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The Internet United States Wireless Networking

The Truth About Faster Internet: It's Not Worth It (wsj.com) 253

Americans are spending ever more for blazing internet speeds, on the promise that faster is better. Is that really the case? For most people, the answer is no. From a report: The Wall Street Journal studied the internet use of 53 of our journalists across the country, over a period of months, in coordination with researchers at Princeton University and the University of Chicago. Our panelists used only a fraction of their available bandwidth to watch streaming services including Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and YouTube, even simultaneously. Quality didn't improve much with higher speeds. Picture clarity was about the same. Videos didn't launch quicker. Broadband providers such as Comcast, Charter and AT&T are marketing speeds in the range of 250, 500 or even 1,000 megabits a second, often promising that streaming-video bingers will benefit. "Fast speeds for all of your shows," declares one online ad from Comcast. But for a typical household, the benefits of paying for more than 100 megabits a second are marginal at best, according to the researchers. That means many households are paying a premium for services they don't need.

To gauge how much bandwidth, or speed capacity, households need, it helps to look at an extreme scenario. Our users spent an evening streaming up to seven services simultaneously, including on-demand services like Netflix and live-TV services like Sling TV. We monitored the results. Peter Loftus, one of our panelists, lives outside Philadelphia and is a Comcast customer with a speed package of 150 megabits a second. Peter's median usage over 35 viewing minutes was 6.9 Mbps, 5% of the capacity he pays for. For the portion when all seven of his streams were going at once, he averaged 8.1 Mbps. At one point, for one second, Peter reached 65% of his capacity. Did his video launch faster or play more smoothly? Not really. The researchers said that to the extent there were differences in video quality such as picture resolution or the time it took to launch a show, they were marginal.

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The Truth About Faster Internet: It's Not Worth It

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  • by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @09:58AM (#59105586)

    I'm not sure when WSJ started taking telecom monopoly money for astroturfing money, but I'm pretty sure they have no idea what they're talking about. The only time I ever have "unused bandwidth" is when I (and everyone in my neighborhood) am asleep. Otherwise I very much feel the ebb and tide of available bandwidth. I can see my (not 4k) HD netflix quality rise and fall as I sit there. I can watch my downloads slow down. My 11 year old has made it his hobby to test bandwidth 3-4 times a day, because he can't figure it out either.

    It's most noticeable when working from home. From screen share sessions to video conferences.

    Maybe "most americans" in their mind don't care about video streaming quality or still watch on standard def CRTs with rabbit ears, don't use the computer for anything other than amazon and social media, and never teleconference. But they're cherry picking a pretty unusual sample group, and aren't thinking about the future. At some point companies who are paying millions for expensive downtown offices, and inflated employee salaries are going to realize they could save a lot by embracing technology. And all WSJ will be doing here is slowing down the inevitable, and wasting shareholder profits to prop up an industry that doesn't deserve even the slightest love.

    • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @10:09AM (#59105636)
      The article is basically telling people to send a smaller check to Comcast every month, so I don't see how that fits your narrative.

      I can see why you're ticked about getting less-than-advertised speeds if it's not enough to meet your needs though.

      I wonder if people who pay extra for faster service get more when it's not the caps but backbone saturation kicking in? In a way it seems like they should, but making customers outbid each other just to get a fraction of what is advertised for the base service level is quite a racket.

      • by Adriax ( 746043 )

        Comcast and all the other big ones would love to not have to upgrade their core and just provide current speeds with their yearly price increases. So much easier to be complacent and do nothing but replace dead equipment and collect checks.
        The only reason they have to now is to compete with eachother. But if the cattle stop demanding more they can just sit back and enjoy profits.

      • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @10:29AM (#59105736)

        Probably because he doesn't understand just how internetworking works. His 4k stream is going to be variable bit rate, and (at 15mbit, ish) isn't going to consume anywhere near what his maximum data rate is. There are many things that will impact what his video quality ends up being. Like the article says, speeds above 100mbit are basically just a number for most people. The problem comes from ISPs misleading consumers like him about just how much bandwidth they need. I laugh my ass off at service reps who say that you need the fastest possible speed they offer for gaming, when that is (save for the moments where you're downloading, which aren't common) probably one of the least bandwidth intensive applications most people use.

