Your resources will be Cox's own speed tests in your account,, ftp test servers. So if you do sign up, and buy at least a 50mb package, be certain you are getting the promised speeds. Too bad someone with more time and money than I have doesn't do a class action about this. Charging for a claimed speed, and not delivering it until the customer or their techy friend notices it and they flip the switch.
INTERNET UPTIME UPDATE
They should just update everyone and be done with it as I've suggested here before, most customers are paying for a package that exceeds 32mb downstream and I'm sure a large percentage of those people don't even realize they aren't being delivered what they are paying for because they are average users who would have no clue. Customers should not have to jump through that hoop, and I would hope that Cox is putting all NEW customers on the higher service level to avoid that nonsense. Follow the instruction on screen to complete the set up. In the bottom right, click on the Add Integration button.
From the configuration menu select: Devices & Services. There are literally thousands of occurrences of this, I think at least a thousand posted right here on the forum. If the above My button doesn’t work, you can also perform the following steps manually: Browse to your Home Assistant instance. If a person is on a service level that doesn't support past 32mb downstream they have to call or post to have Cox flip a switch to put them on a higher service level. Notice when your domains or SSL certificates are about to expire. Stay transparent to your clients by displaying your service status. Monitor your servers resources, and get alerts on high usage. But what I had to do to get to that point was inexcusable, you can look up my (long) posts here about it from that time period. Our platform can help you: Notice as soon as your websites or servers go down. Moral: document everything that's said by a field tech and anyone else (good practice in general when dealing with any company).īut overall Cox has been fast, and after this last hullabaloo in July of last year, I've had pretty much no issues. Mostly on the upstream side, speeds would drop pathetically and I've had to have techs here at least 20 times in the last several years, and they never have found a problem on my side, although the field techs three times have lied on their reports and I've had to go get field charges reversed by a billing supervisor.
They all use Comcast cable for public internet and I have. Pinguno is an app that continually 'pings' a set of IP addresses and logs all the data in both human-readable and structured (JSON) formats. I want to monitor the Internet uptime that is used on the Public LAN at all of my 18 remote sites. In providing services to their customers, many internet service providers (ISPs). Yes, I've had the issues you're talking about, more than once. Pinguno - a personal internet uptime logger. Network uptime refers to the time when a network is up and running. Unless you're in an area that offers other cable services, Cox is probably going to be your best bet. The redundant architecture of our networks results in a 99.999 uptime of our core networks and the connectivity between the server racks and the internet.