Quote:
Originally Posted by saden1
In certain areas both Verizon and Comcast have ridiculous 100 megabit speeds (I believe Verizon offers 200 Mbps in NOVA). I honestly don't get why anyone needs that kind of speed or willing to pay $100+ a month for an internet connection. 15 Mbps gets you all the content that can be had and at $30 a month with the threat of terminating service every six months keep it at that price that's all I need.
As for the 2% being affected, well when that 2% accounts for 25+ percent of all the traffic it's probably a good idea to give those mofos the boot or make them pay more. Asking users not to go over 50 GIG in a month sounds very reasonable.
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If you use Netflix, Hulu, PSN, YouTube, and/or NHL Gamecenter (like I will be using soon) it's very easy to go over 50 gig a month. I think I'm up to 200 Gigs a month last time I checked.
We can't win with the big media companies. First they say don't download stuff on torrents. Okay fine, we'll go use these legitimate services which give us the same stuff without taking up space on our hard drives. "Oh no that uses to much bandwidth. We're going to have to put up a cap." Until of course you stream stuff like Pay-Per Views and other pay services on Comcast and AT&Ts network, then all of a sudden bandwidth is unlimited.
The bottom line is with more and more people watching less cable (and some unplugging altogether) their business model is being threatened. And somehow prices are going up but quality is going down. Ah the joys of monopolistic "competition."