

Not for North America.


Not for North America.


Did you have to request specific equipment to get a static or semi-static IPv4 like you get with cable? Did it cost extra?


I don’t think it’s optional. I think that’s what separates home internet from business internet. Could someone that has this service confirm?


$70, not $50. And this breaks the deal: https://www.t-mobile.com/business/filtering
Not really usable at home.


Fucking hate all the coax providers. Absolute monopoly granted to them in insane. I’m stuck with an even worse one - Spectrum. No other options where I live. Tmo home internet is cheaper but it’s not reliable enough despite a $400 antenna pointed directly at their tower. And CGNAT breaks a ton of shit.


All this instead of just hiring a few senior devs to contribute to any of the number of existing open source projects that are already infinitely better than any new thing they will come up with.


I understand. I was replying to how gov agencies would find out. Any digital transmission is basically “static” to an analog receiver.


A high powered antenna that transmits a lot of “static” would be a dead giveaway.
Typical tea has around 50mg of caffeine. Typical espresso based drink has 2 or 3 espresso shots at around 65mg each. Plus milk, which a bunch of adults can’t digest to at least some degree.
Haha, well I did choose Europe (Ukraine, technically UkSSR) as spawn, but then had to fuck off due to corruption and bleak future opportunities. Talk about fucking irony.