        For many ISPs, when you pay extra for more bandwidth, all you're doing is paying more for the privilege of burning through your data cap faster, so that you have the privilege of paying even more later.

        Every time people come to me and ask what speed they need, they're usually shocked when my recommendation is often the bottom level tier when the ISP says the total opposite. After they switch, they don't run into problems unless they're using wireless and have shitty building acoustics and/or live in an apartment and are using the very crowded 2.4ghz spectrum.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The main advantage of a really fast connection is that they are very, very hard to saturate. Even with a heavy download session in progress, your Netflix will keep going at 4k and so will your interactive services like streaming games and video chat.

          You can't just add up the bandwidth for all those services to estimate the total needed either. You need a lot of overhead to keep them working well, especially interactive stuff. Traffic shaping helps but it's hard to write rules that work well, and way beyond

        • I laugh my ass off at service reps who say that you need the fastest possible speed they offer for gaming

          I have Comcast gigabit, and the ping for that (12ms) seems better than it was for my pre-gigabit service, also from Comcast.

          My logic here is that with a truly higher tier of service you are going to get better traffic prioritization, so probably for gamers getting a very high end connection would be helpful, in fact it would probably help them more than anyone.

    • That kinda depends on what type of connection you have... if you have to wait until everyone is in bed before you can get full speeds, odds are pretty good you have Cable (yay DOCSIS!).

      Out here in the boonies with my puny 24mbps DSL, my bandwidth isn't shared - when I want 24mbps, I get 24mbps (destination server notwithstanding, obviously.) The only real crimp in my case is activity in the house subnet(s - I actually have two - a QoS/semi-throttled one for IoT use, the other for people).

      • DSL bandwidth is shared, by which I mean oversubscribed usually in your neighborhood remote access point. But if you live in a rural area it probably is less of a problem.

        • We have little DSLAMs out here that tap into an inter-city fiber line, as opposed to a proper direct connection to a CO (the nearest actual CO is roughly 20-25 miles away from my driveway), which might also affect things.

          But yeah, I was too simplistic in a way - on a practical level, I live where there's 14 people per square mile? Pretty sure that It's just me and occasionally one other person (I work from home nearly full-time, the neighbor I refer to does so part-time) on that DSLAM most days.

      • I'm not really sure what you are talking about my DOCSIS modem runs just fine, I usually get a little over my 150 Mbps advertised speed. I have a separate physical lans because damn those HD security cameras can slow everything down. The only DSL available in my area tops out at 24 Mbps and most people on the service are lucky to get 16 Mbps I will say it is cheaper than my connection (more like 70% the price for a tenth of the speed).

    • by jon3k ( 691256 )

      Maybe "most americans" in their mind don't care about video streaming quality or still watch on standard def CRTs with rabbit ears, don't use the computer for anything other than amazon and social media, and never teleconference. But they're cherry picking a pretty unusual sample group, and aren't thinking about the future.

      While I certainly use my (gigabit fiber) connection to its fullest, I think I'm the outlier. I think it's safe to say that the "usual sample group" is the average american who really just uses it for some streaming video (Netflix, Amazon Prime, etc) and social media. Isn't that the normal, average use case? Other than maybe kids who are playing games (really low bandwidth, unless we're talking about streaming gaming services) while also watching Twitch? Maybe if you had three, four or more people, all w

      • Do you think most people are doing video teleconferencing from home, outside of telecommuters?

        Do video calls on Skype and FaceTime count as "video teleconferencing"? Does broadcasting on Twitch? Even if not, as motor fuel prices rise and more manual labor tasks become automated, I imagine we'll see more people become telecommuters over time. This needs upstream throughput and consistent latency, something that a lot of home Internet plans don't provide much of.

        • by jon3k ( 691256 )

          Do video calls on Skype and FaceTime count as "video teleconferencing"?

          That's a good point, I think as long as there are multiple participants, it is a "conference". I assume those are also in the low single digit Mb/s bandwidth, like WebEx. I'm sure a lot of people broadcast on Twitch, but as a percentage of average internet users, it's probably a tiny fraction of 1%. So I really don't think it qualifies as the "usual sample group". You also make a great point about upstream bandwidth, it is certainly very limited using cable/DSL. And I agree, we'll see more telecommuter

        • as motor fuel prices rise

          Looks at the 4 decade trend [zfacts.com], I'm not sure this claim is consistent with the data.

