As an engineer, my bosses are constantly telling me to separate the commercial side of a project from the technical. No Can Do most of the time....
But maybe the fact that Verizon is spending thousands on each installation in Suburbia is a non-issue. I'll let them think about it. I love my installation - with a few exceptions.
First the exceptions. We live in an area where hurricanes may take the electric out for days on end. Better do (as I have) and make provision for supplementing the short (2 hour?) power pack if you want the same kind of connectivity security you get with copper.
Secondly, if you are a road warrior, your eMail may not follow you. I cannot log on (from Italy and China) because the Veizon server will not authenticate the foreign ISP.
The Verizon web mail has an excellent address book, great space (1 gig) and no eMail reciept verification facility. If I need a receipt I use Roadrunner, which has no address book, and only 20 meg of message sace.
When I compained to RoadRunner tech suport, they told me to go to Yahoo or Gmail. Go figure.
Trading speed on the road can be a real issue. Can't wait to get back to the glass!
About installation:
A Verizon contractor has dug up (cut) my cable twice, which requires an expensive in-the-field splice , and cut my back-up copper line once. All times support was immediate. One time I had four Verizon trucks in my yard with a Division Manager present. Great Support!
Some techies have complained about poor, generic answers to technical questions, ut if you call tech suport and let them know yo know a router from a modem, they will work right with you.
Go for it! (I will keep RR as a backup for the next digup!)