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i have found having your own router as opposed to the one supplied makes things a lot more stable, and configurable.
i have been with BT forever, so, they never ever offered me a Hub, and have always had my own.
then a few years back problems started to occur.
rang BT explained they had never ever sent me a Hub,
and the cheeky b^stards said it would cost me for them to send one (£60!).
f*ck that.
(also, i believe that to reconfigure anything, you have to call the supplier and get them to do it ? )
went to pc world, bought a new belkin (for more than £60 - but still), as mine was clearly obsolete.
however, all of this is minor in comparision to the fact our road is a little snicket road off a main road.
so, there is no way we will ever get fibre up here.
good old copper for us with max speeds = 12Mb.
(fine for me + one other most of the time)
after a couple of years of realising that i was paying more than folks in my town who were getting 35Mb+
i rang and kinda gave BT grief about the situation.
15 mins later, they gave me a 2 year deal for £30 per month.
when it came to recently renew the price they actually dropped to £28.
which for 12Mb and extras i.e my daily call to my mum,
i am ok with.
as i said, fuck their toys : if you can, get your own.
a lot more options especially if you run an internal network.
DHCP (i.e. the default) for Sonos can become a proper pain.
with your own router, you can define the IP address of your Sonos devices,
which i found to make things a lot more stable.
― mark e, Thursday, 4 August 2022 18:19 (one year ago) link