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IM1811

join:2001-08-20
Haverstraw, NY

3 edits

reply to Bobcat

Re: 8 GB per day

That's the problem. Uninformed comments like this.
My typical "day" at home may include 1-4 full length movie downloads via Roku and\or Xbox360. Possibly a game or 2 downloaded on the 360, as well as a couple of South Park HD episodes. I also LOVE my ITUNES, try to back-up my files on a regular basis, and I may watch a little Megarotic from time to time.


Matt
All noise, no signal.
Premium
join:2003-07-20
Jamestown, NC
kudos:12

1 edit

said by IM1811:

That's the problem. Uninformed comments like this.
My typical "day" at home may include 1-4 full length movie downloads via Roku and\or Xbox360. Possibly a game or 2 downloaded on the 360, as well as a couple of South Park HD episodes. I also LOVE my ITUNES, try to back-up my files on a regular basis, and I may watch a little Megarotic from time to time.
Do me a favor, think before you post.
You are not an average user and that is who Comcast is targeting. They are painting with as large a brush as they can. In this case, 250GB covers most of the canvas.

You may be an average user in 5-10 years, but right now you're not.
--
Linux Haters Unite!


ThrowDemsOut
If you can't convince 'em, confuse 'em
Premium
join:2002-03-03
Mullica Hill, NJ
kudos:4

1 edit

reply to IM1811

said by IM1811:

That's the problem. Uninformed comments like this.
My typical "day" at home may include 1-4 full length movie downloads via Roku and\or Xbox360. Possibly a game or 2 downloaded on the 360, as well as a couple of South Park HD episodes. I also LOVE my ITUNES, try to back-up my files on a regular basis, and I may watch a little Megarotic from time to time.
And how do you find time to watch everything you are downloading?
--
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funchords
Hello
Premium,MVM
join:2001-03-11
Yarmouth Port, MA
kudos:5

reply to Matt

said by Matt:

You are not an average user and that is who Comcast is targeting. They are painting with as large a brush as they can. In this case, 250GB covers most of the canvas.

You may be an average user in 5-10 years, but right now you're not.
5-10 years is a concern to me. Typical user bandwidth consumption tends to double every 24 months or so. A static bandwidth cap is a cap on our future.
--
Robb Topolski -= funchords.com =- Hillsboro, Oregon
More features, more fun, Join BroadbandReports.com, it's free...


Matt
All noise, no signal.
Premium
join:2003-07-20
Jamestown, NC
kudos:12

said by funchords:

said by Matt:

You are not an average user and that is who Comcast is targeting. They are painting with as large a brush as they can. In this case, 250GB covers most of the canvas.

You may be an average user in 5-10 years, but right now you're not.
5-10 years is a concern to me. Typical user bandwidth consumption tends to double every 24 months or so. A static bandwidth cap is a cap on our future.
Which is why I advocate the review and increase of caps yearly. I've stated as much numerous times. I don't like caps, but I think 250GB is very generous at the moment. There must be controls in place for yearly reviews and FREE increases however. So far the Cable Co's have been good about free speed increases, so I (maybe naively) believe they will extend that practice to monthly caps as well.

I was referring to the amount of usage the OP stated as well as the type. An average user doesn't download 1-4 movies a day, along with 1-2 games, much less all the other stuff he mentions. There simply aren't enough hours in the day for a single individual to download and watch/play all that content PER DAY. A family? Sure, but in the context of the OPs post, he is not an average user if he downloads that much (legal) content per day.
--
Linux Haters Unite!


funchords
Hello
Premium,MVM
join:2001-03-11
Yarmouth Port, MA
kudos:5

1 edit

(MattE, I think you and I agree more than disagree.)

said by Matt:

An average user doesn't download 1-4 movies a day, along with 1-2 games, much less all the other stuff he mentions. There simply aren't enough hours in the day for a single individual to download and watch/play all that content PER DAY. A family? Sure, but in the context of the OPs post, he is not an average user if he downloads that much (legal) content per day.
We have a medium for the "average user," and its television. TV is a neatly packaged, inoffensive information medium intended for Mr. and Mrs. John Q. Public.

The Internet, on the other hand, is an open system where each individual decides what they want to read, say, or do.

