It was abysmal and yet faster than most devices used over wifi. I also posted my device speed yesterday from my wifi enabled iPad mini. Only a direct connection from the device/computer/tablet is what should be accepted. (Saying my wifi part was not needed) in fact it was a clarification statement because many posters think the speed over wifi is what should be at the top mark. I answered your inquiry, and the original posters question. People ask for help with this or that and someone answers the question. The guarantees you are now stating have nothing to do with people asking for assistance, this is not a paid support forum.Īnd as stated earlier what a person asks help with is of no concern of me or others. And this for a number of reasons which I point out many times in my answers. What a person does with my posts or anyone else's post is squarely on the reader.Īnd again the "Gurantee" I speak of is not having sustainable speeds all the time. However as I pointed out a call to tech support could possibly assist. The speed the original poster stated was up to Fios standards. In fact I don't answer questions of which I know nothing about. The simple fact of the matter is the thread deals with Fios broadband. Now having said that I also pointed out quite correctly the speeds that are obtainable via my. And I read where the original poster stated what he was using. Unfortunately I took your post to me as uncivil. While it is not 100% guarentee, sometime there are answers within this forum that do help people who are having issues with their fios services, whether it is phone, internet, or tv. Secondly, you are sorely wrong about this forum. (Just an off, be civil and no hate comment please. The electric company gets paid to deliver power to your home. It's like paying your electric company for electricity to the home yet because your plugs don't work you cannot access that electric. Now testing a device on your home network for speed does not matter to Verizon. This is the the only thing that they accept. When you test on their official test server You pay Verizon Fios for UP TO 940/880 +/- which is not guaranteed sustainable speeds. However if you came here to get a different answer than what tech support would have told you then you are sorely mistaken. Just because a nic can be rated to speeds handled up to 1 gb. Your reference to what devices should be able to handle, or the nic speeds that can be achieved mean absolutely zero. The devices that connect in your home network to the Fios router is not going to get 100% speeds as from your router to Verizon's proprietary test site. Verizon Fios speeds to your home from their service is UP TO 940/880 or there about. You would have seen my reply as to using wifi as a comparison since most posters that say their speeds are not fast on ethernet, normally complain about wifi speeds. So if you have relevant information regarding this matter, please kindly share it with us.įirst off I don't do the engineering for Fios or for the computer manufacturers. Many of us including myself that are having issues with fios service, go to this forum for possible solution to remedy the problem. I don't know about OP or some of the others that might have this similar issue, I'm getting a little bit frustrated here ever since I had this service upgraded back in July. So computers with built PCie NIC should have no problem with near gigabit test result, even if the PCie interface is version 1.0 with x1 throughput (250MB/s = 2Gbps) Also the vast majority of the computers around 2009 or greater have NIC built through PCie interface instead of PCI bus (share bandwidth). I've looked up Fios gateway router's chipset for the NIC interface and obviously it can easily handle near gigabit speed as you've probably seen through OP's screenshot of the router's connection. "I have a Macbook Pro TB 2017, gigabit belkin USB-C to Ethernet conected" Did not state anything about using WiFi so that has nothing to do with this subject.
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