U-Verse does not require and internet subscription. I pay $68/month for 25/3 from U-verse with no TV. And my guess is well under 1% of people use more than 150GB a month.
Damn typo, U-verse does not require a TV subscription.
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U-Verse does not require and internet subscription. I pay $68/month for 25/3 from U-verse with no TV. And my guess is well under 1% of people use more than 150GB a month.
The idea behind this sort of move is that they're hoping for other ISPs to do the same thing. That, and people who only have AT&T DSL in their area, have no choice. There's also the possibility that they're losing services to the internet.
Either way, consumers will do the thing they do best. Canceling their service, and moving to another ISP. Eventually AT&T is going to undo these changes.
Come back to earth. Here on earth, if we use too much of something, they expand it.honestly, if someone is going over 150GB per month, they're 'hogging the road' just like someone driving a 4 lane wide supertruck down an interstate. they should be removed for the sake of all other customers.
And you know this how? The reality is, 150GB costs ISPs pennies. Look it up. So what would 500 GB, or 1TB cost them? A few pennies more?If ISPs were to build their infrastructure to give every customer full speed and fully unlimited connections, they'd have to charge about $2000 per month for the connection. If you want to download 150GB of data per month, get a business connection with that capacity. (On a side note, I have a Hulu account, a Netflix account, download Linux ISOs for work, and play WoW on a regular basis, and I barely use 12GB per month, on rare occasions, I get up to 15GB. going over 150GB per month is just totally ridiculous.)
I am going to buck the trend here. Let's say the ISP has 100Mbps to divide among 100 customers. Each gets 1 Mbps and is charged $10 a month. You want faster connections? They are giving you better speeds when the bandwidth is available. So, 100 customers, 10 Mbps intermittently, and still $10 a month.
They always oversell, just like airlines, as it is less cost-effective not to. If you want more than 1 Mbps continuous, then you need to pay more than $10 per month. If you are not willing to do that, then what ISP wants you? Why should they care about the 2%?
150/250 GB sounds pretty good to me, at least it isn't 5 GB like the phone plans. At least TRY and see it from the other side every now and then.
And DSL is a more stable connection usually. Since Cable shares with other customers and TV channels, the network just is not built point-to-point. There are just many more network issues to contend with.
could you even download that much with DSL since its so piss ass slow.
And DSL is a more stable connection usually. Since Cable shares with other customers and TV channels, the network just is not built point-to-point. There are just many more network issues to contend with.
could you even download that much with DSL since its so piss ass slow.
honestly, if someone is going over 150GB per month, they're 'hogging the road' just like someone driving a 4 lane wide supertruck down an interstate. they should be removed for the sake of all other customers.
If ISPs were to build their infrastructure to give every customer full speed and fully unlimited connections, they'd have to charge about $2000 per month for the connection. If you want to download 150GB of data per month, get a business connection with that capacity. (On a side note, I have a Hulu account, a Netflix account, download Linux ISOs for work, and play WoW on a regular basis, and I barely use 12GB per month, on rare occasions, I get up to 15GB. going over 150GB per month is just totally ridiculous.)
Great. So long as I don't use it like anything but a 56K modem, I'm fine.
150GB = 5GB/day = 208~MB/hour = 57KB/Sec
I really wanna know how the fuck this is going to "win over more customers".
Maybe in some stupid suit's drug-addled hallucinations?
UVerse is DSL (VDSL or ADSL2+ depending on where you are) and they have 24Mbit down available.
If the likes of South Korea can provide better quality/faster internet to everyone at a lower price and we (the 'West') can not something is seriously wrong.
DSL is a single channel connection to the DSLAM, from there it is combined with some other link, such as a T1, T3, or fiber. It is shared as much as ANYTHING is on the internet, but not like cable. Cable has a loop. Your entire neighborhood can run off of one channel and one subnet, and one idiot can plug his router in backwards and knock everyone on his loop off. And I am not just saying, this actually happens here. Although, they are taking steps to correct the subnet issue.
The DOCSIS 3 upgrade is being rolled out here, but the cable loops are too big. DOCSIS 3 requires no more than 4 nodes, we have 10 currently.
