Forum Discussion
So you are saying your data is internal Cox documentation? What my question is if the guest wifi was changed to wifi TV boxes, what does the CoxWifi run on? How do they segregate the data for privacy/security/data collection? The fact that the normal wifi signal and the one for wifi TV boxes goes off when you put the gateway in bridge mode but the Coxwifi signal does not means something. Like they should be on different antenna. I tried looking up the exact specs on FCC's site but they didn't give specifics.
::edit:: You think the CG6300BD was bad, I had to beta test the CG3000, Netgear's first combo Cox wanted to use. Worst device I have ever used and I used to be a Dlink beta tester, so that is saying something.
Actually, I LIKED my CG6300BD, it actually ran great, till it got bricked bu a firmware update from Docsys engineering.
The C0X WiFi channel, runs on an unmetered connection, and I THINK, it was limited to 2.4GHZ.
- WiderMouthOpen2 days agoEsteemed Contributor II
That's why I will never trust my router firmware to my ISP.
Any idea how the CoxWifi network manages the bandwidth resources? The DOCSIS connection only has so much bandwidth. How does the system know how many Coxwifi connections to allow and at what speed before it creates a bottleneck for the customer paying for the main service?
- DannyS2 days agoModerator
WiderMouthOpen, Panoramic WiFi modems that have the Cox WiFi radio engaged. It will allow up to five simultaneous connections. Like our public open WiFi hotspots, they have a configured QOS of 50 down and 5 up. You should never expect to find QOS concerns because of anything connected to your Panoramic WiFi service's internal Cox WiFi service.
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