Site icon Insurance Chat

Fibre to the Home – What you need to know before you sign up with an ISP

Fibre to the home (FTTH) is rolling out in suburbs across South Africa at a rapid rate, promising lightning fast internet speeds, a world of connectivity and online in-home entertainment options not yet experienced since the Jurassic Park advent of copper lines and ADSL. 

Once you get over the trenching, messy pavements and lumpy driveways courtesy of the fibre infrastructure provider, and you’ve done your homework on the best internet service provider (ISP) to provide the actual interconnectivity via your fibre line – Netflix binges become a reality, along with a veritable treasure chest of YouTube and Google knowledge, music and movie downloads, online gaming, skype chats with far-flung family and friends, lighting fast downloads and uploads and cloud storage and back-up for your documents, photos and videos – you name it and the internet becomes your oyster. 

Linda Morris of Smart Technology Centre (STC), a leading internet service provider and IT technology partner says that an internet connection that delivers on speed, availability, security and data integrity is no longer a ‘nice to have’ option at home, but has now become a necessity in our tech-driven lives. 

“Fibre to the home opens up a world of entertainment, education and learning, music, transacting, work-from-home flexibility, security and remote monitoring, and IoT for connected devices that are all increasingly fundamental to our daily lives.  Your computer, smart phone, TV, tablet and even your home appliances like fridges and security camera systems are increasingly using data and requiring high-speed internet connectivity.  FTTH is becoming an essential utility, much like water and electricity,” says Linda.

“Of course, the proviso to all of this working flawlessly comes with one really important caveat –choosing the right internet service provider (ISP) before you sign. While it’s true that the steps to getting fibre to your home are not always plain sailing, as there are many role players and steps involved, knowing what to expect, who is involved in the process, and what the important things are to look out for will streamline the process considerably,” explains Linda. 

Smart Technology Centre provides some key pointers on what to expect when getting FTTH:

Installing the infrastructure

It’s really important to point out that ISPs are not all equal in terms of service, pricing, back-up and support and quality of connection.  Smart Technology Centre provides the following tips and questions to ask before you sign up with an ISP:

“Be wary of basing your entire ISP decision on the first available connection date or price.  Each FTTH provider is affiliated with one or several Internet Service Providers (ISPs) that will actually manage your fibre line connection.  The ISP you choose will ultimately shape what your fibre line will deliver, such as the speed of the line, whether it is capped or not, the back-up you will receive and monthly cost,” explains Linda. 

“The fact that South Africa’s fibre network is mostly built on the principles of open access means that you have a choice as a consumer of who you want your FTTH provider or ISP to be.  You have the ability to change either of the two if infrastructure in your area allows, which leaves fibre users absolutely spoilt for choice, shifting the power to the consumer,” concludes Linda.

For more information go to https://www.stc.za.com/ftth/

Exit mobile version