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I have spent much time learning the art of getting the cheapest deal for my broadband. If you read my other articles, you know that the only monthly telco fee I pay is for broadband (I get free TV via antenna, and get virtually phone service via Ooma). As such, I only need the telco providers to give me a broadband only service, no TV and ,no landline phone. I'm probably the least favorite customer for them because I don't bundle any of their other services, so this has forced me to learn all the tricks to playing them against each other to get the lowest price for this single service.Where I live in the Northern California Bay Area, there are 3 main choices for broadband:
- Comcast: I actually have this at the moment because I was able to find a deal where I would have the 15 Mbps service for $30/month for a year. Normally, their special offers this package for $20/month for 6 months, then it jacks up to around $65, usually without any warning.
- AT&T DSL: I call this internet for grandparents. It is the slowest option as it maxes out at 6 Mbs downstream (realistically 4 Mbps because DSL has about a 20% overhead), and 600Kbps actual for upstream. But it's the cheapest and has no install fee because they use your existing phone landline wiring. I consider this is a non-option because I like to stream HD video, plus want to ensure that I have the margin to be doing other stuff while someone is streaming video such as taling on my Ooma VOIP phone or playing my XBox. Also keep in mind AT&T has a 150 GB monthly data cap on DSL users.
- AT&T U-Verse: I am fortunate to live in a neighborhood that gets U-Verse service up to 18 Mbps and 1 Mbps upstream. I've had this service before, and it's good and reliable. My buddy who is in the networking industry tells me that AT&T U-Verse is superior to Comcast in that it tends to have lower jitter, which is critical for real time video conferencing. Anyhow, one of the barriers to getting U-Verse is that they will charge you a $150 fee for doing the installation of a new internet only service. Ouch! Well, we'll find a way around that!