Measuring Broadband America Report Released 160
AzTechGuy writes "Early this year I received one of the 'Whitebox' routers to test the speed of my ISP and compare it to the advertised speed. Today I received an email that they have released the first report with another report due at the end of the year. My results do not correspond with the results reflected in the report."
It appears that most ISPs are within 80% of their advertised speeds during peak hours with Verizon leading the pack mostly exceeding their advertised rates. Cablevision users, on the other hand, shouldn't expect more than half of the promised bandwidth (youch!).
Errr what? (Score:5, Insightful)
You mean a single data point doesn't follow the trend? Throw the study out! It must be crap!
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My results do not correspond with the results reflected in the report.
I have one of the monitoring boxes at home and my results (or at least my perceived experience) do match the results in the report. I am a Verizon (now Frontier) fiber customer. The service rocks.
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"Read this report. Did you read it? IT'S CRAP! DON'T WASTE YOUR TIME READING IT!"
On the other hand, he -could- have submitted it, knowing full well that slashdotters never read TFA. Maybe he figured if he didn't submit it, we might read it...
False advertising (Score:4, Insightful)
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They should make ISPs advertise minimum speeds, and not 'up to' speeds. So if you buy a 5mbit plan, you will definately get 5mbit at all times, if not more.
Of course I highly doubt many ISPs have the capacity to actually promise anything above dialup speeds at any given time.
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Actually, it should be cap/time. If you have a "100mbit" connection with a 5GB monthly cap, a listed speed above 1.9kbps is false advertising.
The 100mbit number might be listed as "burst speed", since it's what it is.
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Indeed. As are fuel consumption figures for cars with the throttle anything less than wide open.
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Fuel consumption figures are theoretically intended to give an idea of performance under typical use. Bandwidth numbers are just lies.
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Getting what's advertised AND getting more isn't false advertising.
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Pay for a dedicated line and you'll get a dedicated line just don't expect it to be as cheap as the non-dedicated lines.
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Pay for a dedicated line and you'll get a dedicated line just don't expect it to be as cheap as the non-dedicated lines.
Why not? FiOS is often cheaper than other services.
Yes, technically FiOS is shared bandwidth, just like at some point any "dedicated line" becomes shared with other connections. But, from your house to Verizon's central network, you'll never share with enough other users to not get your full speed, even if FiOS gets 100% uptake in the areas in which it is available.
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And thus Captain Obvious answers his own question. If you're on a shared circuit and nobody else is using it then it's effectively acting dedicated.
OK, I know it's hard to understand, but all bandwidth is shared at some point.
For example, if ISP A peers to ISP B at 10Gbps, then even if a line is "dedicated", the fastest a customer of ISP A can get data from ISP B is 10Gbps. If there are 200 ISP A users with "dedicated" 100Mbps lines and all of them try to pull content from servers on ISP B, then they will not be able to do it at their "dedicated" speed. But, ISP A never said their "dedicated" 100Mbps line would get you that speed to every site...just
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The statements "Verizon does not oversell FiOS" and "you won't all be able to get it right now [due to everyone in the neighborhood using more than the concentrator will provide]" are mutually exclusive, just in case you didn't realize that when you were typing it.
The point is that Verizon won't oversell. You can't get higher than 80Mbps in areas where they have not upgraded their hardware because they won't sell it to you. They won't sell it to you because it could cause contention, and they will not do that. In areas where the hardware is upgraded, they will sell higher speeds, but still only up to the speed that will not cause contention.
In other words, FiOS bandwith is guaranteed because Verizon won't sell you a higher speed than they can guarantee, and they b
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who are you getting a symmetric 5mbps for $250/month from? We are paying almost twice that. Is there any sort of SLA at that price?
He's getting it from somewhere that FiOS isn't available.
Seriously, if it wasn't for Verizon's decision to get into TV delivery (which has caused them no end of regulatory issues with local governments who have been bribed by cable companies), FiOS would now be so widespread that the days of paying more than $200/month for a business Internet connection would almost be at an end (unless you want something faster than 150/35).
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How can anyone guarantee a minimum speed? An ISP may be able to have such guarantees in their own network (where most stuff isn't), if they have full control over EVERYTHING.
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By varying the price [slashdot.org].
