Funny you should post this yesterday as a guy at work posted a similar experience with U-Verse.
I have no personal experience with U-Verse, but here was his comments
Guy from work wrote:
I just switched to U-Verse (for everything) the other day. The install took a VERY long time (>4 hours), but part of that was that the "outside installer" was late, so the "inside installer" had to wait around for an hour. The inside installer was very knowledgeable and friendly, and they included one cat-5 in-wall w/keystone (~50 feet) and a good isobar power strip. The gateway is on a UPS battery, so you can have phone service for up to 17 hours if the power goes out.
It's about the same quality than TWC or Dish (which is not great - they all compress the signal a lot), but I have way more channels than I can ever watch and 12Mbit down / 1.5Mbit up internet for the same price I was paying for 3mbit DSL, Bellsouth/ATT phone, and Dish Network (all bundled from ATT). The benefit is I'm not paying Time Warner. I don't /think/ I'm paying more for the ability to watch 2 HD channels at once, but it might be included with the U450 TV service (that bundle included the $10 HD fee). I like that you can connect the set-top-boxes with ethernet or coax or phone lines (next year, wi-fi). As has been mentioned, the big draw was watching DVR from any TV in the house (and I can schedule it from the internet). I also missed having decent video-on-demand with satellite - a good number of the shows we would DVR are already stream-able on demand.
The only "problem" is that you can only watch or record 2 HD shows plus 2 STD shows at the same time (or 1 HD plus 3 STD I think), so if you have two people watching HDTV in different rooms of the house, and the DVR turns on to record a different HD show, it interrupts one of the watchers with a message allowing them to either cancel the DVR recording or "interrupt" the other TV watcher, or they have to watch one of the other shows. If you interrupt, the other TV watcher gets a similar message and has the same options. Interesting way to handle it I guess. The installer said that they are supposed to be increasing the bandwidth to the house "probably next year" to allow for 3 HD plus 3 STD /plus/ 24Mbit down +10Mbit up. It is still copper last-mile technology, so I'm not sure how well that will work. The installer also said that people who have above-ground telephone wiring in their neighborhood might have interference from some AM stations - especially a problem during football games in Chapel Hill when they boost the signal.