Did you read what you posted? They have the 250GB limit yet when it came time to get their 98% number they had to move the goal post to 300GB.
That and many more are dropping TV and streaming. I have not had cable in a good decade. I am more IT savvy so making it work is easier to me and most here, Burt now with Roku's, amazon TV, etc... any body can plug it in and go. And even with the low rate of those only streaming they had to move to 300GB to make their case even though they have 250GB limits.
How dare someone consume an unlimited resource to their hearts content after buying an unlimited plan! Bandwidth isn't a sack of potatoes that everyone can only take a few each until it is all gone forever. Me using a lot of bandwidth shouldn't impact you in any way, if companies actually had to compete and update their infrastructure after 1990.
So do you work for Comcast, Verizon, Time Warner, or AT&T?
Nice ass pull. 99% is a crock of shit (especially for ones like AT&T DSL which has a 150GB cap). Stream a single HD movie a night for a month and you'll eat 90GB pretty easily, so for a family you could easily use up your cap. Not to mention other things like buying digital goods (movies, games which are getting to be 20-50GB in size).
Considering they're selling "unlimited" service I don't know how you can defend it. Not only that but they also lie out their asses constantly, they advertise about all the improvements they make and how their network is so fast and stellar, yet they then blackmail companies and tell the FCC they're so congested they can't manage and can't afford to upgrade their network (unless, say, Netflix pays them). And yet somehow they've been paying out more to their shareholders than ever.
Did you read what you posted? They have the 250GB limit yet when it came time to get their 98% number they had to move the goal post to 300GB.
That and many more are dropping TV and streaming. I have not had cable in a good decade. I am more IT savvy so making it work is easier to me and most here, But now with Roku's, amazon TV, etc... anybody can plug it in and go. And even with the low rate of those only streaming they had to move to 300GB to make their case even though they have 250GB limits.
Then on top of that you link ask the question...
What is the average usage of people on your network today?
Yet their answer was the "median monthly data usage", not average.
So do you work for Comcast, Verizon, Time Warner, or AT&T?
Nice ass pull. 99% is a crock of shit (especially for ones like AT&T DSL which has a 150GB cap). Stream a single HD movie a night for a month and you'll eat 90GB pretty easily, so for a family you could easily use up your cap. Not to mention other things like buying digital goods (movies, games which are getting to be 20-50GB in size).
Considering they're selling "unlimited" service I don't know how you can defend it. Not only that but they also lie out their asses constantly, they advertise about all the improvements they make and how their network is so fast and stellar, yet they then blackmail companies and tell the FCC they're so congested they can't manage and can't afford to upgrade their network (unless, say, Netflix pays them). And yet somehow they've been paying out more to their shareholders than ever.
Really? When you attach a new modem to their network you get pushed to a page to register the device. I've done it twice in the past year at two residences. One had no active Comcast account associated with it at the time and the other did. In the latter case I was moving from their modem to my modem.
Yes, how dare you. I don't care why they're doing it or any of the reasons behind it. The data cap is extremely reasonable and it only impedes people who use WAY, WAY more bandwidth than the average user. Those people pay more with every other type of service, so internet isn't different.
lol.. an ass pull would have happened had I not provided two links. I love when people can't read. Comcast said 98% of its users are between 20 and 25 GB - a statement which you may or may not believe, but enough people don't give a shit so the model is staying. Verizon quoted similar numbers when I called to ask about getting FIOS service.
I'm not defending it as much as I'm saying you're already being charged this way for basically everything else. Right or wrong, the minority opinion isn't going to get them to budge.
And those numbers will not stay put. As the younger "on demand" generation gets older, the demand for streaming is only going to grow. I think they (ISP's like Comcast) are trying to set a precedent now to corner the market later.
If you're using more of something than 99% of the other people who use it, you deserve to pay more.
No they did not. They said the "median monthly data usage is 20 - 25 GB per month" not 98% of users.
It's actually kind of disgusting how much TV people watch. I haven't owned a TV in 7 years and I'm better off as a result.
I take it you don't do well on standardized testing.
2013: To put 300GB in context, our median customer’s data use is about 16 to 18GB per month.
2014: XFINITY Internet customers' median monthly data usage is 20 - 25 GB per month.
YOU misunderstood his statement about the 250 GB cap. The above two statements are all you need to read to understand typical usage for a home user.
Re: your edit - do you know what median means?
So why doesn't that apply to welfare and other government services, then?
By your logic, welfare queens should pay the MOST taxes.
Hahaha... apparently you do not know what median means.
Median is not a average, its the middle number of the data.
So whats the median of this data set...
1000
1000
900
800
700
25
25
25
25
25
25
and whats the average?
I apologized for misreading in the last post, but this doesn't prove your point. You've biased the data set in a way that does not reflect reality.
That's true, but the cap obviously isn't fixed because they've already moved it once. If the cap starts to impose on the majority of their users, people will switch services. It's really pretty fucking simple. Yeah yeah, some people don't have a choice, but tons of people do and they'll exercise it when pushed against a wall. I'm not saying I love caps, but they've set it way higher than most of their users need, which is reasonable. If they set the cap at 50 GB, they'd be imposing an extra fee on as much as 30% of their users, which wouldn't fly. Pissing off 2% is irrelevant because most of them will probably just pay the extra fee anyway.
