A:AnswerI'm using a gigabit ISP myself, and the only thing I'll note is that due to the limitations of a dual band system, you're probably not going to get more than 300-400mbps on your more distant nodes. That said, even using a gigabit+ wireless router and extender I averaged slower speeds than this mesh network when combined with a gigabit internet connection, so I honestly wouldn't worry out the band and throughput limitations if comparing this against stand-alone routers. You can opt for more high-end mesh networks of course, but personally that seems like a rather steep jump in price without a whole lot of real-world gain when it comes right down to it.
A:AnswerYou may want to goto the Google Home site and ask that question. I know on the app you can see and test each unit, but to be able to see each persons actual usage, and track it, that may be more like a router funtion
A:AnswerI have Cox internet and my Google Wi-Fi device works just fine, I have a Motorola cable modem ( I bought from Best Buy) and this Google Wi-Fi router connected to my HP computer and it is all compatible.
A:AnswerI have Google fiber. They advertise that the TV boxes are WiFi repeaters. I recently dropped the TV from my fiber (went to YouTube TV instead) and I can honestly say that the 3 nodes far outpace the advertised repeaters in the TV boxes. I had the TV boxes in strategic locations (6 of them) around the house, and still had dead spots. I now have one mesh node on each floor, with the main one hard-lined into the network box, and have zero dead spots now. If you do this, you will need to turn the WiFi off on the network box or you will have conflicting WiFi signals and reduced mesh performance.
A:AnswerYes, but you need verizon modem hooked up to the network as internet gateway for the google hub. then disable Wifi on it and use Google hub as WiFi device