Originally posted by: Kappo
Additionally, the crappy ISPs in the US could just stop using an oversubscription rate of 200%...
What? Your crappy network can't handle everyone on at the same time? Get better crap.
Originally posted by: Delta6Echo
Originally posted by: Fritzo
Originally posted by: Anubis
caps not good, way to low
http://arstechnica.com/news.ar...width-caps-arrive.html
40GB is HUGE!!!!! We service 200 employee corporations that only use 30GB/month. Turn off Bit Torrent and it won't be an issue.
I work for a big ISP- only .4% of our customers go over 10GB per month. The ones that do are impacting the network for other users, causing the need for more infrastructure and bandwidth. If those .4% are causing the other 99.6% slowness, would you expect an ISP to :
A) Charge higher fees to everyone
B) Make the heavy users pay more
I know which one seems fair to me.
Please shut the fvck up. You work for an ISP company? I'm shocked. Tell you what, I'll cap your water, electricity, and gas. Does that sounds good to you? Cable/Internet is a utility, if they start doing this, you know they will start capping other services.
Then all the "Soviet Russia" jokes will start up and never end. Is that what you want to happen? IS IT?P)
Originally posted by: Kappo
Additionally, the crappy ISPs in the US could just stop using an oversubscription rate of 200%...
What? Your crappy network can't handle everyone on at the same time? Get better crap.
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: Kappo
Additionally, the crappy ISPs in the US could just stop using an oversubscription rate of 200%...
What? Your crappy network can't handle everyone on at the same time? Get better crap.
They could do that, but do you really want to pay $500/month for cable internet?
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Kappo
Additionally, the crappy ISPs in the US could just stop using an oversubscription rate of 200%...
What? Your crappy network can't handle everyone on at the same time? Get better crap.
It's more like 100 to 1 if not more. Every network is oversubscribed. That's how they can give you the service for dirt cheap.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Actually, they're doing exactly what electricity, water, etc do. You are charged for how much you use.
Originally posted by: Fritzo
Originally posted by: Delta6Echo
Originally posted by: Fritzo
Originally posted by: Anubis
caps not good, way to low
http://arstechnica.com/news.ar...width-caps-arrive.html
40GB is HUGE!!!!! We service 200 employee corporations that only use 30GB/month. Turn off Bit Torrent and it won't be an issue.
I work for a big ISP- only .4% of our customers go over 10GB per month. The ones that do are impacting the network for other users, causing the need for more infrastructure and bandwidth. If those .4% are causing the other 99.6% slowness, would you expect an ISP to :
A) Charge higher fees to everyone
B) Make the heavy users pay more
I know which one seems fair to me.
Please shut the fvck up. You work for an ISP company? I'm shocked. Tell you what, I'll cap your water, electricity and gas. Does that sounds good to you? Cable/Internet is a utility, if they start doing this, you know they will start capping other services.
Then all the "Soviet Russia" jokes will start up and never end. Is that what you want to happen? IS IT?P)
They DO cap gas, electricity, and gas moron. That's why you pay more for heating in the winter and more for electricity in summer when you're running your AC. This is also why people try not to over-use utilities---BECAUSE THEY'LL HAVE TO PAY FOR IT.
How about thinking about what you're going to say before you start spewing verbal diarrhea?
Originally posted by: Chiropteran
Originally posted by: spidey07
Actually, they're doing exactly what electricity, water, etc do. You are charged for how much you use.
If you use less than the cap they aren't giving you a discount. It's not the same at all, you are charged a base amount regardless of how much you use.
Originally posted by: Anubis
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Kappo
Additionally, the crappy ISPs in the US could just stop using an oversubscription rate of 200%...
What? Your crappy network can't handle everyone on at the same time? Get better crap.
It's more like 100 to 1 if not more. Every network is oversubscribed. That's how they can give you the service for dirt cheap.
you admit they are all oversubed yet you flame me for bitching about them because they need to upgrading their crap infrastructure
Originally posted by: EKKC
this wont fly. expect mass exodus to DSL or FIOS if this does happen. and government sanctioned cable oligopoly has got to stop.
im a TWC customer, while i am generally happy with their speed, i'd be the first one to leave them if they did this to me (NYC)
Originally posted by: Fritzo
Originally posted by: EKKC
this wont fly. expect mass exodus to DSL or FIOS if this does happen. and government sanctioned cable oligopoly has got to stop.
im a TWC customer, while i am generally happy with their speed, i'd be the first one to leave them if they did this to me (NYC)
Hate to tell you this, but ATT and Verizon are waiting to see how this works out so they can implement caps themselves. A memo discussing caps passed my desk just last week from ATT. Not sure where you're going to go if everyone starts doing it.
Also, keep in mind they're doing this for network efficiency and to keep current price structures in place, not to make money. Some people seem to keep getting this idea that they're going to make huge $$$$ off of this "evil" plan.
Also, keep in mind they're doing this for network efficiency and to keep current price structures in place, not to make money. Some people seem to keep getting this idea that they're going to make huge $$$$ off of this "evil" plan.
Originally posted by: Xavier434
A very good point.