        • Yes, and when I was a Skype customer I never used the video part except once. The once was underwhelming to say the least. Not quality, just no one wants to be a talking head. Get enough of that with TV.

      • by I4ko ( 695382 )

        True. I telecommute and also watch 1080p netflix. I have a 5600Kbps connection (the netflix 1080p streams top at 5300Kbps) I can do either just fine, not both. 1080p Amazon prime struggles a bit, most of the time it needs 7800Kbps.

        So 15Mbps per person should do a household just fine. For 4k (which is a gimmick you don't see most of the time due to screen sizes and viewing distances) you would need 25Mbps per person (17Mbps for the streaming and 7 for other needs) indeed.

    • by Aereus ( 1042228 )

      This sounds more like your neighborhood node is oversubscribed than anything about your personal internet package.

    • Maybe "most americans" in their mind don't care about video streaming quality or still watch on standard def CRTs with rabbit ears, don't use the computer for anything other than amazon and social media, and never teleconference. But they're cherry picking a pretty unusual sample group, and aren't thinking about the future. At some point companies who are paying millions for expensive downtown offices, and inflated employee salaries are going to realize they could save a lot by embracing technology. And all WSJ will be doing here is slowing down the inevitable, and wasting shareholder profits to prop up an industry that doesn't deserve even the slightest love.

      No, there's nothing special about you, you're not an audiophile or videophile with some kind of super sophisticated taste, and CRTs are long gone for everybody but those who simply prefer it for whatever reason.

      Bandwidth tests are only useful for determining the capacity limits of your last mile connection, and nothing else. Your poor quality video can be explained by far too many things to list in the time I have, but you bandwidth capacity limit isn't one of them unless you're somewhere below 20mbps. I ca

      • DSL ISPs have a tendency to do both as they tend to hold deep rural monopolies and they don't care, so try running through a VPN.

        Not always... Out here in the sticks, the Sat providers are starting to loosen up on caps and lower pricing to the point where it's getting at least somewhat competitive to DSL (ViaSat is offering 100mbps w/ 150GB/mo semi-cap plans now, for the same price they used to charge for 25mbps/30GB plans.) For most rural folks, it's just fine (the farm kids can't play twitch-games, but otherwise it works just fine for browsing and movie-streaming - I've even done WebEx w/ VoIP over it... works like a 2-way radio.)

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

      This. It may come as a shock to this WSJ "journalist" but the internet is used for more than watching Netflix. Ask anyone who just bought a AAA title on steam if their internet is fast enough while they wait for hours for the download to complete.

      • Pretty sure there is an implicit "for most people", as there would be with any similar pronouncement. It's assumed, of course, that for _some people_ it's worth it. For most it isn't.
    • Maybe "most Americans" in their mind don't care about video streaming quality or still watch on standard def CRTs with rabbit ears, don't use the computer for anything other than amazon and social media, and never teleconference. But they're cherry picking a pretty unusual sample group...

      I humbly suggest you review what is usual and unusual. Their group, a bunch of non-techies watching Netflix, probably matches the vast majority of Americans. They can't tell the difference between a macroblock and a microbrew. People like you and I who even know what a bandwidth test is are the minority.

      To be specific, I think you're exactly right: the vast majority of Americans use their computers to watch Netflix, read Twitter/Instagram/Facebook, and never teleconference. At most they might Facetime on th

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @10:01AM (#59105604)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • So if I download 24/7, I need more time to watch or watch more than one thing at a time.

      If you live alone, you might not feel it. But you may start feeling it once two to four people in your household all try to stream at once.

    • Same for me, after upgrading from 40Mbit to 120Mbit the only major difference is downloading steam games, and that happens once or twice a month where the download time has gone down from 'many hours' to 'a few hours'. Still not something I would actively wait for though.

    • by cb88 ( 1410145 )
      Stupid spectrum only offers 200/12 here... it's nuts... it takes me ages to upload anything and video chat is barely passable.
      • 12 Mbps is more than enough for video chat. Your problem is elsewhere.