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As soon as the data leaves the providers own network, all guarantees are gone. The ISPs own uplink might be sufficient, but towards the endpoint there might be some congestion. It might just be that Comcast and Verizon have much better peering partners (with respect to the targets of the tests) than Cablevision. For example I live in a neighborhood where EVERYBODY (approx 4000 houses) has access to FttH (with only 1 plan: 100Mbps up and down), this provider (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edutel) has to have
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All of these sorts of terms are available as business connections. You will note that they cost considerably more, because their oversubscribe rate is lower.
Business Internet and home TV (Score:2)
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What if the limiting factor is something outside of the ISP's control ? Like, say, distance from the exchange or quality of internal wiring for ADSL ?
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Oh, they have the capacity. They just don't have the right pricing model. If there's a shortage of available bandwidth to your house, it's because the price is set below the going rate determined by supply and demand [wikipedia.org].
So all they have to do is raise the price during periods of high demand, until demand falls enough so that whoever's using the bandwidth is getting their full allotment.
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The words 'up to' and 'average' do not mean the same thing.
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I... I'm not really sure why I said it like it was a BAD thing. I'm e-mailing my congressman right now. No more using the words "up to" in ads, only real averages. Or else they behead you.
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Pretty much... from the FCC pdf, all of the cable ISPs pretty much delivered ~22mbps. But their marketing branded them as "20" , "25", or "30".
Interesting that the FiOS consistently delivered 110% - 115% of their marketed value. And that practically no one mentions latency, which is probably a bigger selling point, esp. with mobile networks.
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I would say that any company that was listed that never reached an average of their advertised speed should be taken to task for false advertising. Maybe dragged in front of the FTC, and possible legal action since it looks like most providers are never able to deliver their advertised speed.
*sigh* The knee-jerk "call the lawyers!" response never fails to find a taker, does it? And precisely what "false advertising" could you charge them with? Look carefully at the advertising *and* the actual end-user contract. You'll find no promises of any bandwidth anywhere. Quite the contrary, you'll find lots of "speeds up to XX" and "actual speeds may vary" language liberally peppered everywhere. This means precisely what it says: you *may* get speeds "up to" the advertised amount, but you may not.
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The problem is that it's dishonest and misleading if you never receive the stated bandwidth. If they're going to play that game, then why not just have everybody advertising as having up to 100 kagillion gigabits per second? The reason is that up to requires that at some point during the month you're receiving that connection or have a reasonable chance of receiving it. If they can't provide the connection of that speed then they're not really providing a connection that's up to that speed.
On a side note, I
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I did, and it's still bullshit. They're advertising a service which they have no intention of providing.
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False advertisement.
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There is no law against selling something to someone who is too stupid to take the time to understand what they're buying, nor should there be.
Sure there is. If you state things like "this tonic may cure cancer *note, there is no evidence it does, and no proof it doesn't" then you likely broke the law. If you say "this can can get 1000 mpg if you leave it in idle in neutral while coasting down Pikes Peak (actual measured results)" then you are possibly breaking the law. Factually true statements given to mislead are lies. Lies to separate others from money is fraud. Factual statements given with the sole purpose of misleading don't make a lie
Promised bandwidth? (Score:2, Insightful)
Cablevision users, on the other hand, shouldn't expect more than half of the promised bandwidth (youch!).
"Promised bandwidth"? I'm sure if you read the fine print on *any* residential broadband SLA, you'll find the ISP "promises" exactly *zero* bandwidth. Every contract I've ever seen says they promise speeds "up to" a certain amount but there is no lower limit to what they actually deliver. This is akin to the good old days of zero CIR frame relay where the provider had the right to discard up to 100% of your packets if network congestion became an issue. In return, you got rock-bottom pricing. I never saw
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False [slashdot.org].
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They protect bandwidth. AT&T protects bandwidth on U-Verse for phone calls and television signals. FIOS protects space on the line for the same reasons. I wouldn't be surprised if Comcast/TWC do it for their phone service.
"You are getting a 22 mbps line, we're just using 21.937 mbps for our stuff" - Your ISP
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AT&T protects bandwidth on U-Verse for phone calls and television signals. FIOS protects space on the line for the same reasons.
On FiOS, the TV and phone are carried on an entirely different part of the laser spectrum from the Internet, so if that's what you mean by "protects space", then you are correct.
