ratracer wrote: » I had the same call. Details: 20Gb monthly allowance, 18mth contract which is €100 to break. I'm just gonna hold out now until the summer, hopefully FTTH will be live by then.
rob808 wrote: » There no point going with imagine LTE especially if your getting FTTH sometime in 2017.
Kristopherus wrote: » Seeing as the Eir is unwilling to be definite about their deadlines, it would be well worth most people's time to jump to Imagine. They have a 12 month contract, and, imo, those 12 months will very likely be well gone before Eir come calling.
oneofakind32 wrote: » The estimate they are now giving is 1 year! It's already 2017, this thread started in 2015, pretty sure the roll out started in 2014, maybe even 2013?
oneofakind32 wrote: » Sorry! Maybe I'm in the wrong thread then. I just wanted to complain about the Eir's efibre rollout which has been going on for years and their stupid map which never delivers on promises.
knipex wrote: » What map ??
John1993W wrote: » Yes signed up. Install set for the end of the month/first week of March.
rob808 wrote: » I am not saying don't get imagine LTE it just messy because you have to get reconnect to the exchange which could take a couple days I was waiting a 1 week and half.If people want to get imagine LTE while wait for FTTH then go ahead it there choice.
Kristopherus wrote: » And I'm not saying people should get it, but its definitely an option while people are waiting for Eir or anyone else to come calling. As for myself, I'm happy out as I have 100mbps from my provider to my ancient copper line and am actually getting 80+:)
rob808 wrote: » www.fibrerollout.ie
oneofakind32 wrote: » This Eircom/Eir fibre roll out is a joke of the highest order. Eircom spent 10m on rebranding? Something like that? (payed to a UK company as well). Maybe is they invested in their network they might get more customers. I have been checking the eir fibre rollout map on a regular basis since it was the eircom efibre rollout map. It must be 4 years since this started. I have been checking my parent's phone number in Co. Galway. For a long time it said 6 months. Every time I would look at it and think, oh great it will be there when I go home in sept for a week. Never happens. The estimate they are now giving is 1 year! It's already 2017, this thread started in 2015, pretty sure the roll out started in 2014, maybe even 2013?
Billydoc wrote: » Hi, can anyone explain to me what an eir sales rep was telling me, they said, For anyone living outside the blue line in rural areas on the rollout map... eir are currently (in her words) 'putting some sort of boxes on poles' outside the blue line in rural areas and now houses are getting speeds of >100mbs when before was dsl or nothing. They said it's already live in some parts in donegal. What are these magic boxes eir are installing?
ED E wrote: » My guess is you were being told lies to get commission.
Billydoc wrote: » eir sales rep
rkdub wrote: » According to facebook last night.. Councillor Joe Byrne, Kinvara is 5 weeks away (although last year, he shared a date of May 16..). "EIR have informed me this evening that residents within 1.5km radius of Kinvara can order Fibre in 5 weeks time ( fibre to exchange almost complete) At the same time very unhappy that certain areas in the locality are not being connected with fibre to the home by EIR at present. Makes no sense no matter whatever the excuse they give."
pegasus1 wrote: » Just seen Fibre being run from pole to pole on the N10 Waterford rd on a Blue line outside Kilkenny City...They seem to have done about 300 meters in about an hour.. Now question for the Tech heads here, they are not spooling the Fibre off the drum as normal as in they are letting it come from the side of the coil leaving the twist in it...would this affect the Fibre in any way, having the twist in it from pole to pole?
long_b wrote: » Quick question on splicing - does each pole need to have a white slice box put on or do they only do that when you place your order?
ED E wrote: » When that goes rurally you'll probably find its more like one every 10 or twelve poles.
ED E wrote: » Old copper DPs served a max of 8 homes usually so in dense urban areas at a 16:1 split you'd have one POS every ~2nd pole. When that goes rurally you'll probably find its more like one every 10 or twelve poles.