No Verizon FiOS Anytime Soon for Bay Area

I will be moving within the next year, and I’m unfortunately in a bind. Craving bandwidth and California’s Bay Area just don’t seem to be getting along.

Verizon’s FiOS has long been a holdout for many, with Verizon’s expansive deployment and perpetually-upping of bandwidth speeds (they hit 50 mbps tiers this week), it hasn’t been fun topping out at 8 mbps with Comcast in the entire Bay Area. While this may seem like a no-brainer for Verizon, unfortunately, it’s not as easy as it sounds.

Verizon has trouble expanding FiOS in areas where they do not provide local phone service. First, they don’t own local fiber loops to get the traffic to people’s homes. Second, they don’t own the phone system (AT&T does in the entire region). Third, they don’t have the people on-the-ground to bring up to FiOS.

Verizon even commented on their public policy blog to this effect (without detailing the reasons above), and they agreed, it isn’t happening any time soon.

Just to add insult to injury, about an hour north of the Bay Area, Surewest offers their version of FiOS, running up to 50 mbps for a little more than what Verizon charges… in pretty much every area.

This, of course, makes me between a rock and a hard place. A lot of projects I’ll be working on require networking in the Bay Area. With the added cost of living, it certainly would be nice to bring the new dedicated PhoneNews.com server in-house, but alas, looks like I’ll be settling for a load-balancing router, and combining AT&T DSL with Comcast cable… for a 12 mbps shotgun connection.

3 Responses

  1. Ted Shab
    Ted Shab May 23, 2008 at 1:46 pm |

    How did this work out for you:

    “settling for a load-balancing router, and combining AT&T DSL with Comcast cableā€¦ for a 12 mbps shotgun connection.”

    Was it reasonably easy to install/configure? What router did you use? Is that what you are hosting your blog on?

    Thanks for any info.

    –Ted

    Reply
  2. Christopher Price
    Christopher Price May 24, 2008 at 12:43 am |

    Haven’t set it up for myself yet. But, from experience, it does work… just keep in mind that you can’t combine speeds in the sense that you may be thinking.

    When you start a file download (for example) it can only use a single connection. However, the other connection will still be open for you to continue using the internet without a slow speed.

    Reply
  3. sven
    sven September 22, 2009 at 1:12 pm |

    Sounds intriguing. Comcast is offering up to 50MB now in some areas. But I’m really gunshy about their reliability. On the flipside, I’ve had 10 years of flawless service from Speakeasy DSL/VOIP. Any details on how to get this working?

    Reply

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