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Forums » FCC Finally Realizes 200kbps is Not Broadband » No credit Karl?
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Strange, but I can dig it »
« New DEF is still pathetic  
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Steve
I'm a PC, so shut up
Consultant
join:2001-03-10
Yorba Linda, CA

reply to digitalfreak
Re: No credit Karl?

said by digitalfreak See Profile :

He craves attention.
Good thing you pointed that out or I might have missed this


digitalfreak

join:2005-12-09
49533

reply to Steve
said by Steve See Profile :

said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

Submitted this link and news item. But no tip credit?
Do you submit news because you want to be helpful, or because you want to be credited?
He craves attention.


Steve
I'm a PC, so shut up
Consultant
join:2001-03-10
Yorba Linda, CA

reply to TKJunkMail
said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

Submitted this link and news item. But no tip credit?
Do you submit news because you want to be helpful, or because you want to be credited?


wilbilt
Pronto Resurrected
Premium
join:2004-01-11
Oroville, CA


1 edit
reply to TKJunkMail
"ISPs will be required to report numbers of subscribers, and at the census-block level. Under the current methodology, ISPs report only the number of zip codes in which they have at least one subscriber, and they report numbers of lines nationwide. Now they'll have to report the number of subscribers in each census tract they serve, broken down by speed tier. The FCC decided to use census tracts because researchers may be able to use other demographic statistics collected by the U.S. Census, such as age and income level, to gain insight about what drives broadband penetration rates."

Great...so now an ISP will report that it has zero subscribers in an area (because they don't offer service there), and the FCC will announce that nobody subscribes in that area because they can't afford it.

The FCC should send out a simple questionnaire to every address in the country if they really want to find out the extent of broadband deployment.

Of course, they really don't want to know, so it will never happen.
--
We were taking a vote when the ground came up and hit us.

openbox9

join:2004-01-26
Alexandria, VA
·AT&T Southeast

reply to dvd536
Re: Satellite

You may have, but the majority (and don't kid yourself, the majority matters in marketing) didn't even know what upload meant 10 years ago. In fact, I'm willing to lay odds that a majority of people today truly don't have a concept of what upload means. Do not confuse the typical ISP customer (the ones that ISPs want as their customers) for the types that hang out in forums like this.


dvd536
as Mr. Pink as they come
Premium
join:2001-04-27
Phoenix, AZ

reply to openbox9
said by openbox9 See Profile :

Upload offerings will be tracked and the only way anyone will pay attention to them, is when enough consumers (not DSLR posters) start asking for increased upload capacity.
START??? We've been asking for more upload for 10+ years, only the providers aren't listening!
--
You can never be too rich, too thin or have too much Bandwidth

openbox9

join:2004-01-26
Alexandria, VA
reply to synic
Upload offerings will be tracked and the only way anyone will pay attention to them, is when enough consumers (not DSLR posters) start asking for increased upload capacity.


synic

join:2002-03-30
Reno, NV
·AT&T Yahoo

reply to TKJunkMail
said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

Also what hasn't changed is that the tiers are still based on download speeds.

Meaning 768/128 would be considered in the broadband tier.
That's seriously unfortunate. They need to rate upload speeds, as it's the only way to get anyone to pay attention to them.


TKJunkMail
Enjoy the sun
Premium
join:2002-03-03
Avalon, NJ
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·Comcast

reply to DV0407
said by DV0407 See Profile :

Well i guess the 256 tiers offered by Satellite isnt broadband anymore LMAO!!
Also what hasn't changed is that the tiers are still based on download speeds.

Meaning 768/128 would be considered in the broadband tier.
--
My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page

DV0407

join:2007-02-10
Orlando, FL
reply to TKJunkMail
Well i guess the 256 tiers offered by Satellite isnt broadband anymore LMAO!!


TKJunkMail
Enjoy the sun
Premium
join:2002-03-03
Avalon, NJ
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·Comcast


2 edits
No credit Karl?

Submitted this link and news item. But no tip credit?

Details of new methodology:
The FCC, as is typical, won't release the full text of the changes it adopted for a few weeks, but here's a rundown of major components described at Wednesday's meeting:

• 200Kbps speeds are no longer considered "broadband." Until this point, the FCC has considered any service that produces 200Kbps speeds in the upload or download direction to be "high speed." With Wednesday's vote, that methodology is no more. Now, 768Kbps, which is the entry-level speed offered by major DSL providers like Verizon, will be considered the low end of "basic broadband," a range that extends to under 1.5Mbps.
• Broadband service speeds will have to be reported both for uploads and downloads. Previously the FCC had six big categories of broadband speeds, and they effectively only tracked download speeds. Now the agency says it will require reporting on upload speeds. Pro-regulatory advocacy groups like Free Press say that's a necessary step in part because of particularly in light of Comcast's admitted throttling of peer-to-peer filesharing uploads.
• Upload and download speeds will have to be reported in a more specific way. At the moment, the broadband speeds most commonly offered by cable and telephone companies are lumped into two major categories: those between 200Kbps and 2.5Mbps, and those between 2.5 and 10Mbps. The FCC's new rules would require them to be broken down further, in an attempt to address charges that the current buckets have the potential to overstate the number of high-end subscriptions and understate the number of low-end subscriptions. Those new tiers will be: 1) 200 to 768Kbps ("first generation data"), 2) 768Kbps to 1.5Mbps ("basic broadband"), 3) 1.5-3Mbps, 4) 3-6Mbps, and 5) 6Mbps and above.
• ISPs will be required to report numbers of subscribers, and at the census-block level. Under the current methodology, ISPs report only the number of zip codes in which they have at least one subscriber, and they report numbers of lines nationwide. Now they'll have to report the number of subscribers in each census tract they serve, broken down by speed tier. The FCC decided to use census tracts because researchers may be able to use other demographic statistics collected by the U.S. Census, such as age and income level, to gain insight about what drives broadband penetration rates.
• ISPs will not have to report the prices they charge....yet. Democratic commissioners and liberal consumer advocacy groups had argued such a step is necessary in order to give consumers an idea of the value they're getting for their money--and to compare U.S. prices to those for comparable services abroad. Democratic Commissioner Michael Copps said on Wednesday that he continues to believe it's a "mistake" to omit that requirement, and Adelstein also voiced concern. But a majority of the commissioners opted to push that decision off until another time and gather more comments.
Forums » FCC Finally Realizes 200kbps is Not BroadbandStrange, but I can dig it »
« New DEF is still pathetic  


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