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On Aug 20, 2007, at 18:23, Tom Metro wrote: > John Chambers wrote: >> Tom Metro writes: >>> It's stuff like this that makes me reluctant to switch my cable TV >>> service to Verizon, even it it ends up being cheaper and better. >> To get service from Verizon comparable to what speakeasy gives for >> $60/month (fixed IP, permission to run servers), Verizon's >> lowest price was $200/month for "business" service. > > I've looked into the FIOS business data offerings on several > occasions and have always found the entry-level offering with > static IP to be priced at about $100. See my prior posts: > > http://www.nabble.com/Verizon-Fios-tf4188406.html#a11910436 > http://www.nabble.com/FIOS-tf4189891.html#a11914692 > > If this has changed, can you cite a page with prices? For the record, I pay $99.95/mo for 20Mbps down, 5Mbps up and 5 static IP addresses on FiOS. > Comcast, RCN, and FIOS all offer "business" connectivity with the > option of a static IP. They're all overpriced (compared to static > IP DSL), and as I've mentioned on the list before, despite offering > static IPs, some still prohibit running servers. This was true of > RCS when I checked with them several years ago. I don't know about > Comcast's business offering - they dragged their feet in rolling it > out for so long that I lost interest. And as I noted in the posting > I linked to above, FIOS blocks ports on their business service with > dynamic IP, but claims they don't if you opt for a static IP > (though they never produced a terms-of-service agreement stating > that). They don't block anything on my pipe. -- Jarod Wilson jarod-ajLrJawYSntWk0Htik3J/w at public.gmane.org
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