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 sweintzPremium join:2002-03-01 Chester, CT | reply to Hall
Re: and 100% of this survey is stupid said by Hall: Consumer-grade networks are designed and more importantly, sold, based on every customer NOT being a bandwidth hog. Exactly the problem, IMO.
If every customer used 100% of their service 24/7/365, we wouldn't be paying $20/month for DSL or $40/month for cable.
Initially, no. And I would have no issue with that. I spend $150 a month for my broadband connection at home for "business class" service, which still sucks performance wise, because at the edge, it shares the network with the consumer customers.
It's no different than the dial-up days when there was a 20-25% rule on number of incoming phone lines vs number of customers. No, it IS different, beacuse people didn't leave dial up connections up all the time. Broadband, on the otherhand, IS left up all the time by most people. | |  NormanSPremium,MVM join:2001-02-14 San Jose, CA kudos:4 Reviews:
·SONIC.NET
·Pacific Bell - SBC
| said by sweintz:No, it IS different, beacuse people didn't leave dial up connections up all the time. Broadband, on the otherhand, IS left up all the time by most people. That doesn't mean that it is used all of that time that it is left up. I am rarely actually accessing anything on the Internet more than a couple of hours a day. Who has time to access the Internet 24/7/365? You have to eat, sleep, and procreate! -- Norman ~Oh Lord, why have you come ~To Konnyu, with the Lion and the Drum | |  HallPremium,MVM join:2000-04-28 Dayton, OH kudos:1 | reply to sweintz said by sweintz: If every customer used 100% of their service 24/7/365, we wouldn't be paying $20/month for DSL or $40/month for cable. Initially, no. And I would have no issue with that. I got DSL not long after it first became available in my area. $50/mo was the low-end price and I wouldn't do it... Mindspring ran a promo for $40/mo and I jumped. I paid $40-50 for years and understood that early adopters pay more. Now I pay $17.99 for 2x the speed I had then.
It's no different than the dial-up days when there was a 20-25% rule on number of incoming phone lines vs number of customers. No, it IS different, beacuse people didn't leave dial up connections up all the time. Broadband, on the otherhand, IS left up all the time by most people. You took my analogy to literally. I was referring to the concept of what some call "oversubscribing". Fact is, I used a local ISP for a number of years and I was online daily, numerous times a day. In 3-4 years time, I honestly could count on one hand the number of times I got a busy signal. They used the 25% rule and it obviously worked excellent for them. -- This is my .sig. I like it bold. | |
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