 funchordsHelloPremium,MVM join:2001-03-11 Yarmouth Port, MA kudos:5 1 edit | reply to amigo_boy
Re: i'll answer both said by amigo_boy:Consider your land line. They advertise that you can pick up the phone and get a dial tone. I've never seen such an advertisement. What I have seen are instructions to wait for a dial tone. But your argument is poorly applied to the idea of whether or not something has an arbitrarily fixed limit at the same time that it is being advertised as unlimited.
The number of trunk lines to the next town is a physical capacity based on the configuration of a telephone switch. 2.4 Mbps is a physical capacity based on the technology. 5 GB/mo. is not a physical capacity, it is a policy -- a limit imposed upon a service advertised in huge capital letters as UNLIMITED.
said by amigo_boy:IMO, those complaining about caps are like the kid doing 90 on a 40mph surface street. They're just arguing technicalities that are irrelevant to the majority, average user. Even if we were talking a 250 GB cap, a 250 GB cap is not unlimited. But add to that we're talking about a 5 GB cap on a Broadband carrier. That's just a few hours of Netflix streaming (non-HD) a month. That's less than one DVD in the Fedora set.
(It's still probably 14 kajillion emails.) 
Comcast had been trying to erase its history of advertising "unlimited" service (while keeping secret the fact that it was limited). Cricket doesn't even have that defense. It is actively advertising UNLIMITED.
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