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Available at a variety of speeds, from Lite (10 Mbit/s down, 1 Mbit/s up) to Ultimate (250 Mbit/s down, 20 Mbit/s up) tiers. Rogers Hi-Speed Internet Ultimate Fibre's speeds are 350 Mbit/s down and 350 Mbit/s up. Rogers Hi-Speed Ultimate and Ultimate Fibre's usage caps had been increased dramatically to 1 TB/month and 2 TB/month respectively.
Toggle the table of contents. Comparison of router software projects. Add languages ...
In April 2013, Shaw Business Solutions took over Enmax's Envision subsidiary, which had built a fibre-optic network throughout Calgary. The acquisition was completed for $225 million. [30] final Shaw Communications logo, used since 2012 until 2023. In 2014, Shaw partnered with Rogers Communications to launch Shomi, a subscription video on ...
Notable custom-firmware projects for wireless routers.Many of these will run on various brands such as Linksys, Asus, Netgear, etc. OpenWrt – Customizable FOSS firmware written from scratch; features a combined SquashFS/JFFS2 file system and the package manager opkg [1] with over 3000 available packages (Linux/GPL); now merged with LEDE.
Canada’s Rogers Communications is buying competitor Shaw Communications in a deal worth CAD$26 billion ($20.8 billion). Rogers will acquire all issued and outstanding Class A Shares and Class B ...
Rogers Hi-Speed Internet: Rogers Communications: SaskTel: Saskatchewan: Seaside Communications: Nova Scotia: Rogers Communications: Rogers Communications Shaw: Shaw Communications: Acquired by Rogers Communications, April 2023 [6] Source Cable: Rogers Communications: SSI Micro: Northern Canada: Netcrawler: Tbaytel: Thunder Bay, ON, and ...
Rogers Video — video rental business (although some stores converted into Rogers Plus outlets) [5] Shomi — video streaming service co-owned with Shaw Communications, shut down in 2016. Yoopa — children's programming
BIRD (recursive acronym for BIRD Internet Routing Daemon [2]) is an open-source implementation for routing Internet Protocol packets on Unix-like operating systems. It was developed as a school project at the Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Charles University, Prague, [3] and is distributed under the GNU General Public License.