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devnuller

join:2006-06-10
Cambridge, MA
Reviews:
·Comcast
·Charter

reply to JazzJRabbit

Re: 50mbps for 192 seconds?

said by JazzJRabbit:

From what I read Netflix HD streaming requires 8-10MBit bandwidth. So if throttling like this was implemented by US ISPs and you were on 20MB tier, then you'd be throttled even before you finished watching your movie.
You are confusing speed (20Mb per second) with usage (250,000M per month). This is a common mistake.


meh37

@verizon.net

said by devnuller:

said by JazzJRabbit:

From what I read Netflix HD streaming requires 8-10MBit bandwidth. So if throttling like this was implemented by US ISPs and you were on 20MB tier, then you'd be throttled even before you finished watching your movie.
You are confusing speed (20Mb per second) with usage (250,000M per month). This is a common mistake.
Speed + time = usage
Usage, of course, varies relative to how much time you spend "speeding". (Or were you just trying to be funny?)

devnuller

join:2006-06-10
Cambridge, MA
Reviews:
·Comcast
·Charter

1 edit

said by meh37 :

Speed + time = usage
Usage, of course, varies relative to how much time you spend "speeding". (Or were you just trying to be funny?)
I think it is actually a sum of instances around speed * time = usage. And no, I was trying to clarify a misconception.

JazzJRabbit

join:2003-09-27
Naperville, IL
Reviews:
·WOW Internet and..

reply to devnuller

said by devnuller:

said by JazzJRabbit:

From what I read Netflix HD streaming requires 8-10MBit bandwidth. So if throttling like this was implemented by US ISPs and you were on 20MB tier, then you'd be throttled even before you finished watching your movie.
You are confusing speed (20Mb per second) with usage (250,000M per month). This is a common mistake.
I'm assuming you're talking about comcast since you mentioned 250GB cap.

I said if US ISPs followed Virgin throttling approach then you would be throttled before you could even watch one HD movie from netflix.


meh37

@verizon.net

reply to devnuller
Well, regardless, users seldom attain the rated speed, so using the rated speed to "compute" usage is always a best case scenario (or worst case if you have ridiculously low caps). Of course, if ISPs simply performed the function for which customers contract with them--namely, providing access to the Internet; then those customers wouldn't have to deal with stupid issues caused by greedy ISPs.


beaups

join:2003-08-11
Hilliard, OH

reply to JazzJRabbit
Jazz that is absolutely BS


beaups

join:2003-08-11
Hilliard, OH

reply to JazzJRabbit
And not to mention the article states they are moving AWAY from the throttling system and just going after bittorrent specifically....


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