No idea, especially with a cable modem, but just like our little SOHO routers, it could be trying to DHCP it's companions on the same loop.How does one plug in a router backwards?
Like, did no one read the article? "AT&T DSL" gets 150GB/month, "AT&T U-Verse" gets 250GB/month. Every 50GB you go over gets a $10/overage.At any rate, I hope they are only referring to their traditional "DSL" services as I am a UVerse customer myself![]()
The United States is a much larger country landmass-wise with an aging and honestly shitty infrastructure. South Korea is much denser and enjoyed the advantage of building their infrastructure with modern technology in mind.
This same argument applies to European countries where gigabit fiber is available to homes. They are smaller and have heavily subsidized telecom. The "oh they (European/Asian nation here) have it but we don't wahh" argument needs to go die in a fire.
Yes there are topographical and demographical differences. That doesn't change that we have a technological advantage. Reading up, I see remarks about the poor internet availability in Oakland, Ca. That being a very dense residential area in the most populous state. In the bay area cities run together with no gaps and Oakland is at he center of the east bay conglomeration. By your argument the internet there should be the best in the country.
The 'other' countries in question had hurdles to overcome we do not. Despite that they were able to upgrade their infrastructure and we seemingly can not.
Then again we have greedy American corporations and they do not.
honestly, if someone is going over 150GB per month, they're 'hogging the road' just like someone driving a 4 lane wide supertruck down an interstate. they should be removed for the sake of all other customers.
If ISPs were to build their infrastructure to give every customer full speed and fully unlimited connections, they'd have to charge about $2000 per month for the connection. If you want to download 150GB of data per month, get a business connection with that capacity. (On a side note, I have a Hulu account, a Netflix account, download Linux ISOs for work, and play WoW on a regular basis, and I barely use 12GB per month, on rare occasions, I get up to 15GB. going over 150GB per month is just totally ridiculous.)
could you even download that much with DSL since its so piss ass slow.
honestly, if someone is going over 150GB per month, they're 'hogging the road' just like someone driving a 4 lane wide supertruck down an interstate. they should be removed for the sake of all other customers.
If ISPs were to build their infrastructure to give every customer full speed and fully unlimited connections, they'd have to charge about $2000 per month for the connection. If you want to download 150GB of data per month, get a business connection with that capacity. (On a side note, I have a Hulu account, a Netflix account, download Linux ISOs for work, and play WoW on a regular basis, and I barely use 12GB per month, on rare occasions, I get up to 15GB. going over 150GB per month is just totally ridiculous.)
And for the wide majority of customers, like 90%+ of customers, it won't.They're only going to cancel service if this actually effects them.
honestly, if someone is going over 150GB per month, they're 'hogging the road' just like someone driving a 4 lane wide supertruck down an interstate. they should be removed for the sake of all other customers.
If ISPs were to build their infrastructure to give every customer full speed and fully unlimited connections, they'd have to charge about $2000 per month for the connection. If you want to download 150GB of data per month, get a business connection with that capacity. (On a side note, I have a Hulu account, a Netflix account, download Linux ISOs for work, and play WoW on a regular basis, and I barely use 12GB per month, on rare occasions, I get up to 15GB. going over 150GB per month is just totally ridiculous.)
while that may be true on paper, i've been using cable from different ISP's in two different states at three different address in the last 10 years and i have never had a problem caused by any spiking ......DSL on the other hand, when i used it at my parents house acted exactly as you describe, it was slow, fast, slow.........never consistent, but on it's fastest day it was dog slow compared to my always fast cable connections
Then again we have greedy American corporations and they do not.
I never been against "reasonable" bandwidth limits that solely try to prevent bandwidth hogs from slowing things down for everyone else. I rather have heavy bandwidth users buy into higher tiers or be motivated to cut down on their usage than having it be the wild west where my connection slows to crap during peak hours. And doing some rough estimates in my head, 150 gigs seems reasonable.
Most densely populated areas in the US are just as fast as the South Korean densely populated areas. When they aren't, go take a look at the local restrictions to competition made by the government.