Guess what I have?!?
Alas, I have work to do. The last few routers provided acceptable throughput throughout the house. I also have ethernet runs in much of the house. But it's not complete coverage.
The router they supplied is great, if you're not too far away. At 10 meters, it's a weak signal.
I used to have a nice router and had wireless access points throughout the house. I took that infrastructure out because I didn't need it. I have no idea where I put the gear. I think it might be out above the garage, but I'm not sure. Try as I might, I've yet to remember where I put the stuff.
A part of me thinks that I gave the stuff away. I'm not a huge fan of clutter and keeping stuff that isn't important in some way. This means I give stuff away. It means I donate a ton of stuff. Of course, I also send stuff off to be recycled.
So... Well...
I HAVE FIBER INTERNET!!!
This means I have work to do. The provided router only has four ports. It has a horribly weak wireless signal. The router's admin password is not something they shared with me. Yes, I explicitly asked for it, and they more or less told me to pound sand.
At a minimum, I need to get a replacement router. I'll be okay with just the four ports. One line goes down into the rack in the basement. where my switch is. Though, it's nice to be able to run a line when needed, that probably won't be a problem.
The lousy wireless is going to be a problem. I'm thinking about a better router and putting up extenders/access points.
I'm going to download the entire internet.
Also, it looks like I can go from my 100 mb/sec to 250 mb/sec for like five bucks. They changed their pricing structure. No, I do not know why they did that. It made that tier quite reasonable. So, we'll upgrade that. There's also 2 GB service for a business. I would be a business, technically. I even have my own business ID.
They need to come back out. They need to run fiber to the shop. Other than that, the installation was quick and painless. I already had everything marked out for them. Everything inside was marked out. (I have an 'envelope house'. So, they had to route through two walls.)
Now, let's see how well they keep the service up and running through a Maine winter.