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Best Posts in Thread: PLDT Fibr coming to you.... Soon to open?

  1. NYC

    NYC DI Senior Member Showcase Reviewer Blood Donor Veteran Air Force

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    Ah, yes! There's the rub! Once it's available to the masses and the masses subscribe en masse, and performance will suffer until the digital infrastructure comes up to worldwide standards. It is possible to have screaming internet speeds with fiber even with a large subscriber base. Until I moved to Dumaguete, I never bothered checking my download speeds. Now, I feel ecstatic to get 2.0 Mbps on my Smartbro Pocket Wifi (the ONLY thing that works at my apartment in Liptong, Valencia.) For grins I check everywhere now.

    Most restaurants in Duma and Valencia with a cable modem clock in at a nice +/- 5.0 Mps.

    The food court on the top floor of Lee Plaza stunned me with their time-limited, but free, Wifi. I nearly fell off my chair when it clocked in at 49.3 Mbps. It expired in 30 minutes, and I tried desperately to purchase a 3-day pass to continue it, but the Philippine digital infrastructure has been particularly cruel in not allowing me to purchase through my cell phone no matter how many times I try.

    Back in the US now for a little while. NYC to be exact with it's incredibly dense population (driving me crazy already) and enough wealth so that virtually everyone has a cable/fiber connection. Even with the huge subscriber base in the "neighborhood", the cable modem-to-wifi connection in the apartment is 230 Mbps! (The same cable also carries the land line phone and digital HD cable TV.) I will miss that wifi speed when I get back to Negros Oriental, but I will enjoy the pace of life and even the roosters outside my windows waking me up at 4 am.
     
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  2. Rye83

    Rye83 with pastrami Admin Secured Account Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Army

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    Unfortunately for the Philippines the worldwide standards don't stand still. They will never catch up. Every bribe taken and hiccup with tech roll-outs only puts them further and further behind. Corruption and p*ss-poor education ingrained in their culture ensures that they will never catch up until a world war has wiped out every country more advanced than them. They will always be 20+ years behind the rest of the developed world.
     
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  3. Dutchjob

    Dutchjob DI Member

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    Since my first port was june 1 2016 and that was the first sign i saw of PLDT boys putting Fibr here in the poles and a lot around in the ground one can assume that after the first signs of Fibr in your street it could take a year before you are connected....

    But this is just one experience based on my own. Could be that the waiting was for some main connection being made somewhere else. I see all over Valencia the same cables going in the poles, so i would expect the first barangay's the be connected after the easier installations in Dumaguete is done.

    But best is to ask the PLDT people hanging in the poles in your street... if any.

    The cables in the ground is only the first phase, later the cables goes in the poles and when the black pldt boxes in the poles are connected you can asume there is a fibr waiting for you...
     
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  4. Dutchjob

    Dutchjob DI Member

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    Just letting you all know, PLDT is comming to install my Fibr this... or next week.

    So i guess my question about when will they serve the home connections wasn't so strange at all.

    Now let's hope it will work... a little ... sometime...
     
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  5. Rye83

    Rye83 with pastrami Admin Secured Account Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Army

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    :meh: Really? Do you know how long it has taken for them to just get up to a steady 2Mbs? (Many people in the area still don't have that.)
     
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  6. msls6

    msls6 DI Member Blood Donor Veteran Navy

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    I have Globe Landline with DSL Broadband P1599 postpaid plan that allows 150GB of data at up to 15MB speed. When the 150GB is used up, the speed slows to about 3MB until the first day of the next month.
    Those subscribers with Globe for their home internet may not be aware that they can get a data boost (Globe calls it a Volume Boost) that is good for 30 days. The Boosts are in various increments from P99 for an additional 50GB up to P999 for an additional 1000GB. The data boosts are also available for LTE. More information is available at the link below.
    Volume Boost Form | Broadband | Globe
     
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  7. Dave_Hounddriver

    Dave_Hounddriver DI Forum Luminary Highly Rated Poster

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    Congrats Dutchjob.

    You have renewed my faith in PLDT. Maybe it is more fun in Philippines. Thanks for keeping us all updated and it would sure be nice to hear from you again when its all working and you know what the upload and download speeds are.
    :thumbsup:
     
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  8. Jens K

    Jens K DI Senior Member

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    Got mine installed yesterday in Amigo Subdivision, Piapi. It's awesome. I'm paying 1899 / month for 20Mbps with unlimited data, at the moment I got close to 50Mbps up / down.

    Even if at one point they actually throttle it to what I pay for having equal up/down bandwidth is way better than than the mediocre 16 down/3 up I had with sky cable. Certainly won't miss their crappy TV program as well.
     
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  9. osodelnorte

    osodelnorte DI Forum Adept Restricted Account Showcase Reviewer

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    there is fiber to basay... but not that easy to get a hookup.. as usual with everything else in ph..
     
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  10. Brian Oinks

    Brian Oinks That's Mr. Pig to you Boy! :) Highly Rated Poster

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    You left Australia off that list mate, the Aussie Government is forcing people to sign up to its NBN Fiber-Optic Network which makes speeds here look not so bad after all! I actually LIKE my connection here (apart from Black-outs) :smile: Things could get a lot worse! The Aussie Government could take over the Internet industry in the Philippines! :biggrin: lol

    And Newsworthy statements such as this do nothing to help with the Australia's NBN Fiber-Optic roll out being joke of the world!

    South Australian internet user Christopher Riddell has been monitoring his NBN speeds after he was signed up for Telstra’s peak speed package, which is advertised at delivering speeds at 100 megabits-per-second.

    In analysis reviewed by The Australian, Mr Riddell has tested his internet speed at peak times — usually after 5pm on weekdays — and found his 100Mbps drops to as low as 2Mbps.

    ..............
    Users of the $40 billion-plus National Broadband Network are receiving peak-time connection speeds as low as 1/500th of the service they are paying for, sparking complaints the nation’s biggest infrastructure project is failing to deliver the promised digital transformation.

    Government entity NBN Co, which provides wholesale internet services, and retailers such as Telstra and Optus, who sell those services to the public, each blame the other for the problems.
    ..................
    An investigation by The Australian has found users across the nation are fighting slow speeds.

    Perth-based software designer James Ioppolo finds the arguing between the NBN and the retailers is of little help.

    He moved to the inner-Perth suburb of Victoria Park because it offered fibre-to-the-home connections and bought Telstra’s top NBN package — $95 a month — which spruiks download speeds of 100 megabits per second and upload speeds of 40Mbs.

    However, speed tests obtained by The Australian show his download speeds during peak periods, such as weekday evenings, are as low as 0.2Mbs while his upload speeds are about 20Mbs.

    “Due to (bandwidth) congestion, I assume, the download speed goes down to 0.2Mbs during peak periods, which is 1/500th of the speed that I pay for,” Mr Ioppolio said.

    “As a software developer, the faster I can access the internet the faster I can do my work. It’s just madness.”

    ........................
    Nocookies

    Nocookies
     
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