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(values are 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,A,B,C,D,E, or F)
you are quoting a heck of a lot there.
[QUOTE]blah blah blah[/QUOTE] to reply to menstrual_sweatpants_disco.
Please remove excess text as not to re-post tons
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[QUOTE="menstrual_sweatpants_disco:485115"]Just like any other residential broadband, web servers aren’t allowed in their ToS. I’ve been trying to piece together some info I’ve been reading with what a professor at my school was telling me. He had FiOS service that he was using for business. He was mentioning something about how his servers and routers weren’t able to work as they should. He said they were NATing out an address to you. That seems to be the case now that I’m reading that the next hop outside of the router they provide you will be a 10.x.x.x IP somewhere in Verizon land off your property. I’ve also read that like DSL, FiOS uses PPPoE (boo). If you sign up for the business plan for boatloads more cash, though, I believe they will give you static IPs and ditch the NAT crap. I think my professor was just a cheap asshole trying to use the residential service, which sounds like him. During installation Verizon apparently comes to your house, runs fiber from the pole down to an optical network terminal (ONT) that they install outside your house. This thing also supposedly has a battery backup in it. Your home phone is also converted over to fiber too. As far as I know, they run Cat5e out of this thing into your house. I assume they connect this thing to your old phone demarc too. This thing is also cable ready, so when they decide to offer their FiOS TV service they’ll be using this as well.[/QUOTE]
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