Continue to be pissed off and yell at me for pointing out the obvious reason this cap is in existence AND not causing their customers to flee. It doesn't impact me at all if you're butthurt about this.
It's kinda disgusting that you think that's the only thing that people could possibly be using the bandwidth for. But even then, oh, and what's this, most of those companies are also selling TV service? Hmm, yeah no conflict of interest for them to be trying to cap people or video streaming services (like Netflix).
Oh and did we forget to mention they claim they don't have bandwidth caps at all?
http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/Comcast-Still-Pretending-They-Dont-Have-Data-Caps-130217
Or how about them finally admitting they don't have actual issues with congestion (which is why they had been claiming was why they need to be able to implement bandwidth caps):
http://arstechnica.com/business/201...ion-is-not-a-problem-impose-data-caps-anyway/
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/2...caps-have-nothing-to-do-with-congestion.shtml
Are you really comparing a social program/subsidized paycheck with an opt-in utility?![]()
Taking Verizon's word on anything is just stupid. I was at a conference and the CEO stated we needed data caps because the average DVD streamed was around 4gbs and we'd run out of bandwidth. A, that is wrong and B, we won't "run out".Yes, how dare you. I don't care why they're doing it or any of the reasons behind it. The data cap is extremely reasonable and it only impedes people who use WAY, WAY more bandwidth than the average user. Those people pay more with every other type of service, so internet isn't different.
lol.. an ass pull would have happened had I not provided two links. I love when people can't read. Comcast said 98% of its users are between 20 and 25 GB - a statement which you may or may not believe, but enough people don't give a shit so the model is staying. Verizon quoted similar numbers when I called to ask about getting FIOS service.
I'm not defending it as much as I'm saying you're already being charged this way for basically everything else. Right or wrong, the minority opinion isn't going to get them to budge.
More than "some people" don't have a choice.
So you're cool with it because it doesn't directly affect you, and you have other ISP's to choose from. Thanks for you input.
This works seriously? Does the modem automatically pick up the internet signal? I would think that you have to register for it to work. I'm going to try this.
Didn't take all that long for this thread to sync up with its destiny. I think the holiday season probably delayed it a bit though.
Taking Verizon's word on anything is just stupid. I was at a conference and the CEO stated we needed data caps because the average DVD streamed was around 4gbs and we'd run out of bandwidth. A, that is wrong and B, we won't "run out".
And, using a median value, rather than an average, is beyond stupid. It doesn't cost them more money to send 25GB over their network than it costs them to 250GB over their network. They a simply looking for a way to both get more money from users that actually use the internet and delay updating their infrastructure to what the rest of the modern world has.
If Verizon has 5 internet users with usage of 1, 8, 10, 20, 25, 150, 180, 215, 827, would a cap of 25 be anywhere close to average? But, it is the median! Even if we remove the outliers (grandma and torrent boy), it still isn't anywhere close to satisfying the needs of half their users. If I buy a SINGLE Xbox One game per month, I use 50GB if I do nothing else.
I actually only have two choices and I would have gone with comcast if their price was lower, but it wasn't, so I didn't. I had comcast at my last house and I didn't have a choice, but I still wasn't crying about it.
I don't care about it, but not because it doesn't impact me. It makes sense for them to do it, so they're going to do it and nothing you say will change that. Having an internet connection isn't a right.
His explanation for Netflix’s on-screen congestion messages contains a nice little diagram. The diagram shows a lovely uncongested Verizon network, conveniently color-coded in green. It shows a network that has lots of unused capacity at the most busy time of the day. Think about that for a moment: Lots of unused capacity. So point number one is that Verizon has freely admitted that is has the ability to deliver lots of Netflix streams to broadband customers requesting them, at no extra cost. But, for some reason, Verizon has decided that it prefers not to deliver these streams, even though its subscribers have paid it to do so.
Verizon has confirmed that everything between that router in their network and their subscribers is uncongested – in fact has plenty of capacity sitting there waiting to be used. Above, I confirmed exactly the same thing for the Level 3 network. So in fact, we could fix this congestion in about five minutes simply by connecting up more 10Gbps ports on those routers. Simple. Something we’ve been asking Verizon to do for many, many months, and something other providers regularly do in similar circumstances. But Verizon has refused. So Verizon, not Level 3 or Netflix, causes the congestion. Why is that? Maybe they can’t afford a new port card because they’ve run out – even though these cards are very cheap, just a few thousand dollars for each 10 Gbps card which could support 5,000 streams or more. If that’s the case, we’ll buy one for them. Maybe they can’t afford the small piece of cable between our two ports. If that’s the case, we’ll provide it. Heck, we’ll even install it.
But, here’s the other interesting thing also shown in the Verizon diagram. This congestion only takes place between Verizon and network providers chosen by Netflix. The providers that Netflix does not use do not experience the same problem. Why is that? Could it be that Verizon does not want its customers to actually use the higher-speed services it sells to them? Could it be that Verizon wants to extract a pound of flesh from its competitors, using the monopoly it has over the only connection to its end-users to raise its competitors’ costs?
