F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks BYOD 1 GbE cable from Xfinity or secured 1 GbF fiber from AT&T

BYOD 1 GbE cable from Xfinity or secured 1 GbF fiber from AT&T

BYOD 1 GbE cable from Xfinity or secured 1 GbF fiber from AT&T

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Derp7575
Member
184
05-14-2023, 09:08 PM
#1
I've been using AT&T Fiber for nearly a year, dealing with their Pace router/modem setup. It doesn’t support bridge mode or DMZ+ settings. There’s a recent bug limiting speeds to 50Mbps, which has been ongoing since late last year—some of us still question if it’s a real issue. I’m relying on the Pace device as the network hub, which isn’t ideal. The pros are no data limit and a solid 1Gbps upload. Recently, I discovered an option to switch to Xfinity’s 1Gb service at the same price. The advantage is being able to install my own equipment, but there’s a monthly 1TB cap and only 60Mbps upload. On the flip side, AT&T gives me BYOD flexibility. My choice would depend on what you’d recommend if you shared this situation.
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Derp7575
05-14-2023, 09:08 PM #1

I've been using AT&T Fiber for nearly a year, dealing with their Pace router/modem setup. It doesn’t support bridge mode or DMZ+ settings. There’s a recent bug limiting speeds to 50Mbps, which has been ongoing since late last year—some of us still question if it’s a real issue. I’m relying on the Pace device as the network hub, which isn’t ideal. The pros are no data limit and a solid 1Gbps upload. Recently, I discovered an option to switch to Xfinity’s 1Gb service at the same price. The advantage is being able to install my own equipment, but there’s a monthly 1TB cap and only 60Mbps upload. On the flip side, AT&T gives me BYOD flexibility. My choice would depend on what you’d recommend if you shared this situation.

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StyleTrick
Senior Member
744
05-16-2023, 07:49 AM
#2
There is a way to use your own router on att fiber. Look here, basically there using 802.11x, and you have a router in the middle and use yours to send backets once the authentication is done http://blog.0xpebbles.org/Bypassing-At-t...ble-limits
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StyleTrick
05-16-2023, 07:49 AM #2

There is a way to use your own router on att fiber. Look here, basically there using 802.11x, and you have a router in the middle and use yours to send backets once the authentication is done http://blog.0xpebbles.org/Bypassing-At-t...ble-limits

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Matke04
Posting Freak
825
05-17-2023, 10:47 PM
#3
For gaming, I’d pick fiber. Cable’s Gigabit is really poor—I’d skip it and save money. With AT&T, they provide a modem instead of an ONT, which means no built-in internet connection.
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Matke04
05-17-2023, 10:47 PM #3

For gaming, I’d pick fiber. Cable’s Gigabit is really poor—I’d skip it and save money. With AT&T, they provide a modem instead of an ONT, which means no built-in internet connection.

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earth_4
Junior Member
39
05-18-2023, 05:24 AM
#4
There’s a small white area for the fiber connection that leads into the Pace router. It looks like you can’t simply connect the modem directly since it requires certain certificates or setup steps.
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earth_4
05-18-2023, 05:24 AM #4

There’s a small white area for the fiber connection that leads into the Pace router. It looks like you can’t simply connect the modem directly since it requires certain certificates or setup steps.

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Markoswazzola
Junior Member
18
05-18-2023, 07:11 AM
#5
That sounds intriguing, I'll check it out.
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Markoswazzola
05-18-2023, 07:11 AM #5

That sounds intriguing, I'll check it out.

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floundershy
Member
191
05-18-2023, 01:35 PM
#6
It's unusual for fiber links to connect directly to a router.
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floundershy
05-18-2023, 01:35 PM #6

It's unusual for fiber links to connect directly to a router.

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Krzywy
Member
150
05-25-2023, 05:50 PM
#7
I read it through, but it seems a bit complicated. Honestly, I’m not familiar with network details, so much of it was unclear. I guess I’ll stick with AT&Ts equipment until they release something better. Luckily, I haven’t experienced any packet loss from the poor NAT tables.
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Krzywy
05-25-2023, 05:50 PM #7

I read it through, but it seems a bit complicated. Honestly, I’m not familiar with network details, so much of it was unclear. I guess I’ll stick with AT&Ts equipment until they release something better. Luckily, I haven’t experienced any packet loss from the poor NAT tables.

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lands3
Junior Member
37
05-26-2023, 05:24 PM
#8
I'll get this ready soon, have fiber installed, and plan to expand the network.
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lands3
05-26-2023, 05:24 PM #8

I'll get this ready soon, have fiber installed, and plan to expand the network.

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Darkbandit92
Posting Freak
839
05-27-2023, 10:47 AM
#9
I rechecked it this weekend and realized I could handle it as a project. The tutorial mentioned a 'small business' plan, which means multiple static IPs need setting up. I’m planning to learn more about this later.
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Darkbandit92
05-27-2023, 10:47 AM #9

I rechecked it this weekend and realized I could handle it as a project. The tutorial mentioned a 'small business' plan, which means multiple static IPs need setting up. I’m planning to learn more about this later.

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Winner
Member
242
06-03-2023, 12:47 PM
#10
You just need to switch to Passthrough Bridge mode, turn off the wireless on that router, and link your device behind it. Avoid thinking about other equipment afterward.
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Winner
06-03-2023, 12:47 PM #10

You just need to switch to Passthrough Bridge mode, turn off the wireless on that router, and link your device behind it. Avoid thinking about other equipment afterward.

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