But, it is physically impossible for Internet bandwidth to be reduced because of TV or phone use on FiOS, although they do "share" the overall fiber bandwidth. Since the total fiber bandwidth is on the order of gigabits per second, it's not like you'll ever be close to running out, even with 100Mbps Internet and watching 10 TV chan
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If it is zero, then you have a problem. During the downtimes, I check with my ISPs for the problems. Usually, they say it is known issues and give me credits for them.
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There is no question that cable companies oversell their capacity. However it's been my experience that a lot of users don't know what speed they are getting and because anything above 1mbps is fine for browsing and email they aren't sensitive to it. These users don't tweek their systems, nor do they call the cable company when they have dropped packets or other issues that could be addressed with a simple service call.
Bandwidth is not "promised", it's "up to" (Score:1)
Most consumer Internet does not promise any guaranteed rate or speed, only that it can peak "up to" a certain speed.
If you want guaranteed performance, you will probably have to pay for a business line, which is far more expensive.
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Business lines are far more expensive, but worth it if you actually want to get what is advertised.
Verizon generally only charges about 15-20% more for business service, but for the highest speeds it's even less (about 7%).
Ugh PDF (Score:2)
You know FCC could you please add hyperlinks to your PDF so I can easily go to the desired section?
Verizon Rates vs. Caps (Score:1)
Re:Verizon Rates vs. Caps (Score:5, Informative)
Verizon FIOS has no caps.
Only Verizon Wireless has caps.
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Nor does their DSL.
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good faith? (Score:5, Insightful)
I wonder how long this will last until a class action suit.
I think the ISPs are hiding behind the variables like distance to the tap and peak hours to not make a good faith effort to provide what they are advertising.
In many cases people pay for 3mbs but get 2mbs, then upgrade to the 6mbs plan and get 4mbs, which demonstrates the ISPs capability to have delivered the full 3mbs in the first place.
What a constant Mbps per MHz ratio might mean (Score:2)
In many cases people pay for 3mbs but get 2mbs, then upgrade to the 6mbs plan and get 4mbs, which demonstrates the ISPs capability to have delivered the full 3mbs in the first place.
Then perhaps what customers are paying for is a slice of spectrum x MHz wide, and the Mbps per MHz ratio depends on line conditions such that people living farther away will need to pay more for the same last mile service because it costs the telco more to provide the same last mile service.
Verizon is clearly misleading customers! (Score:1)
FIOS is dramatically outperforming even its impressive advertised speeds. This means that teenagers can infringe content and be lured by online predators that much faster! Quick, parents, sue Verizon for false advertising! You are getting too much (dangerous) bandwidth!
Cablevision/Optimum is Fine (Score:4, Informative)
Cablevision users, on the other hand, shouldn't expect more than half of the promised bandwidth
Hmm...Perhaps you may not hit the max advertised rate on Cablevision's Optimum service, but I can tell from experience that it is much faster than most other services. I have Time Warner Road Runner Turbo and I am paying $66/mo for it in Western NY. I MAX out @ 1.7 MBps sustained, with bursts up to 2.0 MBps (Yes, Mega BYTES, bot bits). But when I visit my friends who live in Eastern NY where Time Warner doesn't have a death gripping monopoly on the broadband market, they are paying far less per month for speeds that always exceed 2.0 MBps on STANDARD level service. Optimum Online Boost, which some do have, get in excess of 3.0 MBps.
So in my personal experience, Optimum wipes to floor with other ISPs. Especially because they have no enforced cap like Comcast or FIOS, and are faster than Time Warner and Cox based connections. Benchmarks and speed tests are fine, but my real world use will decide what ISP I look for when it comes time to buy a house somewhere else. I don't care if they only give me 1/10th of their advertised speed. As long as that speed is still faster than the competition for an equal or lesser price, which so far they have been delivering in my experience.
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Where in WNY are you?
I live in West Seneca and have 25/25 FIOS. It fucking rocks. FIOS does not have a cap either.
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There is too much wrong with Rochester to list. Lack of decent broadband is the second biggest local problem in the eastern suburbs though, behind only the upstate-wide property tax problem.
