Curious how the dual providers would be negotiated. I'm assuming Virgin is one ISP and Sky is a second ISP available in your area. Is a Cisco Box an ethernet switch or is it a more sophisticated box that would combine the bandwidth of both providers to increase your throughput? I'm no IT specialist can two separate providers be multiplexed/combined to work in tandem or is it a manner of the cisco box allotting tasks to the different providers so different tasks that need a bunch of bandwidth would get routed through different ISPs?
At one facility I know they combined to services but I never understood how that was configured to divide the bandwidth load.
---In avid-l2@yahoogroups.com, <mikeparsons.tv@...> wrote :
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 26, 2016, at 12:49 AM, tcurren@... [Avid-L2] <Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Best I get at home is maybe 22 with Uverse.
---In Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com, <davaldod@...> wrote :Oh, for the love of Jeebus. I already pay for AT&T Max Turbo Mega Plus or whatever is, with a promised bandwidth of, I don't know, something big, but I never get that kind of performance out of it. And I live 14 feet from Warner Bros. Consequently, my faith in the ability of local cable providers to deliver the consistent bandwidth necessary for the below described service hovers squarely over zero.
On Apr 25, 2016, at 10:26 AM, tcurren@... [Avid-L2] <Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com> wrote:"To watch Netflix's HDR content, the consumer must have a 2016 Dolby Vision or HDR-enabled TV set (available from LG and Vizio), with a recommended broadband connection of 25 megabits per second or faster. "
Posted by: bigfish@pacbell.net
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