U-verse has always been intriguing to me. My neighborhood has had U-verse for many years now (it was one of the first areas in Indianapolis to get the hook-up), but my own early in-store observations of the picture quality as well as the plethora of negative reviews of the service kept me planted firmly in the land of satellite TV (Dish for 5+ years and DirecTV for about 9 months). I also subscribed to Comcast for years for my Internet service.
On a recent phone call to AT&T to fix a wireless billing issue, a very persuasive tech representative convinced me to give U-verse a try. With the promise of significant savings for a bundle of TV and Internet along with no contract or commitment I decided to give it a shot. I admit that I'm also getting tired of rain fade with satellite. Here are my thoughts after a week with U-Verse.
U-Verse Installation and Equipment
My house was already wired with coax to each of the main rooms as well as in-wall Cat 5e Ethernet, so the installation of U-verse was very straight-forward. Aside from an issue of cleaning up an excess of coax in the crawl space, the installation was uneventful. I have a coax connection from the NID (the AT&T phone box mounted to the outside of my home) into the house, reusing the existing Comcast coax cable. that was already in place running from the side of the house into my home office. The coax connects to the AT&T residential gateway, which looks like a very large cable modem. From there, everything is Ethernet inside the use using my existing Cat 5e wiring.
For the TV service, I have a 67" Samsung LED DLP in the living room, and a 26" Toshiba LCD in the bedroom. The gateway also directly connects an iMac via Ethernet in the office, and a laptop, smart phone, Apple TV, and tablet via wireless.
My U-verse "profile" allows me 18Mbit/sec down for the Internet service and about 1.5Mbps up. The TV service gives me 3 simultaneous HD streams and 1 SD stream. From what I've read, some U-verse areas allow 4 HD streams plus 1 SD stream, but I must be too far from the VRAD or my neighborhood doesn't have the required infrastructure to support the extra HD stream.
U-Verse Internet Service
After a week, the Internet service has been speedy and reliable. I've had no issues with the Internet connection, and all of my (mostly Apple) devices work without any problems. My tests with speedtest.net give me a very consistent 17.3 Mbps download speed and 1.43 Mbps upload speed, with a ping time of just 37ms. While Comcast rates were much higher, especially the upload speed, the ping time is lower with U-Verse which actually makes it a bit faster and more reliable for me to work from home.
Note that using the TV service does slow down the Internet speed. With several HD streams going, my Speedtest.net results drop to about half, but 9 Mbps is plenty for everything I do, and the latency (ping times) remains low.
In summary, the Internet service from U-Verse is very good. I have no complaints. Those who need higher upload rates may choose to look to a different technology but I think most people will be pleased with what AT&T offers here.
Here are my grades for Internet service:
Comcast Internet: A
U-Verse Internet: B+
U-Verse Television Service
I've read dozens of reviews of U-Verse TV over the past years, and the collective voices of the Internet have not been kind. Based on what I read, I expected an HD picture quality of somewhere between standard YouTube and dog poo smeared on glass. The occasional dissident who would proclaim U-Verse to be BETTER than FIOS, DirecTV, Dish, and every other provider gave me a little hope, but i wasn't confident. As recently as a few years ago when I watched U-Verse in an AT&T store as well as at a friend's house, I noticed a very noticeable "pulsing" of static backgrounds due to the aggressive compression which absolutely drove me crazy.
I'm happy to say that the U-Verse HD picture is much improved from my last viewing, and it's very good in its own right. Is the quality better than DirecTV and Dish? Not quite, but it's very close now. ESPN looks very good. NBA channel and NFL network also look very good. Standard HD channels as well as premium movie channels look great. My locals are not quite as good (especially WTHR - NBC), but the differences between U-Verse and the satellite providers are mostly minor and easily forgettable if you actually watch the show instead of scrutinizing every pixel. I suspect that on a smaller set (mine is 67"), only the most finicky eyes would notice any issues at all with the U-Verse HD picture.
Here's how I would grade the picture quality of the services I've tried:
DirecTV: A-
Dish Network: B+
U-Verse: B
Comcast: B+
U-Verse On Demand seems to be very good. It's much better than DirecTV (which has never worked for me on their flagship HR34 receiver) and Dish (just pathetic no matter how you slice it). The DVR is really fast and fun to use, and has all the features you'd expect from a DVR. So far i haven't had any problems, but it's hard to evaluate a DVR's reliability after a week. I love that changing the channel is nearly instantaneous, just like it was in 1984 on basic analog cable! And audio quality is excellent - I've had no pops, clicks, or dropouts and the Dolby surround sound is perfectly fine.
Here's how I would grade OnDemand/DVR/Audio from the providers I've tried:
DirecTV: D/C+/A (*)
Dish: F/D/B (**)
U-Versie: B+/A-/A
Comcast: A/D/?
(*): I rated DirecTV DVR as a C+ because the HR34 is still so damn sluggish. Yes, it's improved from its initial release, but it still feels like you're slogging through molasses every time you try to navigate the thing. If it were faster, the DirecTV DVR would get an A from me.
(**): I rated the Dish DVRs as a D because they've become so glitchy. As of earlier this year, sometimes there would be no picture when you power the unit on, sometimes the picture would just freeze up randomly, and sometimes you would only get a partial recording.
