Variability will always happen with small businesses, but you're more likely to 
encounter someone that won't do nasty things to your bits through a local WISP 
as opposed to a national player. It's also more likely to be consistent versus 
the variability of a mobile service. 

WISPs have been going strong for years. 

Typically when a fixed wireless customer moves to mobile wireless, they move 
back within a couple months. 




Also, *most* people don't need more than 10 megs at home, so fixed providers 
that haven't upgraded to support faster speeds aren't really at a disadvantage 
when you look at how the connection is actually used. That becomes apparent 
once you switch. 




----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

Midwest-IX 
http://www.midwest-ix.com 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Bryan Fields" <br...@bryanfields.net> 
To: "NANOG List" <nanog@nanog.org> 
Sent: Wednesday, March 27, 2019 2:28:05 PM 
Subject: Re: residential/smb internet access in 2019 - help? 

On 3/27/19 7:50 AM, Mike Hammett wrote: 
> https://broadbandnow.com/Florida/Micanopy?zip=32667# 
> 
> You might want to try neighboring ZIP codes to see what other fixed 
> wireless providers might be convinced to expand. 
> 
> http://svic.net/wireless-broadband-north-florida/ 

You really want to weigh what wireless can offer as many of the local players 
doing wireless lack the depth of network knowledge and are completely ignorant 
of what it takes to run an RF network. I'd independently verify your circuits 
up-time if you decide to go with a wireless ISP. 

The other sad part is the PtMP wireless technology is likely slower than an 
LTE modem with external antenna. 

The WISP's had a great time circa 2005 or so, but now that the licensed 
players have surpassed what they can offer it's hard to justify the lower 
availability of the typical WISP vs. cost. 

-- 
Bryan Fields 

727-409-1194 - Voice 
http://bryanfields.net 

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