Calix has the least failure rate of anything else I've used to date and we have 
a lot in the field.
Between us and our parent company we have high thousands of units in the field.

I don't recognize this particular problem with any of our Gigaspires except 
maybe the u10 which we do not use anymore.


________________________________
From: AF <[email protected]> on behalf of Jan-GAMs 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, December 21, 2025 12:05 AM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Calix question


I found the best thing a gigaspire can do is generate needless truck-rolls.  I 
told the boss a dozen times to dump the brand because of the expense but the IT 
department kept putting them back in stock.  They put them in an install 
package and six months later they'd go offline and I'd take them out and 
replace them with an air-cube.  Most of the truck-rolls were an hour away or 
more so it got very costly to keep using using them.  An air-cube is just as 
easy to manage remotely.

On 12/18/25 16:00, [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> wrote:

Are you talking ONTs?  I don’t think I have ever had that happen.



From: AF <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> On Behalf Of 
Jan-GAMs
Sent: Thursday, December 18, 2025 2:20 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Calix question



The main problem with Calix is they turn-off remotely in an arbitrary fashion, 
and cause a lot of needless truckrolls.  Other than that, the wifi coverage 
inside the home is a bit stronger than most routers so I'd give them a 4 star 
rating.  The extenders have the same issues.  When they're working, they're 
pretty good, when they get turned-off, they're worse than dog-doo.  They 
consume a lot of time to install and it's maddening as hell to put up with 
they're arbitrary crap.  You can depend on them shutting off six months after 
install.  The "air-cube" is an easier to install router and more reliable.

On 12/13/25 16:27, Mark - Myakka Technologies via AF wrote:

Ken,



We use them.  First of all their HW just works and works well.  They may seem 
to be expensive on the MRC, but they bring a bunch of other services to the 
table.  They will help with marketing, network engineering, etc.  The support 
is VERY responsive and the amount of data collected in the service cloud is 
unbelievable.



This is all they do, managed routers and fiber distribution.  They have to be 
top notch to survive.



They fit into our business model, but each business if different.



I would say give them a chance to give you a proposal.  See what they bring to 
the table.  Maybe it is a fit, maybe not.





--

Best regards,

 Mark                            mailto:[email protected]



Myakka Communications

www.Myakka.com<https://www.Myakka.com>



------



Saturday, December 13, 2025, 1:51:56 PM, you wrote:



I assume some of the folks on this list who are doing fiber use Calix ONTs and 
routers?



If I go to the Calix website, maybe as a provider thinking of using them as a 
vendor, I am totally confused.  It is not clear what products they sell or how 
I would use them.  It all seems to be glossy marketing stuff about their 
agentic AI cloud and market insights.  I don’t see a single picture of a piece 
of hardware.



Is this how a lot of ISPs are making money despite charging low prices?  Do 
they have an “agentic workforce” monitoring how their customers use the 
Internet, cross referencing it to demographics, and mining that data for ads, 
upselling, etc.?  It seems they have special cloud features for MDU managers as 
well.



It seems a lot of cable companies use Amazon’s eero, I wonder if service 
provider eero is like Calix, or if it’s just the retail eero with a few remote 
management features added.



-- 
AF mailing list
[email protected]
http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com

Reply via email to