• @CrayonRosary
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    1411 months ago

    If you can afford the upfront cost, get service from The Calyx Institute instead. Uses T-Mobile, you own the device, cheaper in the long run, free VPN, and you’re supporting a privacy nonprofit.

    • @[email protected]
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      811 months ago

      The lack of Ethernet on these make me think they’re meant for mobile, as opposed to home Internet. How has your experience been using it?

      • @CrayonRosary
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        111 months ago

        It’s WiFi, so it works with anything. If you had a huge home, it wouldn’t be enough, but for a small home, it’s fine. In the city, I got 150 Mbps, but out in the country I only get about 40.

        It’s unlimited, and I’m not entirely sure what priority it’s given. I just think its a better alternative supporting a better company than T-Mobile itself.

        T-Mobile home internet forbids traveling with their device, but this travels easily. Plus you own it. The only thing you’re not allowed to do is take the SIM card out and put it in another device. I’m not exactly sure why, but you can read about it on the Calyx site.

        Having Calyx service let’s you downgrade your phone plan to something very cheap if you plan to carry the device around or if you don’t use much data when out and about.

  • ares35
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    611 months ago

    i thought the home gateways were already on the bottom tier of priority to begin with.

  • @[email protected]
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    311 months ago

    This really sucks. We used it for a little bit as a wonderful solution during a brief stay in a tiny ADU. It was a terrific experience and we’ve recommended it to anyone who might benefit from it.

      • @owenfromcanada
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        211 months ago

        Same, it’s been as good or better than the $80/month service by cable. And considering it’s over the air, 1.2 TB still seems like a lot.