three thoughts for you
1. your cable company has alot of traffic on the switch you are on, (switches on cable networks is not the same as ehternet networks, please no non-coax comments) basically, you can have too many people in your designated switch area. unless you see a truck going down the alley with new equiptment, don't believe them saying " we are about to upgrade the area you are on"
2. But they said everything was fine! Yes, it is fine if you can get a eventual internet page response and you pull an ip address. That is the test they look at besides signal strength and see if you have aftermarket splitters on your signal. Your tech wouldn't have information regarding if your ip / or if your switch area is being throttled on certain traffic or ports. I have a friend on db that told me you can call the tech people, (not the physically people, but like the online tech support people) and see if there is something on your account, though don't beleive the first answer that is given and push for the second tier support.
to sound better when you describe your problem to them, say that you use a VOIP system and the person listening in can't hear your complete sentenses. then elude to the fact that you can't make an emergency phone call and be understood. while this won't scare a battle hardened tier 2 or an integrety engineer, it will scare you up the tier support ladder.
3. OMG what nowZZZZZ!
Just an FYI, qwest can blow as well. they tend to have dropped connections in the older area I am in and they blame the age of the phone lines as the reason. your area may be entirely different and I encourage you to still try them out. just be warned, a tech phone call usually always leads to a scheduled appointment the next day and the threat that if its your wiring, you will pay a $80 service call fee. oh, don't sign a year contract either, its a rip off.
BTW comcast tends to lie about latencies. in my area, the DSL company latencies "feel" more accurate than the Cable companies latencies. Meaning, 300ms feel like a slow connection on the DSL., but a comcast 200ms can be worse than the DSL's connection info. You can also try bumping up your service level to a higher tier / or business class
There is packet analysis software out there that you can look at if you want though you may need to pull alot of data to get an idea of what is going on without attuned skillzs I don't begin to think I possess
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