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Correct. It is in the Rochester general area. The only other options are Earthlink cable, but that runs over Time Warner copper anyway, and Frontier. And frontier is garbage in terms of support and overall speed (but so is all DSL). FIOS wanted to come into the area, but they were denied because Time Warner owns all the polls their copper is run on and won't rent the space out to anyone else. Basically Time Warner owns the broadband market up here for end user and business class connections. Frontier owns t
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Out here in Eastern Suffolk County(Eastern Long island, NY), customers get between 7 and 13 megabit/second out of the 15 megabit/second cap for regular Optimum Online. Customers that see less than that are having problems, and it is normally a routine service call to solve the problem. These speeds are based on speedtest.net.
In general, unless there is an excess of capacity(meaning few customers), people should not expect to see 100 percent of the advertised speed. Initial service offerings will ha
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I have Cablevison Boost Plus which gives me 52/8 Mbps. It is quite amazing actually.
You do have to keep an eye on Cablevision though. They don't spend a lot of time handholding customers so I believe that many are have various issues that prevent them from getting full speed on the service. Run speedtests and visit Broadband Reports support forums to find out how to get the most of your service.
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That most likely has more to do with there being less subscribers on an ADSL line than cable. Also, if you are hitting your max down speed advertised, you are most likely very close to a DSLAM, where people who are a few more kilometers out would not reach that maximum. Also, even if you are on the most current ADSL standard, your maximum theoretical downstream bandwidth still can't excceed 24 Mbit/s (w/ ADSL2+) which I doubt you even have since there are very few ADSL2+ services, especially in the US. And
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Wow, if that's all you're getting than why not downgrade to Road Runner basic? Couldn't be worse, right? Is your performance typical of others in the area?
I'm in a part of NC where the DSL options are awful (like MAX of 1mbps down 768kbps up), no Uverse, no FIOS, and Time Warner is the only show in town. I get solid ~9.5+mbps down/.9mbps up on a 10/1 connection (the cheapest RR tier).
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Ah, usually I see megabytes per second abbreviated mb/s rather than MBps, thus the confusion
I did miss that. So let me get this straight--you're complaining about ~16mbps connection? That's pretty fast...admittedly $66/month isn't that great, but pretty good compared to a lot of the country. I'm paying $35 for 10/1.
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Can you get Earthlink in your area? It runs on the same modem, same lines, etc. You even pay the bills to TWC still. By switching back and forth between Earthlink and TWC every 6 months to 1 year I have not had to pay more than $40 for cable in a long time. I am in an area with virtually no broadband competition either.
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The what now? FiOS doesn't have a cap. Either that or it's insanely high (believe me, I'd know). I got fed up with Optimum Offline silently capping in the first place, which is why I switched.
Why are these graphs not symmetric? (Score:3)
If these speeds are averages over several days, and we are looking at 24 hours of data, then why in the world does the right side of the graph not mirror the left side of the graph? Surely the speeds don't suddenly change at midnight?
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People with a dynamic IP address usually have it refresh at around midnight (unless you have it set so that your modem resets at a specific time). Until everyone's computers realise the new IP, it will interrupt downloads. Those on a static IP or who's IP doesn't refresh around midnight, will see increased speeds as contention decreases.
Remember USA Broadband is a low bar (Score:1)
For most countries with good broadband 100MBS up AND down is fairly standard.
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And in those countries, the government subsidizes the network. Here in the USA, the government is all about helping big oil and energy companies, and politicians are generally anti-technology, except for military technology.
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I HATE apples to oranges comparisons. Comparing the US to an unnamed —presumably small and high density — country is as silly as comparing a LAN connection to the one you get from your ISP and suggesting that the ISP is slow. Of course it is. They'd have to spend exponentially more to have it equal to your LAN, but they also have a lot more to overcome.
When you have population densities that are significantly higher, you make it significantly easier to provide higher quality service to more peop
Cablevision customer here... (Score:1)
Over the past year or so, I've noticed that my Steam downloads - which would usually cap out at 1.2MB/sec - have been topping out at around 330K/sec after I get home from work. Other people I know have had problems with video streams constantly buffering when watching live video. I've considered upgrading to their "Boost" service, to see if that would help, but if this graph is any indication, it won't matter one bit. I priced out Fios a few years ago, when they first rolled out in my area, but I think it m
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Go to speedtest.net and test your line, if you see less than 7Mbps down, call customer service to get your problem fixed. Any company WILL have problems with areas or individual customers, but if people don't call to report the problems, how is Cablevision supposed to know and test to find the source of the problem?
