User Profile
jasoncal84
Roaming Rookie
Joined 3 years ago
User Widgets
Contribuciones
Re: T-Mobile Home Internet infuriating, atrocious, and aggravating
tomwil wrote: jasoncal84 wrote: I rely on T-Mobile Home Internet for work and this is causing me to not do my job and could affect my livelihood. T-Mobile Home Internet probably works fine for 90% of subscribers, but for the other 10% that are more advanced or dependent on jobs, T-Mobile is probably not the best choice. T-Mobile Home Internet is a new technology, not fully developed like cable or other internet suppliers. It is especially hampered by having the lowest data priority on its cellular system, which it has to share with phones and other higher priority devices. If your job depends on the internet, don't go cheap, spend a little more and get a more mature technological solution like cable. What an excellent way to insult the intelligence of people trying to get answers for their ISP questions on the ISP forum of the ISP. Tell them to spend a little more and get cable. I bet 95+% of the people who are on T-Mobile Home Internet are on it because they don't have cable or fiber available to them.10Visto1like0ComentariosRe: T-Mobile Home Internet infuriating, atrocious, and aggravating
Hi, Maybe I'm now on the screw you routing. It's where they make your experience terrible so you will just leave. Here's a traceroute to bing.com tracert 13.107.21.200 Tracing route to 13.107.21.200 over a maximum of 30 hops 1 2 ms 1 ms 1 ms RT-AX3000-67E8.local [192.168.50.1] 2 1160 ms * 300 ms 10.21.0.1 3 1165 ms 1577 ms 958 ms 37.120.244.49 4 1557 ms * 309 ms 193.27.15.164 5 1289 ms 1889 ms 1302 ms de-cix.nyc.microsoft.com [206.82.104.133] 6 * * * Request timed out. 7 1924 ms 956 ms 768 ms 13.104.141.210 8 * * * Request timed out. 9 * * * Request timed out. 10 * * * Request timed out. 11 954 ms 1225 ms * 13.107.21.200 12 925 ms 493 ms * 13.107.21.200 13 490 ms 1137 ms 1254 ms 13.107.21.200 Trace complete. That could be why my IPv4 went downhill followed recently by IPv6. They were still perfecting their "new technology" and got it finely tuned now. -Jason10Visto0likes0ComentariosRe: T-Mobile Home Internet infuriating, atrocious, and aggravating
Hi, Maybe they configured me to be on the FU routing…where they make your latency high to infuriate you off to get rid of you and make way for other customers: tracert 13.107.21.200 Tracing route to 13.107.21.200 over a maximum of 30 hops 1 2 ms 1 ms 1 ms RT-AX3000-67E8.local [192.168.50.1] 2 1160 ms * 300 ms 10.21.0.1 3 1165 ms 1577 ms 958 ms 37.120.244.49 4 1557 ms * 309 ms 193.27.15.164 5 1289 ms 1889 ms 1302 ms de-cix.nyc.microsoft.com [206.82.104.133] 6 * * * Request timed out. 7 1924 ms 956 ms 768 ms 13.104.141.210 8 * * * Request timed out. 9 * * * Request timed out. 10 * * * Request timed out. 11 954 ms 1225 ms * 13.107.21.200 12 925 ms 493 ms * 13.107.21.200 13 490 ms 1137 ms 1254 ms 13.107.21.200 Trace complete. Maybe that could explain why IPv4 when downhill followed then by IPv6. They just didn't figure out how to F UP my IPv6 yet. -Jason9Visto0likes0ComentariosRe: T-Mobile Home Internet infuriating, atrocious, and aggravating
I talked with T-Mobile customer service, they actually alluded to exploring no longer using them. It's as if they want to not have to deal with me and the problems in their networksthan restore their networks to good working no BS working condition. They said they will follow-up next Sunday.11Visto0likes0ComentariosT-Mobile Home Internet infuriating, atrocious, and aggravating
Hi all, For the last few weeks, T-Mobile Home Internet has been infuriating, atrocious, and aggravating. I need to know how I can get T-Mobile support to resolve this and what possible solutions I can try. In a previous post T-Mobile Home Internet Slow IPv4 | T-Mobile CommunityI showed how IPv6 latency was much better than the worse than dial-up IPv4 latency. I was putting my Asus router on IPv6 pass-through. I've been using T-Mobile Home Internet for about 1 year or so. My issues with IPv4 started about 4-6 weeks ago. I started to implement DNS of TLS (DoT) and IPv6 passthrough on my Asus router. Since this time, my IPv4 experience has been absolutely infuriating. In a previous post, I showed how IPv6 was providing lower latency. This is not the case anymore. When I connect directly to the T-Mobile 4G router, both IPv4 and IPv6, latency is 100 Prior to tall these issues, my IPv4 latency was about 50-60 ms to many common locations. I was not even using IPv6.Now, no matter how many power cycles, or using DHCP default T-Mobile DNSservers and no DNS privacy, I now get average latency of about 250 ms but at times, dropping of data and really bad experience. Here is a current example of my latency, connected straight to the T-Mobile 4GTM-RTL0102: ping 192.168.12.1 -t Pinging 192.168.12.1 with 32 bytes of data: Reply from 192.168.12.1: bytes=32 time=3ms TTL=64 Reply from 192.168.12.1: bytes=32 time=4ms TTL=64 Reply from 192.168.12.1: bytes=32 time=3ms TTL=64 Reply from 192.168.12.1: bytes=32 time=4ms TTL=64 Reply from 192.168.12.1: bytes=32 time=3ms TTL=64 Reply from 192.168.12.1: bytes=32 time=4ms TTL=64 Ping statistics for 192.168.12.1: Packets: Sent = 6, Received = 6, Lost = 0 (0% loss), Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds: Minimum = 3ms, Maximum = 4ms, Average = 3ms C:\>ping bing.com -t Pinging bing.com [2620:1ec:c11::200] with 32 bytes of data: Reply from 2620:1ec:c11::200: time=266ms Reply from 2620:1ec:c11::200: time=368ms Reply from 2620:1ec:c11::200: time=59ms Reply from 2620:1ec:c11::200: time=470ms Reply from 2620:1ec:c11::200: time=376ms Reply from 2620:1ec:c11::200: time=51ms Reply from 2620:1ec:c11::200: time=287ms Reply from 2620:1ec:c11::200: time=65ms Reply from 2620:1ec:c11::200: time=86ms Reply from 2620:1ec:c11::200: time=271ms Ping statistics for 2620:1ec:c11::200: Packets: Sent = 10, Received = 10, Lost = 0 (0% loss), Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds: Minimum = 51ms, Maximum = 470ms, Average = 229ms C:\>ping bing.com -4 -t Pinging bing.com [13.107.21.200] with 32 bytes of data: Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=301ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=195ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=182ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=79ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=265ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=472ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=473ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=475ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=159ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=72ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=362ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=257ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=49ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=69ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=170ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=53ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=57ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=56ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=57ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=133ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=873ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=242ms TTL=115 Reply from 13.107.21.200: bytes=32 time=124ms TTL=115 Ping statistics for 13.107.21.200: Packets: Sent = 23, Received = 23, Lost = 0 (0% loss), Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds: Minimum = 49ms, Maximum = 873ms, Average = 225ms In the past, I was using the 5G cylinder router but due to it trying to use a further 3-mile away 5G router tower than a closer 1-mile away 4G tower, I switched to the 4G router. I was having horrible experience like I am now with the 3-mile away tower. The closer tower has been having "maintenance" done to it and the further 3-mile away tower has been "having issues". This is a reason I have not gone back to the 5G router. The service is just c___ now. By the way, here's a strange experience I had when using a Cisco router with IP passthrough on a LTE gateway to T-Mobile: web.archive.org I rely on T-Mobile Home Internet for work and this is causing me to not do my job and could affect my livelihood. I'm sure this is fine to some people there at T-Mobile screwing things up or not implementing things properly and not thinking twice. Is there a way to open a case with T-Mobile online? T-Mobile Support in Taiwan or USA seems to treat this like " that's it, take it or leave it" customer service like a fast-food place rather than an important utility that should be providing an effective, and responsivecustomer service. At some point, T-Mobile isn't worth it anymore. -Jason1.9KViews0likes8ComentariosRe: New 5g internet gateway
dajack, For home use, these would be my requirements: WPA3 capable (which isPMF/802.11w capable) Operates on both 2.4 Ghz and 5 Ghz HQ in USA (Netgear, Linksys, etc) I would consider something like this if you're just looking for small and pluggable to outlet https://www.amazon.com/NETGEAR-WiFi-Range-Extender-EAX12/dp/B099GLVBGP You could find many routers that act as an extender/repeater but I think the above is what you were seeking. Nice to have would be 802.11s (mesh) and expandable. This Google Nest Wifi system seems pretty good: Nest Wifi - Mesh Router - Google Store You would configure your T-Mobile router in bridge mode. -Jason1Ver0likes0ComentariosRe: T-Mobile Home Internet Slow IPv4
djb14336, I'm using an Asus router with DoT and if I change it from Strict to Opportunistic, it reduces (but doesn't eliminate) the latency issues to normal levels. It could be a combination of the T-Mobile network + the Asus router with DoT but I'm not quite sure.My particular Asus RT-AX3000 router has been acting up, it hasn't been stable. If you could test StrictDoT on your Asus router with 9.9.9.9and 1.1.1.1 that would be great! It will look like this: Then test the DoT here: 1.1.1.1 Connectivity Test Cloudflare Browser Check | Cloudflare Please let me know what you discover. Thanks, -Jason5Visto0likes0Comentarios