150 Mb FTTH for $90 in Newfoundland
Technology
This is the official technology community of Lemmy.ml for all news related to creation and use of technology, and to facilitate civil, meaningful discussion around it.
Ask in DM before posting product reviews or ads. All such posts otherwise are subject to removal.
Rules:
1: All Lemmy rules apply
2: Do not post low effort posts
3: NEVER post naziped*gore stuff
4: Always post article URLs or their archived version URLs as sources, NOT screenshots. Help the blind users.
5: personal rants of Big Tech CEOs like Elon Musk are unwelcome (does not include posts about their companies affecting wide range of people)
6: no advertisement posts unless verified as legitimate and non-exploitative/non-consumerist
7: crypto related posts, unless essential, are disallowed
£30 a month for gigabit unlimited usage. UK. Connection is rock solid.
93/month. 400 down/12 up. 1.2 TB data cap.
East TN. $95/mo Xfinity I get about 300 mbps down 25 up usually according to speedtest.net
$55USD (after taxes/fees) for 50/10 (very consistent). I could get gigabit for $125, but we don't need it and I'd need to upgrade my network to support it. My city is rolling out fiber over the next couple of years, so I'll probably wait until I know more before I upgrade my network.
1000 down, 1000 up for $80 (was $70 until last year) with AT&T.
$80 1Gbps symmetrical fiber. Speed tests are usually 800+ down/1Gb up, but usually can get 1Gb down on steam games. Portland, Or
In Ontario, Canada, 500/500 fibre from Bell. I pay $60/month, though this is a promotional rate for 2 years. I think I will be paying double after the 2 years.
1000/1000 Mbps fiber for $43 in Denmark, no data cap.
500M/250M $80/month
Seriously overpriced here. I used to pay $25 for fiber 1G/1G
Australia, 1000 down but only 50 up, AUD$140 per month, there are slightly cheaper plans available but the guys i'm with are super good to deal with.
Considering switching to 250/100 for the better upload but its $200 per month which is just silly.
16€ for 1000Mb down 60 up by cable in France. It's a good price here
500/500 fiber for $54.99 in a small town on the edge of the Dallas, TX metroplex.
25€/month for up to 1000mbps upload & 1000mbps download fiber glass in small town near Amsterdam, Netherlands.
T-mobile home internet in northern Virginia, just across the river from Washington DC.
50 USD a month for about 400Mbps down/20Mbps up. For me it was a much better deal FIOS or Comcast and the service is generally pretty good, but in my location it meant dealing with with latency that spikes up to 80+ ms every now and again.
Rural Oregon. 1gbps up and down. $600/month. I never go below ~930mbps each way.
I only need a mobile data, no cap, 5-10 Mbps for 4$/mo in East Russia.
1000/1000 fiber line but we sub to the 500/500 rate since that’s more than enough for the 5 of us in Colorado. We pay $60 month to month. No cap. We can move between two services, change the speed any time, and even turn it off whenever. Real world tops out at 500/500 on wired. Wireless on 6 not E is 420/250.
East TN. $95/mo Xfinity I get about 300 mbps down 25 up usually according to speedtest.net
100Mbps download of fiber optic network for 11.50 €/mo. I'm from Lithuania, which has always had a good internet coverage. The supplier is Cgates. They offer cheaper alternatives if you agree for a 1-year or 2-year plan.
10mbps 4G router for 20€/month in Finland
I have fibre too but it's more expensive so I don't see a reason to pay more when my current one works just fine too.
Verizon 5G, $35/month for the 300 mbps / 20 up plan (my needs are not huge, this does the TV streaming and the zoom meetings just fine).
Somerville MA. Was previously paying 3x that for crappy Astound service at half the speed.
50/50 from ziply fiber in Oregon. I think it is around 60-90$ a month but I don’t pay the bill. Edit: checked with my dad and we pay 60$ a month for that
100 mbps for 999 inr a month ~10 usd in india but I somehow get around 220 mpbs on the same plan :P
altough there is also a plan for 1000 mpbs for 4000 inr ~50 usd
$90 for 100/20 in Sydney, Australia. I have FttP, but can't come up with a legitimate need for >100mbs at the moment
$90 a month for gigabit from cox in Southern California. Shits great and I only have the occasional few minutes of downtime in the middle of the night when nobody should be on the internet anyways, biggest downside is I only get 100 upload. They’ve treated me right so far and I plan to continue their service.
Sorry about the shilling they’re just good.
UK, 900 Mbps for £35
10000 ARS (~20 USD) for 200/20Mbps FTTH in Argentina. Public dinamic IPv4 only and no plans for IPv6 yet. Before that, I had a cooper pair line at 10/1Mbps for the same price. EDIT: No data caps.
$100/month, 1200/40mbps. Wish I had fiber for better upload speed, but happy with the download. Allegedly, Xfinity is increasing upload speed sometime this year, but there was an announcement for that same thing last year
$74usd/month for 100mbps up and down with a static ip
$65CAD for 300Mbit fiber. Just clocked it with a speed test at 350/480, which is weird. I don't really trust any speed tests though. Worst part is that we reliably lose connection every time it rains heavily. Brought it up with the ISP and they have just blown me off so far.
500 Rupees (about 6$) for 40mbps fibre connection.
Southeastern PA. I have 1000 down/1000 up fiber to the home for $90 a month. Seeing people get these speeds for under $20 makes me both envious, hopeful that things can be improved, and depressed at the state of the regional monopolies here in the US.
Here's hoping we can make municipal fiber viable going forward.
Gigabit for cheap. Service provider employee plan has its perks.
800 down 35 up, $70 1.2 tb/month cap in Portland. I tried to switch over to century link but the installer said my apartment is too old. They've got 1gbps up and down for $70.