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Yes,
Easy for an ISP to game (Score:1)
Remeber too that ISPs route packets differently depending on the destination provider among other things. Anyone remember the debacle abo
Service improved after I hooked up my 'Whitebox' (Score:1)
I was also a participant in the study. My DSL service before the study was very poor. About a week and half after I received and connected my 'Whitebox' router my service got significantly better. You can see the performance was better (fewer dropped packets and higher substained bandwidth) in the personal graphs I received from Samknows after the first week and half. I have a feeling the my provider detected I was in the survey and made sure my traffic was prioritized.
Poor presentation (Score:2)
.
A box-whisker graph [wikipedia.org] would give a much better sense of how customers are faring.
Moreover, the tests weren't run blind. The ISPs provided data to the people running the study to help them disambiguate whether bot
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The Report mentions that data was made available also, so everyone should be able to make their own charts. All I could find so far were a couple of xls files which are not very helpful: http://www.fcc.gov/measuring-broadband-america/charts [fcc.gov]
I like to bash Comcast as much as the next guy but (Score:2)
I have to admit since I finally bit the bullet and went to their cable modem 20MB service, the thing virtually always test out at 31MB/s for looong periods of transfer, I have been quite happy. It's a little expensive, but it is fast, and (so far) consistently 30Mbps/5Mbps down and up - not just in short bursts (I was worried about that.)
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Around here Comcast is basically the same speed as Qwest is, the main difference is that they have that boosting technology that lets them borrow bandwidth from the loop when congestion is low.
Unfortunately, neither company is particularly interested in doing anything about it and Qwest has flat out stated that they won't be upgrading capacity in several Seattle neighborhoods leaving them with a connection of 1.5mbps max or comcast.
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AT&T Uverse sucks in San Diego (Score:2)
I ran/submitted Uverse to this FCC test almost a year ago, it was much faster then and we actually got speeds as advertised. Me thinks the ISPs might have a way to game these metrics. I mean, its the FCC,
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It sucks so bad... We now have the 18mbps (upgraded from 6 to 12, and now to 18) plan and I haven't gotten over 6mbps since upgrading. It is actually slower now than it was with the 6mbps plan.
If you're paying more for less, you're their dream customer. Why don't you switch back?
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Oh, bummer. Assuming you're sharing with other tenants, you've made sure they're not gumming up the works?
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LUS Fiber (Score:2)
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Sadly LUS rolled out fiber just a few months after I left Lafayette. And the substation they picked for initial rollout was where my apartment had been. Ah well. So jealous now that I have to deal w/ Comcast up here... All I hear is good things from my friends/family that are using LUSFiber back home.
Interesting that you say that it stays up in a power outage, as that was BellSouth and Cox's talking point about why the LUS system would be bad (Our systems run on copper, so they carry their own power, and st
I wonder (Score:2)
How long it took the ISP's to detect the boxes and set their throttle algorithms to ignore streams from them.
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Considering everyone I know who has FIOS is damn happy with it, I doubt it.
The service really is great. I left TWC for them and now due to the competition TWC has started offering reasonable (above 20Mbps) speeds. Too bad the service is not available everywhere.
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I have Verizon DSL and even that came in right at the spec'd rate whenever I ran a speed test. Of course it wasn't a bit over the rate, but I get what I pay for and am content with that for the time being.
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No, this corresponds to my experience. Verizon FIOS is a premier service. Really nothing bad to say about them.
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Once FIOS expands, I'm sure the network will get bogged down and speeds will drop to below advertising speed.
Even with 100% uptake, FiOS can provide 80/80 service to every customer. The limiting factor is the neighborhood concentrators, which are slowly being upgraded to move the limit to somewhere near 300Mbps per customer.
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My office had a DSL connection for years from Speakeasy that had been rock solid. we even upgraded it several years ago to 6mbps down/1.5mbps up. All of a sudden, about 10-12 months ago, the connection went to hell. After some VERY painful technical support calls, missed appointments etc, someone finally told us the distance from the CO was like 12,000 feet. Funny, it used to be 6,000 feet. They also claimed that 75ms pings to google/other internet sites were normal and 10% packet loss in pings wasn't that