Bay Area getting 16mbit Comcast service.

zoiks

Lifer
Jan 13, 2000
11,787
3
81
We're probably behind in net speeds than a lot of places in the country so its long overdue. It's great for people who can't get FIOS right now.
article



Internet junkies, rejoice: Silicon Valley homes can finally get a fast connection to the Internet.

Comcast is launching a new service today in most of its Bay Area territory that will hook computers into the Internet at 16 megabits per second - double the top speed previously available.

The cable-modem service, called Blast, will cost $67 a month by itself, $53 if you also have Comcast cable TV or $10 if you get any of the Philadelphia company's Triple Play TV-Internet-phone packages. Subscribers who already pay the full, non-discounted price for 8 mbps will get the faster speed as a free upgrade.

The boost is long overdue for the valley, home of Google, Yahoo, Cisco Systems, Sun Microsystems and hundreds of smaller companies that actually create the Internet as we know it.

While Los Angeles, San Diego and much of the East Coast got connections of 15 mbps or more during the past few years, the Bay Area has limped along with a top speed of 8 mbps from Comcast, the dominant cable provider, and 6 mbps from AT&T, which offers DSL service over its phone lines. (Small pockets of the Bay Area recently got access to 10 mbps Internet connections as part of AT&T's U-verse service, although that requires spending at least $100 a month for a combo TV and Internet package.)

Valley consumers will now have a clear choice: Pay a premium for Comcast's speedier connections, or opt for AT&T's cheaper but slower DSL, which can cost as
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little as $10 a month for 768 kbps (less than 1/20 the speed of Blast).

Comcast says it has spent $663 million upgrading the Bay Area network since buying it from AT&T in 2002, and customers are reaping the benefits. "This is a game-changer for us as far as our competition," said Comcast spokesman Andrew Johnson.

Fast access means the most to people who use the Internet for video. Streaming movies flow faster and more smoothly, which means you can enlarge those postcard-size playback windows to full screen without losing any resolution. Downloads are also a lot easier.

As higher speeds become more common, they are also likely to spur Silicon Valley's inventors to come up with new services, from interactive gaming to new forms of shopping.

"We have people here who are developing the tools to take advantage of this broadband," said Seth Fearey, chief operating officer of Joint Venture: Silicon Valley Network, a consortium of government agencies and private companies that has lobbied for faster broadband.

But AT&T argues that the need for speed is overhyped and most customers don't want to pay for it. "What we found is that value is important to people, particularly people making the switch from dial-up," said AT&T spokesman John Britton.

As people take their laptops, iPhones and other mobile devices to more places, AT&T figures they want mobile access more than a fast, fixed connection at home. The phone giant recently started offering 10 million of its DSL customers free access to its network of 10,000 WiFi hot spots.

Based on the e-mails I get every time I write about broadband, I'm with Comcast: I think a whole lot of Bay Area residents want the fastest connection possible and are willing to pay the price.

I suspect that the Blast service won't be enough for many of them, especially because it only allows a maximum upload speed of 2 mbps, which limits the ability of people to share large files.

But have patience, speed addicts. Another boost is on the way. Comcast CEO Brian Roberts recently promised to roll out DOCSIS 3.0, a cable technology that allows speeds of about 100 mbps, throughout Comcast's territory by the end of 2009. If demand for Blast is high enough, the Bay Area might jump to the head of the upgrade list.
 

NanoStuff

Banned
Mar 23, 2006
2,981
1
0
What would be more impressive is if they actually let you use the bandwidth you're supposedly given. Not bad though, pretend 16Mb is better than pretend 8Mb.
 

ghost recon88

Diamond Member
Oct 2, 2005
6,196
1
81
Originally posted by: NanoStuff
What would be more impressive is if they actually let you use the bandwidth you're supposedly given. Not bad though, pretend 16Mb is better than pretend 8Mb.

QFT
 

zoiks

Lifer
Jan 13, 2000
11,787
3
81
Originally posted by: Steve
How reliable is Comcast's service out there?

Ever since I've had comcast (3 years), I've only had downtime once with their service. Otherwise its been pretty good.
 

maddogchen

Diamond Member
Feb 17, 2004
8,903
2
76
Originally posted by: zoiks
Originally posted by: Steve
How reliable is Comcast's service out there?

Ever since I've had comcast (3 years), I've only had downtime once with their service. Otherwise its been pretty good.

I had downtime quite a lot more. For a while it was one weekend a month for around 4 months. Something was wrong in my area.
 

AMDZen

Lifer
Apr 15, 2004
12,589
0
76
Originally posted by: zoiks
Originally posted by: Steve
How reliable is Comcast's service out there?

Ever since I've had comcast (3 years), I've only had downtime once with their service. Otherwise its been pretty good.

This is true for me as well. Also, I have never felt the effects of the "traffic shaping" that has made the news so much over the last few months. Never had a problem.

Although I know a lot of people in other areas that did feel the effects on Torrents and such
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
111,947
31,483
146
Originally posted by: zoiks
Originally posted by: Steve
How reliable is Comcast's service out there?

Ever since I've had comcast (3 years), I've only had downtime once with their service. Otherwise its been pretty good.

Does the Bay Area suffer from the same City vs Suburb parity that Comcast provides to us in the Chicago area? I never hear complaints about their service from those who live in the burbs, but try to get them to do any thing positive for you if you live in the city. I dare you...
The complaints in high-density areas seem endless.

I think the majority of their problems come from a refusal to replace the outdated infrastructure that they've acquired from the other providers that they've bought out. I know that the majority of buildings that I've lived in with Comcast service were running old and leaky lines. They would mention that they put in a service call to fix them....but it never happens. they simply don't care.
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
Originally posted by: zinfamous
Originally posted by: zoiks
Originally posted by: Steve
How reliable is Comcast's service out there?

Ever since I've had comcast (3 years), I've only had downtime once with their service. Otherwise its been pretty good.

Does the Bay Area suffer from the same City vs Suburb parity that Comcast provides to us in the Chicago area? I never hear complaints about their service from those who live in the burbs, but try to get them to do any thing positive for you if you live in the city. I dare you...
The complaints in high-density areas seem endless.

I think the majority of their problems come from a refusal to replace the outdated infrastructure that they've acquired from the other providers that they've bought out. I know that the majority of buildings that I've lived in with Comcast service were running old and leaky lines. They would mention that they put in a service call to fix them....but it never happens. they simply don't care.

*cough*
"Comcast says it has spent $663 million upgrading the Bay Area network since buying it from AT&T in 2002, and customers are reaping the benefits. "This is a game-changer for us as far as our competition," said Comcast spokesman Andrew Johnson. "

This is nothing more than proof that competition is driving better services.
 
May 16, 2000
13,522
0
0
I really don't get anything beneficial going from 8 to 16 downstream...what I need is someone to give me at least 8 upstream, preferably with bonding and some advanced configuration options.

I wish I could get good services in my little backwater. 8-(
 

xeemzor

Platinum Member
Mar 27, 2005
2,599
1
71
I don't care that much about download speed, for the most part it's fast enough already. Give me more upload already!
 

tasmanian

Diamond Member
Dec 22, 2006
3,811
1
0
Originally posted by: Imported
Still holding out for FIOS. :[

Fios is less then a mile from my house. However i doubt i will ever get it since comcast is about 300 feet from my house.
 

ChaoZ

Diamond Member
Apr 5, 2000
8,906
1
0
Wait, so is it for the same price of their current speeds here? I don't even know how much I'm paying.