![]() Thanks for helping me confirm that we had fiber already wired in this condo – I had no idea there was fiber here until I started hunting for the coax point of entry and found a mysterious wall plate that turned out to be fiber. ![]() (By the way, I used this Ethernet adapter for our new Amazon Fire Stick 4K and it works great.) I'd rather have AT&T stop at the ONT, and configure it so that the customer's router can connect straight to the ONT. The only devices using WiFi are our phones. I can probably use the TP-Link as an AP, or bridge to it, but I'm not super motivated to do that just yet since I've got both TVs, the streaming sticks, and my desktop all on wired Ethernet/MoCA. I don't want it, and it forced me to shelve the TP-Link router I bought recently. I'm a little bummed that AT&T forces their wireless router/gateway on you. Note that I was only getting 20-ish Mbps with Powerline in this condo (so I canned the Powerline adapters and switched to wireless for a while, which was faster.) I did get around 100 Mbps with Powerline in a previous apartment – Powerline is extremely variable depending on the home's wiring, much more so than MoCA as far as I know. I just plugged them into the right cables and boom, a near-gigabit wired network. The MoCA adapters work like a charm with zero config necessary (or possible?). I've never had anywhere near that speed at home. The desktop is getting 866 Mbps down and 684 up ( full results). The other adapter is plugged into a switch in my office/spare bedroom, and my desktop PC is also plugged into that switch. One MoCA adapter is plugged into this gateway/router. The AT&T BGW210 wireless gateway is situated at the entertainment center, so the TV and streaming devices are plugged into it directly with patch cables – I don't like depending on wireless for streaming. (My new ISP is actually Sonic, which resells AT&T Fiber.) I bought two goCoax MoCA 2.5 adapters and set them up as soon as the AT&T guy left. Hi all – AT&T Fiber was installed yesterday, the 1 Gbps plan. u/RoweDent created this awesome resource on network theory u/tht1kidd_ has created a suggestion post regarding information everyone needs to provide when asking a question about their network There have been some excellent guides written in this sub, and we're always looking for more! ![]() If you wish for your flair to be changed, please message the mods and we'll be happy to change it for you. Proof of at least 6 month's history of posting in this subredditĪs a result of this, users are now no longer able to edit their own flair. Your highest level of industry certification, or highest IT related job title held in the last 5 years to a comment you made in the last 6 months, helping someone in the community To obtain trusted flair for your account please message the mods of /r/HomeNetworking with the following info Trusted user flair has been added as a means of verification that a user has a substantial knowledge of networking. Please flair your posts as Solved, Unsolved, or simply Advice. If you can't find what you're looking for with the search function please feel free to post a new question after reading the posting guidelines Please use the search function to look for keywords related to what you want to ask before posting since most common issues have been answered.
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