You know what part of this problem is all sounding like to me? It sounds like ISPs like Comcast got way in over their heads when it comes to investing so much money into infrastructure so that rural places could get broadband. Obviously they were hoping that these rural areas would expand in due time and it would result in more subscribers. However, no one is buying or building housing right now are they? So rather than invest even more money into better infrastructure to solve the issues, they just want to charge all of their customers more money for more limited service. They know people rely on the internet in their lives too much for people to rid themselves of the service all together and they are willing to take advantage of that. It's such bullshit. We are getting the short end of the stick because their original business plan sucked and it is now catching up to them. They should be the ones floating the bill here. Not us.
Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
Originally posted by: frostedflakes
My bad, it's been a while since I've logged onto XBL. I'm pretty sure 720p movies are in the 5GB area, though.Originally posted by: vi edit
You'd be surprised, depending on what you do, it probably isn't that tough to hit 100GB. High def movies and game demos on XBL are around 5GB each IIRC. For one person 100GB may be a tough mark to hit, but if you have a family or a few college students on one connection, I'd think it would be much easier to reach
Largest demo I've ever seen on XBL is around 1.6gb. Most of them are between 500 and 800mb.
No clue on high def downloads though.
Does anyone remember how big that Age of Conan download (not counting required updates) was for the open beta? I want to say it was something along the lines of 8GB before receiving the massive update upon install.
Originally posted by: KMFJD
Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
Originally posted by: frostedflakes
My bad, it's been a while since I've logged onto XBL. I'm pretty sure 720p movies are in the 5GB area, though.Originally posted by: vi edit
You'd be surprised, depending on what you do, it probably isn't that tough to hit 100GB. High def movies and game demos on XBL are around 5GB each IIRC. For one person 100GB may be a tough mark to hit, but if you have a family or a few college students on one connection, I'd think it would be much easier to reach
Largest demo I've ever seen on XBL is around 1.6gb. Most of them are between 500 and 800mb.
No clue on high def downloads though.
Does anyone remember how big that Age of Conan download (not counting required updates) was for the open beta? I want to say it was something along the lines of 8GB before receiving the massive update upon install.
I believe it was 17gb download for the client, they have had about 1gb+ in patches since going live i believe...
Originally posted by: MrColin
You would think that in order to stay competitive and keep up with increasing consumer demands they would have a pretty big R&D budget. They don't, its not even big enough to warrant mention on their financial statements. The word research appears once in that 88 page statement and it is in reference to a discontinued joint venture with Motorola. The only R&D going on as far as I can see is on trying to squeeze consumers. There are lots of other solutions than just charging more money, I haven't noticed any tremendous bandwidth issues as a result of abusive bandwidth hogs. All this talk of a small number of users slightly degrading the service for everybody is just a pretext for an assault on net neutrality.
Originally posted by: vi edit
*****side tangent******
How much reserved space does the operating system and various other system stuff take up on the 360 20 gig drives? At 17 gig + patches, you are at the very edge of space for pretty much every "Premium" version of the console out there. You essentially could have no other downloaded content or local music stored on the machine. You get one game. That's it.
I don't see that taking off very well given MS's lucrative pricing on the larger HD's and their closed door policy on user installed HD's. This is very much an exception, and not a norm in the demo world.
*****side tangent over******
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: vi edit
*****side tangent******
How much reserved space does the operating system and various other system stuff take up on the 360 20 gig drives? At 17 gig + patches, you are at the very edge of space for pretty much every "Premium" version of the console out there. You essentially could have no other downloaded content or local music stored on the machine. You get one game. That's it.
I don't see that taking off very well given MS's lucrative pricing on the larger HD's and their closed door policy on user installed HD's. This is very much an exception, and not a norm in the demo world.
*****side tangent over******
I believe the 20 GB Xbox 360 hard drive has ~13 GB available to the user.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Anubis
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Anubis
no no you cant, hell our summer place untill 2 year ago couldent even get dialup because the lines were so old
yes, yes, yes you can. Just call up a telco or ISP and they'll be more than happy to dig/bury fiber all the way out to where ever you want to provide you service. But you'll pay for it.
no you are still wrong,
for examply a friend of mine lives less then 50 yards from where the cable line turns off and goes down a different road, he has called TWC about 50 times saying he will pay for them to run a line to his house. they keep saying no
You didn't read my post. Call the telco and have them run a T1/T3 or optical connection. Heck you may be able to get a T1 on a 3 year contract for a few hundred a month.
Originally posted by: isekii
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: vi edit
*****side tangent******
How much reserved space does the operating system and various other system stuff take up on the 360 20 gig drives? At 17 gig + patches, you are at the very edge of space for pretty much every "Premium" version of the console out there. You essentially could have no other downloaded content or local music stored on the machine. You get one game. That's it.
I don't see that taking off very well given MS's lucrative pricing on the larger HD's and their closed door policy on user installed HD's. This is very much an exception, and not a norm in the demo world.
*****side tangent over******
I believe the 20 GB Xbox 360 hard drive has ~13 GB available to the user.
Isn't age of conan for pc not xbox360 ?
Originally posted by: eos
me - "I like milk A LOT, but 10 gallons a week just isn't enough for me and my store won't sell me anymore. They say no one can possibly drink more than 2 gallons a week"
spidey - "Buy 100 cows and start a dairy farm. Duh..."
:roll: