Comcast doesn’t provide fiber internet. It’s still coax.Which is why they're selling fiber internet and phone services.
Comcast doesn’t provide fiber internet. It’s still coax.Which is why they're selling fiber internet and phone services.
Comcast doesn’t provide fiber internet. It’s still coax.
Xfinity offers fiber-powered internet with speeds up to 2 Gbps, combining high performance with wide availability and unlimited data.
Ya and the last mile is delivered by coax. At least around here. Prices for direct fiber are much cheaper for better speeds.That's not what THEY say::
And getting xfinity mobile off the ground - in which it never has
Comcast’s bigger issue is cable subscriptions tanking.
Which is why they're selling fiber internet and phone services.
They will do business fiber but not to the home.
This is not correct, anymore. My previous house was built in 2019, and had fiber from Comcast up to the side of the house, though it was converted to coax with the use of an RFoG ONU.They will do business fiber but not to the home.
They will do business fiber but not to the home.
I never looked at the numbers but that’s awesome. I only heard they were struggling in mobile from a fiber technician when they were servicing my address. I actually switched to xfinity mobile and internet a few months back from ATT and have much better serviceDepends on how you look at it. One million subscribers in 2018, five million in 2022 (four years in), seven million in 2024 (seven years in), 9.3 million at the end of 2025 (eight years in).
That's pretty far behind the Big 3---Verizon (146 million), T-Mobile (140 million) and AT&T (119 million), but it's absolutely growth.
It's hard to find news reports that aren't behind paywalls, but the Google preview for the Wall Street Journal story from January 29 of this year says Xfinity Mobile revenue increased to $1.4 billion in 2025---an 18% increase over 2024.
This makes a ton of sense. Comcast dwarfs NBCUniversal, and should be a huge cash generator on its own.
With all due respect. I don’t think anyone has been arguing or going out of bounds on topics here. Mike stated stats. I didn’t see anyone actually argueThis is quickly turning into a case of citing "facts" without proof that they are true, and one specific person in this thread does it a lot.
At least when I post a fact, I can point to something real to back it up. So did Mike in the post above this one. So did the telecom engineer in the post above Mike's.
It was useful because they had a vehicle to sell their internet services. I still think it’s useful and this is a bad ideaSo why did they buy NBC in the first place.
So basically, expect layoffs - not now but eventuallyIt's always nice to have someone with deep pockets as a parent company. Now NBCUniversal will have to raise its own capital.
That was the problem a lot of these radio-only companies discovered.
it's a hybrid network, coax to the homeComcast doesn’t provide fiber internet. It’s still coax.
It's actually called HFC ("Hybrid-Fiber-Coax") internally, and has been since the mid-1990s. That's been the model since Day One. But apparently, based on what some posters have attested to above, now they're extending fiber directly to individual premises, so they can "guarantee" each subscriber a specific speed. Previously they wouldn't commit to your effective speed, because the technology was based on a shared infrastructure network. However, it's still shared. Nobody's fiber runs all the way to the internet exchange, it's aggregated at certain points into faster fiber down to their local or regional headend, and depending on demand at any given moment, there's the potential for contention that could slow down your effective data rate below what you think you're paying for. If you read the fine print in your agreement, you should find language that explains that disclaimer in Comcast's best lawyerese.it's a hybrid network, coax to the home
What are the limitations of DOCSIS. Can it ever provide symmetric speeds or will upload always be bottlenecked.It's actually called HFC ("Hybrid-Fiber-Coax") internally, and has been since the mid-1990s. That's been the model since Day One. But apparently, based on what some posters have attested to above, now they're extending fiber directly to individual premises, so they can "guarantee" each subscriber a specific speed. Previously they wouldn't commit to your effective speed, because the technology was based on a shared infrastructure network. However, it's still shared. Nobody's fiber runs all the way to the internet exchange, it's aggregated at certain points into faster fiber down to their local or regional headend, and depending on demand at any given moment, there's the potential for contention that could slow down your effective data rate below what you think you're paying for. If you read the fine print in your agreement, you should find language that explains that disclaimer in Comcast's best lawyerese.