Conclusion
I've been pleasantly surprised by U-Verse. The Internet service is excellent, and the TV service is very good. I like it enough that I'm going to suspend my DirecTV service for 6 months and give U-Verse a good, extended run. For anyone who has been on the fence about U-Verse after reading the horror stories in some of the forums, I'd say give it a try - there's a lot to like.
On a recent phone call to AT&T to fix a wireless billing issue, a very persuasive tech representative convinced me to give U-verse a try. With the promise of significant savings for a bundle of TV and Internet along with no contract or commitment I decided to give it a shot. I admit that I'm also getting tired of rain fade with satellite. Here are my thoughts after a week with U-Verse.
U-Verse Installation and Equipment
My house was already wired with coax to each of the main rooms as well as in-wall Cat 5e Ethernet, so the installation of U-verse was very straight-forward. Aside from an issue of cleaning up an excess of coax in the crawl space, the installation was uneventful. I have a coax connection from the NID (the AT&T phone box mounted to the outside of my home) into the house, reusing the existing Comcast coax cable. that was already in place running from the side of the house into my home office. The coax connects to the AT&T residential gateway, which looks like a very large cable modem. From there, everything is Ethernet inside the use using my existing Cat 5e wiring.
For the TV service, I have a 67" Samsung LED DLP in the living room, and a 26" Toshiba LCD in the bedroom. The gateway also directly connects an iMac via Ethernet in the office, and a laptop, smart phone, Apple TV, and tablet via wireless.
My U-verse "profile" allows me 18Mbit/sec down for the Internet service and about 1.5Mbps up. The TV service gives me 3 simultaneous HD streams and 1 SD stream. From what I've read, some U-verse areas allow 4 HD streams plus 1 SD stream, but I must be too far from the VRAD or my neighborhood doesn't have the required infrastructure to support the extra HD stream.
U-Verse Internet Service
After a week, the Internet service has been speedy and reliable. I've had no issues with the Internet connection, and all of my (mostly Apple) devices work without any problems. My tests with speedtest.net give me a very consistent 17.3 Mbps download speed and 1.43 Mbps upload speed, with a ping time of just 37ms. While Comcast rates were much higher, especially the upload speed, the ping time is lower with U-Verse which actually makes it a bit faster and more reliable for me to work from home.
Note that using the TV service does slow down the Internet speed. With several HD streams going, my Speedtest.net results drop to about half, but 9 Mbps is plenty for everything I do, and the latency (ping times) remains low.
In summary, the Internet service from U-Verse is very good. I have no complaints. Those who need higher upload rates may choose to look to a different technology but I think most people will be pleased with what AT&T offers here.
Here are my grades for Internet service:
Comcast Internet: A
U-Verse Internet: B+
U-Verse Television Service
I've read dozens of reviews of U-Verse TV over the past years, and the collective voices of the Internet have not been kind. Based on what I read, I expected an HD picture quality of somewhere between standard YouTube and dog poo smeared on glass. The occasional dissident who would proclaim U-Verse to be BETTER than FIOS, DirecTV, Dish, and every other provider gave me a little hope, but i wasn't confident. As recently as a few years ago when I watched U-Verse in an AT&T store as well as at a friend's house, I noticed a very noticeable "pulsing" of static backgrounds due to the aggressive compression which absolutely drove me crazy.
I'm happy to say that the U-Verse HD picture is much improved from my last viewing, and it's very good in its own right. Is the quality better than DirecTV and Dish? Not quite, but it's very close now. ESPN looks very good. NBA channel and NFL network also look very good. Standard HD channels as well as premium movie channels look great. My locals are not quite as good (especially WTHR - NBC), but the differences between U-Verse and the satellite providers are mostly minor and easily forgettable if you actually watch the show instead of scrutinizing every pixel. I suspect that on a smaller set (mine is 67"), only the most finicky eyes would notice any issues at all with the U-Verse HD picture.
Here's how I would grade the picture quality of the services I've tried:
DirecTV: A-
Dish Network: B+
U-Verse: B
Comcast: B+
U-Verse On Demand seems to be very good. It's much better than DirecTV (which has never worked for me on their flagship HR34 receiver) and Dish (just pathetic no matter how you slice it). The DVR is really fast and fun to use, and has all the features you'd expect from a DVR. So far i haven't had any problems, but it's hard to evaluate a DVR's reliability after a week. I love that changing the channel is nearly instantaneous, just like it was in 1984 on basic analog cable! And audio quality is excellent - I've had no pops, clicks, or dropouts and the Dolby surround sound is perfectly fine.
Here's how I would grade OnDemand/DVR/Audio from the providers I've tried:
DirecTV: D/C+/A (*)
Dish: F/D/B (**)
U-Versie: B+/A-/A
Comcast: A/D/?
(*): I rated DirecTV DVR as a C+ because the HR34 is still so damn sluggish. Yes, it's improved from its initial release, but it still feels like you're slogging through molasses every time you try to navigate the thing. If it were faster, the DirecTV DVR would get an A from me.
(**): I rated the Dish DVRs as a D because they've become so glitchy. As of earlier this year, sometimes there would be no picture when you power the unit on, sometimes the picture would just freeze up randomly, and sometimes you would only get a partial recording.
Conclusion
I've been pleasantly surprised by U-Verse. The Internet service is excellent, and the TV service is very good. I like it enough that I'm going to suspend my DirecTV service for 6 months and give U-Verse a good, extended run. For anyone who has been on the fence about U-Verse after reading the horror stories in some of the forums, I'd say give it a try - there's a lot to like.