Taking the Internet and packaging it so that only serves the average "surfer" is a disservice to leadership and innovation. It's not the Internet if it prefers X over Y, otherwise Y could never gain enough market share to win over X. This MUST remain true no matter how great X is or how bad Y is. The users, not the ISP, must decide. Otherwise, it's simply not the Internet.
--
Robb Topolski -= funchords.com =- Hillsboro, Oregon
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Bobcat
Premium
join:2001-02-04
Reviews:
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1 edit

reply to IM1811

said by IM1811:

That's the problem. Uninformed comments like this.
My typical "day" at home may include 1-4 full length movie downloads via Roku and\or Xbox360. Possibly a game or 2 downloaded on the 360, as well as a couple of South Park HD episodes. I also LOVE my ITUNES, try to back-up my files on a regular basis, and I may watch a little Megarotic from time to time.
Then it's obvious that Comcast does not meet your needs, and you should take your business elsewhere.

250 GB per month is more than adequate for the vast majority of Comcast's customers.


Matt
All noise, no signal.
Premium
join:2003-07-20
Jamestown, NC
kudos:12

1 edit

reply to ThrowDemsOut

said by ThrowDemsOut:

said by IM1811:

That's the problem. Uninformed comments like this.
My typical "day" at home may include 1-4 full length movie downloads via Roku and\or Xbox360. Possibly a game or 2 downloaded on the 360, as well as a couple of South Park HD episodes. I also LOVE my ITUNES, try to back-up my files on a regular basis, and I may watch a little Megarotic from time to time.
And how do you find time to watch everything you are downloading?
This is not directed at the OP, but he reminds me of several old friends of mine. They would simply download anything they could get a hold of, whether they were going to use it or not, and simply burn it off to DVD, "Just in case." Movies, apps, games, porn ... literally anything. They would keep their connections maxed out 24x7 and they (legally or illegally) only used 1% of what they downloaded. I really think they are just modern day kleptomaniacs.
--
Linux Haters Unite!


funchords
Hello
Premium,MVM
join:2001-03-11
Yarmouth Port, MA
kudos:5

said by Matt:

This is not directed at the OP, but he reminds me of several old friends of mine. They would simply download anything they could get a hold of, whether they were going to use it or not, and simply burn it off to DVD, "Just in case." Movies, apps, games, porn ... literally anything. They would keep their connections maxed out 24x7 and they (legally or illegally) only used 1% of what they downloaded. I really think they are just modern day kleptomaniacs.
I've observed this as well. I attribute it to hoarding, but your kleptomaniac thought actually fishtails nicely.

- Not wanted or needed for personal use or conversion (money), nor for retaliation or other malicious intent.
- Despite those factors, a sense of want before and fulfillment when accomplished.

I don't know if you're right, I'm right, or if it's a mish-mash of both, or something else.

Even though legitimate P2P use is on the rise, overall P2P use is dropping while web surfing and video streaming are increasing. iTunes is doing very well, as are full-episode TV sites. If legitimate availability of content is what is driving infringing P2P use downward, that would tend to suggest hoarding was the root cause over kleptomania.

Kleptos usually also have some other associated disorder (but who doesn't these days?)
--
Robb Topolski -= funchords.com =- Hillsboro, Oregon
More features, more fun, Join BroadbandReports.com, it's free...

patcat88

join:2002-04-05
Jamaica, NY
kudos:1

reply to Matt

Click for full size
compulsive hoarding egh?
said by Matt:

This is not directed at the OP, but he reminds me of several old friends of mine. They would simply download anything they could get a hold of, whether they were going to use it or not, and simply burn it off to DVD, "Just in case." Movies, apps, games, porn ... literally anything. They would keep their connections maxed out 24x7 and they (legally or illegally) only used 1% of what they downloaded. I really think they are just modern day kleptomaniacs.


wings10
I Am Legend
Premium
join:2004-06-09
South Elgin, IL
Reviews:
·AT&T DSL Service
·AT&T U-Verse
·Dish Network

1 edit

reply to IM1811

said by IM1811:

That's the problem. Uninformed comments like this.
My typical "day" at home may include 1-4 full length movie downloads via Roku and\or Xbox360. Possibly a game or 2 downloaded on the 360, as well as a couple of South Park HD episodes. I also LOVE my ITUNES, try to back-up my files on a regular basis, and I may watch a little Megarotic from time to time.
You need to get out more.
--
"The American Indians found out what happens when you don't control immigration."

NeoandGeo

join:2003-05-10
Harrison, TN

reply to IM1811
Your typical day is full of moron.


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