I would second Nathan's experience. Tried to use them for our corporate office as a life boat when our T1 provider was sold to an outfit that didn't answer the support lines. Clear's NAT is atrocious and can't be turned off, so you can't drop a real firewall behind it on a single static. -J -------- Jason J. W. Williams, COO/CTO DigiTar williamsjj@digitar.com V: 208.343.8520 F: 208.322.8522 M: 208.863.0727 www.digitar.com On Dec 3, 2010, at 4:47 PM, Nathan Eisenberg wrote:
This came up in another thread yesterday or today, and I just got the solicitation mailer for Clearwire's WiMAX service in Tampa Bay, which they call "4G", though the ITU disagrees.
The AUP is here: http://www.clear.com/legal/aup
I cannot strongly enough discourage you from using their service. My experience with them has been consistently awful - and given that they're headquartered in my area, that's unacceptable. I'm informed that my experience is not at all unique - either to the Seattle area or to their service at large. Their Wikipedia article tells you pretty much everything you need to know.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clearwire
Their definition of unlimited tends to be "barely acceptable throughput levels, until you start streaming youtube/netflix or doing a long-running download or using bittorrent to seed files to your work PC and laptop or using your VPN to retrieve a document, in which case, we won't turn you off, we'll just silently jail you into a 32-128kbps bandwidth profile. Also, have some poorly implemented NAT on our ludicrously underpowered CPEs!"
I also understand that they've been having financial difficulties, so they're unlikely to address the issues their customers are faced with.
If I were you, I would keep your backpack offline until another option is available. You're not going to be able to use VOIP on their service, anyways.
Nathan (Speaking as an individual - not as the company I work for.)
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