It won't overlap with the one you are using for yourself on the same device. DOCSIS has service flows with different priorities. I don't know if they are allocating specific channels for it or if it's just a different service flow, but either way it is a lower priority and should not cause contention with regular user traffic. Really it is just the power they seem to be complaining about. Phil -----Original Message----- From: "Harald Koch" <chk@pobox.com> Sent: 12/10/2014 10:21 PM To: "Mr Bugs" <bugs@debmi.com> Cc: "NANOG list" <nanog@nanog.org> Subject: Re: Comcast thinks it ok to install public wifi in your house On 10 December 2014 at 21:50, Mr Bugs <bugs@debmi.com> wrote:
however they use a separate DOCSIS and 802.11 channel so if would follow that it would be a separate IP tied to comcast corporate and not the subscriber as well as not taking up your bandwidth.
IIRC there are only three non-overlapping channels on 802.11g and six on 802.11n; I can see more networks than that from my basement. I haven't been keeping up with the technology, but in the ancient of days wasn't the uplink side of DOCSIS also a limited-bandwidth, shared resource? -- Harald