I didn't get the TV right away and only attached the TV Cable then so it wasn't needed to run the actiontec box but I think it sends out on demand requests and the like from the cable box to the internet. My TV's set top box shows up on the router's list of connected devices.
On Sun, May 24, 2009 at 3:36 PM, David K Watson <[email protected]>wrote: > Sorry to take so long to comment on this, I have been > recovering from a bad cold. > > That is not the way FIOS is setup at my house. The fiber optic > cable runs from the pole to the FIOS box outside the house and > from there it is only a coax cable inside the house which is split > to serve different devices. One coax line goes to the Actiontec > and others go to set top boxes. The Actiontec only provides > internet and wireless routing, and does not interact at all (as far > as I can tell) with the television service. For example, the > actiontec modem and our set top boxes had to be separately > authenticated in order to work, and the set top boxes were > authenticated and tested for operability before the Actiontec. > We have two different kinds of set top boxes, a big one for our > main TV that has the station schedule guide and video on demand > capabilities and two smaller ones that just serves us the non- > interactive channels. They all have coax input and operate > without problems if the Actiontec is unplugged. > > I am quite sure that this is Verizon's standard FIOS setup. > > However, what you describe might sometimes be true. I think I > saw an ethernet port on the outside box before they sealed it up. > Also, my mom gets TV and internet (not FIOS) from the phone > company in her town, and I think that has ethernet to the set top > boxes, with video and ethernet outputs for TV and internet respectively. > Except for her limited channel availability, that is a cool setup. > Whenever she gets a phone call, she gets an alert on the TV > screen with caller ID information. > > > From: John Duncan Yoyo <[email protected]> >> >> On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 1:16 PM, Rev. Stewart Marshall < >> [email protected]> wrote: >> >> OK first of all if it is COAX it is not DSL it is cable service. (I >>> looked >>> it up this is a FIOS modem router.) >>> >>> The airport should probably be disconnected and solely let the wireless >>> MacBook be looking only for the DSL wireless base station. >>> >>> Another scenario is to hook the Airport into the router (one of the L:AN >>> ports) and try connecting your mothers MacBook to the Airport and not the >>> Actiontec. >>> >>> >>> They use the Actiontec to feed the the TV boxes through the COAX on my >> FIOS >> setup. The network comes in on an ethernet cable from the outside FIOS >> box >> to the Actiontec router/modem. >> >> > > ************************************************************************* > ** List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy ** > ** policy, calmness, a member map, and more at http://www.cguys.org/ ** > ************************************************************************* > -- John Duncan Yoyo -------------------------------o) ************************************************************************* ** List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy ** ** policy, calmness, a member map, and more at http://www.cguys.org/ ** *************************************************************************
