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Can anyone recommend an unlimited fibre provider.
I work from home using a voip phone, so bandwidth is vital.
Any recommendations. I currently use BE for DSL and it works well but fibre is meant to be live at the end of this month
Thanks
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Voip hardly uses any bandwidth, if one Voip phone line 24/7/31 you would use just 16GB over the course of a month if talking constantly on the phone.
As for unlimited..
Sky - no traffic management
TalkTalk - traffic management on P2P
BT - traffic management on P2P
All three are unlimited.
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband staff member. It may not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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BT Infinity option 2 is unlimited, but note P2P is throttled.
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thanks.
The voip traffic uncompressed, not to sure if that will matter.
I also have VPN, SSH connections etc.
I don't like the idea of talktalk, so it's BT or SKY.
Any advantages one over the other ?
I'm not a SKY customer, my land line is with BT, my DSL with BE.
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In reply to a post by Anonymous: Any advantages one over the other ?
I'm not a SKY customer, my land line is with BT, my DSL with BE.
Not really - you can have the Sky Fibre without the TV, but you have to have Sky phone (as with BT Infinity you have to have BT phone). They're both dynamic IP services, no static option. BT's business services have static IP options but MUCH more expensive.
James - be* pro - 16.8 / 1.2 Mbps until 16th Sept - then BT Infinity from 19th Sept - 44.6 / 6.5 Mbps estimated
BQM 13 years of broadband - ntl:(512k/1M)/BTbusiness(2M)/Metronet(2M)/Bulldog(8M/16M)/BE(16M)
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So what bit rate is your voip using?
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband staff member. It may not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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VoIP is very unlikely to be uncompressed. It is lowish latency and jitter that matter most, you are unlikely to use much bandwidth even at high quality.
My infinity connection has marginally higher ping at 21mbps than i had on be adsl at 19mbps interlraved, 11 fast path. There have been times where it was quite a bit worse on infinity.
--
Moved (with trepidation) to BT Infinity 2 for upload speed. Happy BE user for several years.
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Even uncompressed VoIP is only 64kbps, being on the phone 24x7 still uses less than 20GB/month.
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In reply to a post by Anonymous: I work from home using a voip phone, so bandwidth is vital.
VoIP doesn't need much bandwidth and working from home doesn't generally either. It depends on the work of course but I remote into my office computers and use Remote Desktop all day. It usually comes in at half a gig or so.
Of course if you're work involves transferring large files back and forth you will need more but that's a bit unusual I'd have thought.
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They're both dynamic IP services, no static option. BT's business services have static IP options but MUCH more expensive. Which is annoying. I'd like to switch to Sky :-/
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They're both dynamic IP services, no static option. BT's business services have static IP options but MUCH more expensive. Which is annoying. I'd like to switch to Sky :-/
Sky fibre has "sticky" IP addresses and rarely change.
My IP address only changed after an extend outage cause by a powercut last month, before then I had the same IP address since I upgraded to fibre in May.
Using a service such as DynDNS pretty much gets round any IP address changes.
Edited by simon194 (Thu 13-Sep-12 08:43:44)
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Using a service such as DynDNS pretty much gets round any IP address changes. I'm not keen on it for my email server although if it changes that rarely it might be okay. Still
- it would probably mean switching to using my ISP's SMTP server for outgoing email and that seems a step backward.
Edited by Andrue (Thu 13-Sep-12 10:22:43)
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You should use a smarthost when you have a dynamic IP address. You could use gmail as a smarthost (like Sky do  )
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You should use a smarthost when you have a dynamic IP address. You could use gmail as a smarthost (like Sky do ) There was a time when I had all mail go to my domain provider's servers then my server picked it up using POP3. There was a reason why I ditched that but I can't remember what it was.
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Up to ten email addresses per domain on Gmail is free. POP3 & IMAP access as well as webmail.
Edit: Also, pretty good spam filtering,
Edited by deleted (Thu 13-Sep-12 13:13:09)
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I meant for sending
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Up to ten email addresses per domain on Gmail is free. POP3 & IMAP access as well as webmail.
Edit: Also, pretty good spam filtering, I need wildcard addresses and don't need spam filtering
My anti spam system involves DEAs based around a wildcard template. Back when I used my domain provider's service I had '*' -> 'me' then my server filtered that as it downloaded it splitting it into:
* Whitelist -> My personal account.
* Blacklist -> bin it.
* Doesn't match the template -> bin it
And I think I've remembered why I ditched it. Using POP3 you can only filter on the 'TO:' header field and spammers started to fake that so it's unreliable. I switched back to my own server so that I could filter on the RCPT TO command which can't be faked.
Running an externally hosted mail server would be fine but the pricing just isn't competitive. My current setup runs on a Fit-PC2 which consumes around 5w an hour which is a piddling running cost.
Edited by Andrue (Thu 13-Sep-12 14:15:23)
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Google Apps supports wildcard.
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