finally split the node to relieve the traffic congestion in that neighborhood.

I think a lot has changed with this Co. since they got the DOCSYS3 up & running here. It's been a couple of years here (in Worcester). I think that has made a big difference. Have the 25-down / 3-up here now. Service at this place (you guys were here for the BBQ) has generally been very smooth since June 2010 when we moved in. We had to get techs out here a couple of time just after they replaced the drops this past summer --they needed to tune (something), then we had torrential rain that seemed to be getting iinto something, somewhere nearby. They did note lots of packet loss "at the drop" which meant it was not in my house, my lines or my equipment, so the tech calls were all zero-cost.

You might like to have your own modem & router, which I have, or maybe not. I can discuss what equipment I am running here if necessary, with which I am very satisfied. I buy my own router & modem so that I can run my own software on it & see my own diagnostics pages.

We do not experience a slowdown in the evenings or on rainy-day weekends here. Speed is very good 99.9% of the time.

The only Cons: A couple of times I had to call Cust. Service to explain that the service calls they charged me for were not "my fault". But  they immediately dropped the charges that had billed me for. So this is not that much of a Con except it did cost me some phone-call time.  Just keep an eye on your bill & don't auto-pay.

Some percentage of their phone support people (including Tech) is outsourced to overseas locations. Some of the accents are a bit difficult to understand. These techs have a hard time disuccing anything that is not in their canned script, so if the call is something they can't handle, I just ask for a "Level 2 Tech" or a "soup Tech" (supervisor) & usually I end up being transferred to someone in the US.
Again, this is not much of a Con.

I'm generally very pleased with the service.

You'd be welcome to drop by with a laptop, or & check out what the service is like here, or just test the service using my spare desktop (Debian Squeeze which might become Mint at any moment). Or just PM me if you would like a demo.

HTH,
Liz J



On 23 November 2011 18:13, Chuck Noyes <vze284qe@verizon.net> wrote:

Hi All,

I'm getting fed up with Verizon's inability to fix their DSL service - it's been incredibly slow for the last couple of months. Customer support
has been no help. So, I'm curious what ISP people like (and don't like). I'd prefer a local one, but at this point, I'm not
fussy. I'm looking for something reliable. We have Charter as the cable TV provider. I don't know if I want to go that route.

I don't want to start a "religious war" - I'm just looking for information so I can make an informed decision.

Thanks,
-Chuck



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