        • Re: I agree (Score:2, Interesting)

          by cb88 ( 1410145 )
          Disagree...try and video chat while uploading anything else on 10mb up, it needs to be 200/50 atleast... there should be restrictions on asymmetric connection link speed disparity.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I have 250Mb down and my laptop can't keep up. At least it can't with BitTorrent. Stuff that downloads sequentially over HTTPS etc. is fine but because BitTorrent sends random bits of the file it generates loads of random writes, and even with a Samsung SSD (a few years old now) the limit seems to be about 25MB/sec.

      Anything over about 10MB/sec random writes and the machine starts to slow down, with anything over 15 being unusable.

    • Why would I care of a huge speed if I can only use it for 1 week per month?

      Depends on your use case. If your only reason for a fat pipe is to download AAA games on Steam then that once a month major speed boost is ideal.

    • In my experience, 90%+ of people would do fine with a 20mbps account for personal use. And unless you've got a dozen devices all streaming Netflix, even a 80 or 100mbps broadband connection is more than enough.

    • I used to have 100/30Mbps (down/up) but decided to upgrade to 1Gbps because I am a full-time YouTube content creator and wanted faster uploads. Even at 30Mbps, uploading a multi-GB file can take a while.

      Did I get more speed?

      Yes... but.

      My downloads peak out at around 900Mbps but uploading to YouTube seems to be capped (perhaps by by YT) at around 40Mbps which means little has changed.

      Also, although some sites do deliver almost the maxmum download speeds, it seems that most of the time, the rest of the inter

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @10:01AM (#59105606)

    Sure for streaming (non 4k video) a slower connection works just fine.

    But if you factor in things like system updates for devices, and especially purchasing console games online, suddenly a faster connection is more and more valuable...

    Also as people shift to 4k streaming they will unknowingly value the higher data cap of a faster connection.

    I have a gigabit connection from Comcast and I wouldn't go lower, in large part because of a variety of updates I have to do regularly for programming tools.

    • Not to mention, even if you pay for a faster connection, there's no guarantee you'll get it.
    • by leonbev ( 111395 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @10:51AM (#59105838) Journal

      Yeah, the author of this article should have tried buying an XBox and tried downloading a few 50+ GB AAA game titles on it. Suddenly, saving $5 a month on that 100 MB Internet connection isn't going to seem like a good idea.

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        50 GB per 8 hours is 400,000 megabits per 28,800 seconds. So long as your download speed averages 15 Mbps or more, you can start the download, go to bed, and have the game ready next morning.

        • you can start the download, go to bed, and have the game ready next morning.

          The difference is, on gigabit internet I can start the game (or monstrous patch, far more common) download, go have dinner or a light snack., then play the game the same day...

    • I don't have a data cap and have only 150 Mbps connection it's fine for multiple TVs and a game console right up until a game wants to run an update. I'm not a gamer but my kids are always annoyed by game updates that take an hour or two to update and I don't think a gigabit connection would even help I'm not sure the service would allow it to download at that speed. I can download a gig of software on my pc in 10-15 minutes and I'm not entirely sure it's the connection keeping me from getting it faster.

    • Sure for streaming (non 4k video) a slower connection works just fine.

      But if you factor in things like system updates for devices, and especially purchasing console games online, suddenly a faster connection is more and more valuable...

      Wouldn't you say those issues are pretty infrequent? I don't mind managing my bandwidth a little if it saves me a little cash.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      I for one would like to be able to download a Linux distro DVD images instantaneously.

  • Before:
    "I need to log into work can everyone else stop using the internet for a couple of hours"

    After:
    "Keep on watching the movie or playing games online I need to log into work for a couple of hours"
  • by Software ( 179033 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @10:14AM (#59105654) Journal
    I get really annoyed having YouTube start every video on "360(Auto)" resolution when I have a 200 Mbps connection. If I wanted to see individual pixels, I would have stayed in 1998. Give me my 1080p or give me death!
  • by Cowclops ( 630818 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @10:14AM (#59105658)

    Why is "streaming video" the only thing they seem to care about? Are they saying that when I download a new ~100GB of steam its impossible for me to notice the difference between a 20 minute download and a 3 hour download? Internet speed may not affect all people in all scenarios, but downloading games, driver updates, torrents, whatever are all going to be NOTICEABLY faster on faster internet.

