My understanding is that for residential customers it's carrier
grade NAT by default, a single public IPv4 address by request at
no extra cost. Additional IP addresses available for a monthly
charge. I don't know what that fee is. The most likely obstacle
would be coverage... Not much availability last I checked, unless
you're in Cambridge, or in view of the top of the Hancock
building in Boston.
I don't find a coverage map... you may need to submit the form
here: http://www.netblazr.com/residential/at-home/#get
A number of us (Kurt Keville, Brian Delacey, et al) have
known one of the founders, Brough Turner, for years. Good
folks to deal with.
-S.
On Tue, 31 Oct 2017, Federico Lucifredi wrote:
Does netblazr include multiple fixed IPs? And I will assume the residential
service is not a routed circuit :-).
Best-F
Sent from my iPhone.
On Oct 31, 2017, at 12:12 AM, Stephen Ronan wrote:
On Tue, 31 Oct 2017, Federico Lucifredi wrote:
Hello Hackers,
What is the current state of broadband in Boston & burbs? What is the
‘speakeasy.net’ of this decade, meaning the choice of the techie crowd?
Netblazr.com for those within their geographical footprint?
And then there's $10/month Comcast Internet Essentials for low-income families
with kids in K-12 school, or for low-income Boston seniors, or for residents
anywhere of HUD-assisted housing... http://internetessentials.com
-S
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