I had been paying for the "up to 7Mb" service from Frontier. Although I never got to the limit, my speeds weren't too bad. Nothing, compared to what fiber service can do.
Like many people, I live in a wifi house which means pretty much all of my gadgets are connected to the internet wirelessly and not directly connected. I recognize that wifi will always be the bottleneck. Although My TV/DirectTv DVR/Apple TV are hardwired to the Ethernet cable from UIA, the rest of my house (laptops, IPhones, etc) remain connected via Wifi.
Below, are speed tests I ran from my iPhone 5, connected to the internet via Wifi. My UIA service was connected on 10/14/2016, about 11am. The last three lines are the Frontier DSL speeds.
| Date | Download (Mb) | Upload (Mb) | Latency (ms) |
| 12/2/2016 10:44 | 66.724 | 52.749 | 21 |
| 12/2/2016 10:43 | 56.94 | 56.845 | 18 |
| 10/14/2016 13:47 | 60.632 | 57.253 | 8 |
| 10/14/2016 11:33 | 64.623 | 55.293 | 8 |
| 10/14/2016 11:25 | 51.942 | 68.347 | 6 |
| 10/14/2016 06:07 | 6.433 | 1.141 | 39 |
| 10/9/2016 12:13 | 5.625 | 1.221 | 39 |
| 9/1/2015 15:22 | 6.748 | 1.092 | 107 |
I then took my laptop, and directly connected it to the ethernet cable. Here's the results:
| Date | Download (Mb) | Upload (Mb) | Latency (ms) |
| 12/2/2016 11:07 | 90.18 | 94.10 | 5 |
Wifi will probably produce the worst speeds you can get, but getting 56+ Mb via Wifi is unheard of, with our old DSL.
Bottom line: Even if you do everything via Wifi, you'll still get speeds way faster than you would with DSL.