Texas_Signmaker
Very Active Signmaker
i did try wifi calling but my phone won't do speaker phone with it on which is a deal killer when you're on a call for 4 hours... i ordered a new phone to try if a different one will work better.
That's what I have, AT&T fiber and it's Amazing.my building used to be comcast only and I was paying about $100 for 35mbit down / 5mbit up.
att layed down fiber and offered 1 gig up/down for $80 per month. Love it. Same thing at home
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I'm tempted to upgrade to 2gbit at home and I think 5gigabit is coming soon. I just upgraded my home network to 10gigabit (do all my work off a NAS) but with 1 gig internet I rarely have to wait more than a few seconds for downloadsThat's what I have, AT&T fiber and it's Amazing.
Verizon has 5g wide band in areas around here... I did a speed test and it was over 2Gbps. Go inside my house and it's barley 1Mbps.
I dont see any advantage. I was at 500mb before AT&T fiber and I can't tell the difference most of the time. The issue with the old provider is they were cable and in the evenings the speed and latency would deteriorate... don't have that issue with fiber at all.. I get the same speeds no matter what time of day... and this is fiber right to the modem.I'm tempted to upgrade to 2gbit at home and I think 5gigabit is coming soon. I just upgraded my home network to 10gigabit (do all my work off a NAS) but with 1 gig internet I rarely have to wait more than a few seconds for downloads
There is a shortcode for that on avayaYou can still do that on our Cisco desk phones, like you could on the old Nortel BMS. Page to phone or zone, though I'm not sure that you can still make the paged handset become hands free.
I've always kept my office and production somewhat separate from the main office, and had ownership of anything with a cable or keypad.
We live in the plains region, so this is the most likely form of demise. Picture take from our front door.The have a steep upfront investment in hardware, but in theory with a backup generator, you could have internet in lots of worst case scenarios, from fire to storms and just regular blackouts... So you could still post from a pc while the wildfire melts your siding or whatever natural disasters CO has.
Maybe an instructional video showing the young'uns how it works. You could also do a Zoom presentation or a TED talk, charging a subscription of course.It's this old form of voice communication we call a landline.
That is pretty much everyone's story that started from nothing. Frustration and anger are very big motivators to change. Good for you, just keep plugging away, it all eventually falls in place.I just reread my original post from last February. It was a sh!tty couple of months earlier this year and I finally had a complete breakdown. I ended up doing what Tex mentioned in the second post: all prices increased at least 25%, changed my hours to appointment only, and became more selective with jobs. First year in business I took anything and everything to get going, second year not so much. I'm generally out of the shop most afternoons either on installs or sales calls/surveys, or I use it as personal time. I've been getting bigger jobs that are way less hassle, no more walk ins, and things are getting better. My biggest challenge remains not being able to find a bigger shop space. Everything that comes on the market either won't work for my business or is beyond the budget.
That's the best part! I can work at night or during the day or Sunday and take off Tuesday...the flexibility of being a business owner is greatI just heard this the other day
Its great to own your own business, I only work half days!
and it doesnt matter which 12 hours I put in at a time.
I just reread my posts and this entire thread from start to finish and wanted to post an update and ask for some advice. After a disastrous job last summer that nearly took down my entire business I've been at a crossroads of trying to decide where to go from here. Did a massive purge of clutter around the shop and terminating my shop helper, both were dead weight that needed to go. Changed my hours. Took more time off, and next week will be closed for a long overdue vacation. Now's the time as things have slowed down a bit. Some local businesses around here have limited winter hours and I plan on doing the same.I just reread my original post from last February. It was a sh!tty couple of months earlier this year and I finally had a complete breakdown. I ended up doing what Tex mentioned in the second post: all prices increased at least 25%, changed my hours to appointment only, and became more selective with jobs. First year in business I took anything and everything to get going, second year not so much. I'm generally out of the shop most afternoons either on installs or sales calls/surveys, or I use it as personal time. I've been getting bigger jobs that are way less hassle, no more walk ins, and things are getting better. My biggest challenge remains not being able to find a bigger shop space. Everything that comes on the market either won't work for my business or is beyond the budget.