Since then, Verizon has launched the service in full to its entire wireline service area, which includes 12 states, and Washington D.C. Verizon later revealed that the service was officially available in North Texas and Harrisburg, PA upon initial release, both of which headlined the service’s beta trials. Official details from Verizon itself were hard to come by early on as the news for the VSM1100 broke.Įngadget also uncovered some forum postings on of actual VMS1100 users in parts of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and California who were part of Verizon’s “phased roll-out” for the device. First impressions were that the system performed extremely quickly, though it still had a few hitches upon early release. According to an Engadget report, Verizon posted and then pulled a commercial for the box with a video hosted on Youtube, only to repost that same Youtube hosted video on. ![]() Perhaps trying to build a buzz, Verizon played coy with the box for its initial unveiling. Users of the Premium service can connect via the Media Client extender boxes for up to 10 TVs at a time, with the ability to record up to 12 individual programs at once. The Premium service doubles the action, working from dual VSM1100 media servers for a combined 2TB of storage space, which translates to around 200 hours of programming. To do so, users can add small extender boxes, which Verizon calls Media Clients, from the main source for each TV. Working from the hub source, the extender boxes will allow users to pause and play live programming on each connected TV, and even pause a source program in one room and continue it in another. The Enhanced service includes a single VMS1100 box which serves as a hub to connect up to five TVs in the home. Quantum TV will come in two tiers, including Premium and Enhanced. Verizon’s official press release recently revealed specific details about how the new service will work. The box is being billed as a “next generation media hub,” and it brings along some impressive new abilities as a part of that billing. The VMS1100 is the centerpiece of Verizon’s new FiOS Quantum TV service. The anticipated device boasts a host of new features, including a 1TB hardrive, 6 on-board tuners, and the ability to combine with another server box to allow up to 12 shows to be recorded at once. Subscribers to Verizon’s FiOS cable service have a new toy to play with as the company has released its highly-capable new VMS1100 media server. ![]() ![]() Updated on : Verizon today announced its new service has made a full launch to its wireline service areas, concluding with New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut.
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