• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Comcast raises broadband speed





Comcast will raise its broadband Internet speeds by at least a third later this year--part of its effort to fend off DSL rivals.

With Baby Bell local phone providers making inroads with cheaper but slower DSL service, Comcast and other cable companies hope to fight on speed rather than price. Comcast's faster service, added at no extra cost to customers, will begin rolling out this quarter, the company announced on Sunday.

As previously reported, the nation's largest cable and broadband provider's current download speed of up to 3mbps (megabits per second) will jump to 4mbps. Upload rates of 256kbps (kilobits per second) will reach 384kbps, the company said. Customers of Comcast's more expensive 4mbps service will see a 50 percent increase to 6mbps downstream and 768kbps upstream.

Speed has been of the essence to the nation's major cable providers. Time Warner Cable said in December that it would raise its basic download speed to 5mbps from 3mbps. Months earlier, Cox Communications said it would raise its speed limit from 3mbps to 4mbps. Faster speeds may help justify cable subscriptions that average $45 a month when the Bells sell DSL--which typically clocks in at 1.5mbps--for as low as $26.95 a month.

Broadband has become the central battleground between cable and the Bells. So far, the Bells lag in overall broadband market share, with about 40 percent to cable's 60 percent. Comcast remains the largest broadband provider with 6.5 million subscribers. In the intense fight for one another's customers, each side is packaging other services, such as video and voice, into its broadband bundles.

Comcast, for example, recently announced plans to sell phone service over Internet lines--voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP--a step into the Bells' territory.

As it has hiked speeds, Comcast has been giving customers more to do with that bandwidth. Its Comcast.net home page has become more of a media portal, with emphasis on higher-bandwidth services such as video news clips, on-demand video games, a flashier interface and more personalization tools.

Last year, Comcast began letting subscribers send 45-second video clips, or up to 10 digital photos with audio narration, in their e-mail messages. To promote these features, the company sent coupons for free Web cams to new subscribers and offered discounts to existing customers.

Comcast this year is expected to introduce more of these higher-bandwidth services. Earlier this week, the company said it will launch its own instant messenger service, which will support live video streaming over Web cams. Instant messaging is one of the most popular applications on the Internet, but it is dominated by America Online, MSN and Yahoo.

Comcast said it will also expand its online music service, refurbish parts of its home page and improve its various content channels, such as fantasy sports, kids and gaming.


TrackBack Print E-mail TalkBack Text
 
Still sucks. I just switched back to DSL. $56 a month since I didn't want their craptastic cable and the upload is no better than dsl which is what I need subsantially more of.
 
Do any of the cable companies offer static IP(s)?

FWIW, I have been a Speakeasy customer for over two years now and I :heart: them.
 
Originally posted by: OverVolt
hmm, i have comcast and it's craptacular uptime for the price.

I'm 6 months into my Comcast subscription and havn't seen an IP refresh (or disconnect, or any downtime) yet.
 
Originally posted by: PoPPeR
later this year, like fall/winter? Why so long 🙁

If you read carefully in the very first paragraph, it says it begins this quarter.
Comcast's faster service, added at no extra cost to customers, will begin rolling out this quarter, the company announced on Sunday.


My IP just changed this past week after remaining constant for almost a year 🙁
Will have to setup some type of dynamic DNS to prevent this from happening in the future.


Hmmm... now that I think about it, they probably reset my modem to reflect the new speed increase.
Time to check when I get home 😎
 
Originally posted by: Viper GTS
Don't care too much about the 6 MB down (not that I'll complain), but the 768 up will be much appreciated.

Viper GTS

Word. I have to painfully upload at 225KB at home. That's why I take stuff to work for upload. 10MB/sec upload.
 
i've heard comcast customers getting calls since the price upgrade, for capping and stuff. look on dslreports.
 
Originally posted by: EyeMWing
Originally posted by: OverVolt
hmm, i have comcast and it's craptacular uptime for the price.

I'm 6 months into my Comcast subscription and havn't seen an IP refresh (or disconnect, or any downtime) yet.
just wait, mine was the same way, but recently they messed something up on their end and now my signal randomly drops out for hours at a time, im lucky to be online right now.

a tech is comming tommorow and im interested in seeing what he says.
 
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
I am supposed to get 3mbps but I am lucky if I get 2.

Call them & complain.

When I upgraded to 4 I was getting 1-2 tops, sometimes as low as 100-200k.

They sent a tech out, replaced my modem, & I'm up @ a full 4M.

Also, are you running through a wireless router? I can't get more than 2 megs or so through my linksys 802.11b, but connected directly to my cable modem I pull a full 4M.

I can't hold Comcast responsible for a Linksys problem.

Viper GTS
 
Originally posted by: MustISO
Just ran a speed test of my comcast connection:
comcrap.JPG

Hopefully we'll have FIOS soon so I can drop their ass.

well Comcast offers 3.3 down at the moment I believe. but i did hear they upped it to 4 and 384 not sure
 
Back
Top