... and that turned out not to work as smoothly as possible. It was a forced upgrade - they say my old modem won't work with the network after 1/25/2018.
The new modem has built in wireless capability, which I don't need because I have my own Airport wireless base. I disconnected the old modem and connected the new one. Connecting the first time with my computer walked me through the modem setup/activation, which was painless. It appeared all was working well, except...
My connection to the internet was very slow and intermittent. The Airport connection doctor ran its diagnostics, which concluded that there are too many wireless signals in close proximity, which makes sense since the Airport and Xfinity modem are only 1 foot apart and both are using the same frequencies.
I also discovered Xfinity pulled a dirty trick - their modem has a built in public hotspot named 'xfinitywifi' that you have no control over, but is using your bandwidth and electricity.
I started a chat session with xfinity (which actually works quite well) to have them shut off the wireless radios. The biggest problem with the chat was that due to my unreliable connection, the chat kept getting interrupted.
Anyway, they shut off my wireless network, but the public hotspot is still broadcasting. They say to wait 24 hours and then reboot the modem. If the hotspot is still up to call them again.
So we will see hat happens next. I would prefer to have a modem with no wireless capability, like my old one.
The new modem has built in wireless capability, which I don't need because I have my own Airport wireless base. I disconnected the old modem and connected the new one. Connecting the first time with my computer walked me through the modem setup/activation, which was painless. It appeared all was working well, except...
My connection to the internet was very slow and intermittent. The Airport connection doctor ran its diagnostics, which concluded that there are too many wireless signals in close proximity, which makes sense since the Airport and Xfinity modem are only 1 foot apart and both are using the same frequencies.
I also discovered Xfinity pulled a dirty trick - their modem has a built in public hotspot named 'xfinitywifi' that you have no control over, but is using your bandwidth and electricity.
I started a chat session with xfinity (which actually works quite well) to have them shut off the wireless radios. The biggest problem with the chat was that due to my unreliable connection, the chat kept getting interrupted.
Anyway, they shut off my wireless network, but the public hotspot is still broadcasting. They say to wait 24 hours and then reboot the modem. If the hotspot is still up to call them again.
So we will see hat happens next. I would prefer to have a modem with no wireless capability, like my old one.