ISP launches first residential 50 Gbps service, costs $900 per month

midian182

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WTF?! Do you think gigabit internet just isn't fast enough? How about 10 Gbps speeds, or even Google Fiber's 20 Gig? For those who want bragging rights for what is presumably the fastest residential internet in the US, one ISP is offering a 50 Gbps service. All it costs is $900 per month plus over $3,000 in equipment and installation charges.

The ridiculously fast and expensive 50 Gbps option comes from the Pacific Northwest-based ISP Ziply. Around one million people in the company's service areas of Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Montana are eligible to receive the 50 Gig tier, writes PCMag.

In addition to paying $900 every month for the 50 Gbps internet, customers will need to supply their own router. But even higher-end products aren't going to cut it in this instance. Ziply recommends the MikroTik Cloud Core CCR2216-1G-12XS-2XQ router, which features 16 GB of RAM and costs $2,409 on Amazon. There's also a $600 installation fee to consider.

There are a few caveats here, of course. Ziply itself warns that observable speeds will vary and they're not guaranteed. It's also noted that the speeds are shown for wired connections, and even those will likely struggle to hit the peak without extra equipment. However, the upcoming Wi-Fi 7 standard promises a maximum throughput of 46 Gbps.

Ziply's residential service is a whole lot faster than the 5 Gbps offered by AT&T and Frontier, Xfinity's 10 Gbps, and Google Fiber's recent trials of 20 Gig internet with Wi-Fi 7 routers. But few consumers need 50 Gig internet. Ziply's response is that the speed tier is a nod to the future, helping ensure the infrastructure can service communities for decades to come.

Ziply added that all its speed tiers are built on the company's 100 percent fiber, multi-hundred Gig network, managed around the clock to ensure no peak time slowdowns, lag, or buffering that can occur on other providers' networks.

If you live in Ziply's fiber area and would like the chance to win 50 Gbps internet without paying the monthly fee, the company has launched America's Fastest Home Internet Sweepstakes in which the winner will receive the service free for one year.

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The price is pretty good for the speed but ya you are not getting an SLA with that and its probably PON. Nice for bragging rights.

If you were running a small business from home and don't mind not having an SLA and a dedicated circuit its do able.
 
My 500mbps fiber is good enough for me.
I went from 1gbps to 200mbps(lowest they offered) and I hardly need that. I remember getting 100mbps first out of college for $120/m but now I pay $15/m for 200 for my first year and then $25/m after that. I was paying $85/m for gigabit service but I can't think of a single time I ever actually needed it.
 
I went from 1gbps to 200mbps(lowest they offered) and I hardly need that. I remember getting 100mbps first out of college for $120/m but now I pay $15/m for 200 for my first year and then $25/m after that. I was paying $85/m for gigabit service but I can't think of a single time I ever actually needed it.
500 is the lowest tier that our provider offers. Its just my wife and I and there really is no use case where we would both be using it and tax the capacity. Its $50/mo. They do have 1G for $75, 2G for $100 and 5G for $200, but even 500 is way more than we need - I love the speed when downloading stuff.

We do have competition in the area, Frontier, offering 500 for $40/mo - but there's a string in the form of a contract attached. I'll gladly pay $50 just to raise my middle finger at Frontier with their contract attached. Service is exceptional with the current provider. Of course, any ISP would be better than my previous provider - Spectrum.

Many years ago, I was paying $120/mo for an ISDN line. How times have changed since those days.
 
500 is the lowest tier that our provider offers. Its just my wife and I and there really is no use case where we would both be using it and tax the capacity. Its $50/mo. They do have 1G for $75, 2G for $100 and 5G for $200, but even 500 is way more than we need - I love the speed when downloading stuff.

We do have competition in the area, Frontier, offering 500 for $40/mo - but there's a string in the form of a contract attached. I'll gladly pay $50 just to raise my middle finger at Frontier with their contract attached. Service is exceptional with the current provider. Of course, any ISP would be better than my previous provider - Spectrum.

Many years ago, I was paying $120/mo for an ISDN line. How times have changed since those days.
I remember going from 56k to DSL and absolutely losing it! After existing in the t1 and t3 days, I could comfortably run an entire business on a gigabit connection.
 
How moronic. Even for business this would be overkill unless you are huge and do massive numbers of online transactions. But what is the upload speed. I know in Australia such a plan would be 50/0.1 and cost $10K per month.
 
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