    Not just that, but also UPLOADING videos to youtube. My 400mbit download speed is fine for all the things the article mentions, but i'm limited to 25 mbit upload speed because of crappy docsis tehcnology. If we had Fios here i'd be able to get more like 800 mbit uploads (or at least, as fast as youtube will accept from a single client). If you want to share a video you just made, being able to go live with in 5 minutes beats taking 45 minutes.

    Back in the early days of cable internet peoples minds were blown by ~3mbit downloads because they were coming off of 56k dialup. Anything that asserts we don't need faster connection speeds will always prove to be hilariously wrong.

    • Are they saying that when I download a new ~100GB of steam its impossible for me to notice the difference between a 20 minute download and a 3 hour download?

      I'm pretty sure so. I concede that I didn't read the featured article because my current subscription package lacks The Wall Street Journal. But in general, analysts appear to assume that a large download of an operating system update or purchased game can happen overnight while the subscriber sleeps.

    • by Octorian ( 14086 )

      Why is "streaming video" the only thing they seem to care about?

      Because its a survey of WSJ journalists who don't actually use their home internet connection for anything else that actually consumes bandwidth, and its in Netflix's best interest to optimize what they need. So yeah, a sample group that's not representative of ANYONE here.

  • ... but when I renewed the contract, a faster speed (150mbps down, 5mbps up) was cheaper than the slower speed (75/5mbps). I'm quite willing to "get by" with 50mbps, but that download speed has an upload speed of only 1mbps. I need the 5mbps upload speed, as I use upload a lot (offsite backups). Why does the ISP offer the faster speed at the lower price? Is it like a drug dealer, trying to get me hooked on the faster speed perceptions? In the end, I'd prefer 50mbps down with a 10mbps up speed. But my
    • by cb88 ( 1410145 )
      Part of the problem is that DOCSIS 3.1 is still badly asymmetric... we won't get much resolution to this until DOCSIS 4.0 is released and implemented in a couple years hopefully.
  • by spywhere ( 824072 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @10:17AM (#59105670)
    I work from home over a VPN. My life gets better every time I increase my bandwidth.
    We're using "gigabit" Fios now, which is actually close to 900 Mbps in both directions, and it rocks. Even mundane tasks like sending or downloading a large file (we're buying a house) are SO much easier.

    When we started the house search, I told my wife "no fiber, no sale." She agreed instantly, since she and her mother can do anything they want online without me complaining that they're interrupting my work...
    • Your case illustrates the central problem with this article. They weren't seeing impacts because the services they are connecting to always throttle. You're measuring performance by how fast much more dedicated servers at work can send you data.

      I think the article is largely true in a fuzzy sense because services are dragging the system now. I'd personally prefer my Netflix to always send the whole show as fast as it can and in the maximum resolution and quality I can view (4K). That way, I'd have fewer tim

  • I logged into to Version just now. The numbers in this post are current as of 11:16 am on 8/20/2019.

    With no contract/term-agreement,I am currently paying $79.99/month for FiOS "Gigabit" connectivity. It is rated for up to 940/880 Mbps.

    For +$27, I can get connectivity rated for 400/400 Mbps.
    For +$17, I can get connectivity rated for 400/400 Mbps.
    For +$17, I can get connectivity rated for 150/150 Mbps.
    For +$7, I can get connectivity rated for 100/100 Mbps.
    For +7$, I can get connectivity rated for 75/75 Mbps.

  • Hello via symmetric 500 Mbps fiber. You bandwidth paupers make me sick.
  • by zoober ( 262430 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @10:21AM (#59105696)

    I own and run a small ISP in Southern California - and I can tell you Gig speeds low latency fixes an awful lot of stuff. Everything just works. Support calls go away, everyone is just happy..

  • Paywalled so I can't read the article but I have an RRD graph that, at least based on the summary, shows they're full of shit.

    Although I suppose the fact that I have an RRD graph makes me not "most people" :)

  • by jcdick1 ( 254644 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @10:26AM (#59105716)

    The faster speed service isn't necessarily a waste of money, because the higher tiers of service usually come with higher data caps, or no caps at all. And similar studies of use have shown that the number of "power users" blowing through their data caps is roughly doubling every year.

    • by smoot123 ( 1027084 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @12:12PM (#59106222)

      The faster speed service isn't necessarily a waste of money, because the higher tiers of service usually come with higher data caps, or no caps at all. And similar studies of use have shown that the number of "power users" blowing through their data caps is roughly doubling every year.

      Sure but the point of the article is that most people aren't power users. No kidding, if they were, we'd have to change the definition. And if you're not a power user, don't pay for a package that only a power user needs.

      I think this is a subset of the American mindset. I may need a SUV or pickup truck two or three times a year. Most days, TBH, a Smart Car would be just fine. And yet many Americans buy the ginormous SUV or truck anyway because bigger is better. And, to be less snarky, because people perceive downside of having a too small car every now and again as larger than the downside of driving a too big vehicle most the time.

  • Anyone that buys and plays digital editions of video games (whether it's on a PC or dedicated gaming console) knows how to appreciate having higher bandwidth. That gigabit connection means your game downloads in 10 minutes after you buy it instead of 100 minutes (compared to the "recommended" 100mbit connection). Stadia & xCloud are also going to stress bandwidth usage with 4K 60 FPS streams (video streaming services I believe are all 30 FPS based).
  • The problem isn't the speed of the broadband. The problem is the lack of proper infrastructure inside the house. Your effective speed is the speed of the slowest component. For most people, this is the wifi router which is A HUB which SHARES bandwidth across all devices.

    What do devices do that realize they have limited bandwidth? They downscale the transmission. If the entire house was wired for 10G full duplex Ethernet all devices were compatible, the results would be very different.

    This is a lack of educ

    • Most people have 802.11n or even 802.11ac WiFi routers. They are more than fast enough to stream a couple Netflix in parallel, unless you are way too far or if there is too much congestion.

      If you can connect your main TV to wired Ethernet (100 Mbps is more than enough, not even sure Smart TVs have GigE) that's of course more reliable and will offload your WiFi for other uses. There would be no benefit in using 10Gbps Ethernet at all. Your modem's Ethernet port is likely limited to 1 Gbps anyways. There is a

    • Oh, really? My single device is saturating my personal router so much that it can't reach the 25 Mb/s my ISP is providing?

    • For most people, this is the wifi router which is A HUB which SHARES bandwidth across all devices.

      Allow me to be pedantic and lecture a bit.

      A hub is a very specific term for a piece of network gear which no one has made since the late '90s. A hub is a half-duplex device where only one unit can be transmitting at a time (and that data is transmitted to all receivers). Network switches made hubs obsolete many, many years ago.

      Any router you buy today will behave like a switch: if you plug in two devices to different ports, they will be able to transmit simultaneously. Problem is, and you've got a point her

  • In the past few years I started monitoring my peak bandwidth used, which almost exclusively occurs when watching streaming video from Netflix. At the times I measured the number from the article (under 7Mbps) appears about right for 1080. We only have a single TV and otherwise maybe stream a bit of Youtube/etc. to our phones or laptops/desktops. Even then we're rarely doing more than one of any of those (TV/phone/laptop) at a time. On the occasions when I work from home Skype voice calls don't add signif

  • Netflix and some web browsing and email, then no, more bandwidth than most people have now isn't worth it.

    But computer usage models do change.

    For example, I have an Oculus Quest and I heard you can stream your PC VR games into it. I decided to give it a try, and quickly found out that my perfectly functional but a bit outdated 300 Mbps wifi router won't cut it for streaming VR inside my home.

    I bought a 5 Ghz 1.3 Gbps one, then I connected the PC via 1 Gbps Ethernet cable to it and with that, I could h
  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @10:43AM (#59105800)

    Browsing, where the page collects all its javascript, ads, trackers and whatnot from a dozen different sites are just as slow as before.

    The only differences I noticed with my 1Gig fiber are the movies and TV series I download with uTorrent, they only need seconds and that's with the VPN.
    I also now can download full Bluray discs instead of compressed Yts ones.

  • I pay for 25 Mb/s. My ISP (UVerse monopoly) can't deliver that with any consistency, so why the hell would I pay for more?

  • When you get a faster connection from your ISP, that's your last mile only. It does nothing to improve your ISP's peering, which is usually the bottleneck. It also does nothing to improve the servers your getting the content from and their connection. Any connection is only as fast as the slowest link and improving anything that's not the slowest link is wasted money.

  • ... if, and only if, my packets were given absolute priority over all others, over the entire internet :)
  • When higher speeds become typical it enables the creation of services that weren't feasible before and can now take advantage of them.

  • It sure is a good thing that the only thing people use the internet for is streaming video and not downloading software or operating system updates or backing up your files to a cloud server or any of the other fifty thousand things it could be used for. More speed might help in those scenarios, but since it's only streaming video, we're fine!

  • Ive seen 50 mbps easily become congested by various high bandwidth uses. this seems to be written by the big media companies which own a lot of the cable systems that want people to stream and pay for every viewing rather than to download and own permenantly movies and other things. If you are downloading, the speed benefit is indisputable. Your file is finished downloading much faster. Also pushing this is cable companies that don't want competition from municipal fiber which can provide gigabit speeds for

  • OTA transmissions have a regulated bandwidth. Everybody who cord-cuts instantly notices the quality improvement. Cable and satellite services have no such regulation; they'll give you 6 Mbps for sports, but talking heads get cut down until people complain. Actually, every show gets its bandwidth cut until people complain, then they go back up 5%. But Over-The-Air, saddled by ancient regulations, is always good.

    Your other source for high-quality video is at your local library, where Blu-Rays are free.

    Bu

  • My wife and I work from home on occasion - VPN & video/audio conferencing at times. In the evening we have as many as 3 "netflix" streams running on HD devices (TV, and iPads). While I'm sure we rarely use much of the 175Mb/s down from Comcast -- the one place I know get's exceed is UPLOAD !!!!

    I would love to pay less and move down to the "75" tier - but the Upload drops to 4Mb/s. I'm at 175/6 right now. If they had 75/6 I'd switch ! 6 really isn't enough.

    I've used LTE at times to get faster u

  • I don't get *that* much out of my higher speed. Would I trade my current 500/13-ish service for 100/50? In a heartbeat. Is my current 500/13-ish worth the $10/month more I spend over a 150/10-ish plan from my local effective monopoly? Yes, just barely, but enough yes that I pay it.

  • I recently moved into a new house and only one company was able to provide internet service, as the entire development area I'm in, is serviced only by Bell Canada Fibre. When I order my internet service, only three packages were available, 1.5 gbps, 1.0 gbps, 50 mbps, and the costs did not line up, making 1.5 gbps the only real option, as the 1.0 gbps was $10 cheaper / month and the 50 mbps was something crazy, I think $25 cheaper / month.

    They installed the service a few weeks ago, and I've been on the
  • As a semi-pro gamer, a single hitch at the wrong moment can spell catastrophe. And while I agree there is probably some optimal speed less than infinity at which everyone is happy, we're nowhere near that yet in terms of internet service, at least not in my neighborhood. I can't reliably stabilize an HD video stream during peak usage hours.
  • Download speeds are only half the story. Upstream bandwidth is important for many modern home applications (cameras, live streaming, etc). However, companies like Comcast severely limit your upstream bandwidth unless you pay for one of their upper tier services which still comes at a 10:1 or higher ratio.
  • Arguably a connection speed above 20 Mbps won't make much difference to video or audio streaming, unless you have to support multiple streams. But it does make a big difference if you're running your own file server.

    I have AT&T GigaFiber, with symmetric 1 Gbps speeds. When I remotely mount the disks connected to my home server, it's almost as responsive as being connected locally. For my work, it's worth every penny.

    I've also noticed a huge jump in the responsiveness of my security system when I remo

  • Which can make it worthwhile, if one finds they exceed the lower amount.

    But beyond that, yeah.... I agree.

  • Selling people on a number for which marginal changes no practical effect or selling them on price and service?

  • Asymmetric (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @01:42PM (#59106570) Homepage Journal

    Is our down fast enough now that we can start to move some bandwidth back to achieving a less-drastic asymmetric ratio?

    I'd take 150/150 over 250/50 any day. We're in the era now where people are uploading 4k videos from home. Getting more up to 10Mbps down so you can even /see/ quality video is a historical notion - one in which sacrificing symmetry was a necessary evil.

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