 | reply to fiberguy
Re: AT&T DSL for downloads, Comcast for gaming! said by fiberguy:said by k1ll3rdr4g0n:said by toddbs98:Your argument makes no sense what so ever because if the people upgraded to a business account with a higher cap they would still be running on the same crappy hybrid network and on the same oversold nodes. Actually, Comcast business is, supposedly, on another network. And with Comcast Business there is no cap. Where are you getting that it's no another network? It's the same network.. sorry.. Do you have different information? Please do share. |
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 fiberguyMy views are my own.Premium join:2005-05-20 kudos:3 1 edit | You've proven nothing by posting that 'in your face' chat.. sorry. 
Asking some $8 per hour chat representative a question, and getting a very VERY vague answer to a very vague question (which is much bigger to what we're talking about based on the question of what a separate network is) doesn't change things.
Just because there is a different set of IP addresses doesn't make it a "different network".. especially in the context of what we're talking about.
The "network" is the same and does not effect the available data on the node.. (you need to apply what you're talking about based on the CONTEXT of the thread, and not what you're defining as network)... Yes, business class runs on a different "network" than residential. However, both services still run through the same "pipes"..
I dunno, but if I were you, I'd not be seeking technical answers from a chat representative.. That's like trying to ask the person who rings you up at the supermarket how their entire delivery chain works. |
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 TzaleProud Libertarian ConservativePremium join:2004-01-06 NYC Metro | said by fiberguy:You've proven nothing by posting that 'in your face' chat.. sorry.  Asking some $8 per hour chat representative a question, and getting a very VERY vague answer to a very vague question (which is much bigger to what we're talking about based on the question of what a separate network is) doesn't change things. Just because there is a different set of IP addresses doesn't make it a "different network".. especially in the context of what we're talking about. The "network" is the same and does not effect the available data on the node.. (you need to apply what you're talking about based on the CONTEXT of the thread, and not what you're defining as network)... Yes, business class runs on a different "network" than residential. However, both services still run through the same "pipes".. I dunno, but if I were you, I'd not be seeking technical answers from a chat representative.. That's like trying to ask the person who rings you up at the supermarket how their entire delivery chain works. If it is running on a different 'network,' then it is running on a different frequency and thus the 'last mile bottleneck' should be less of a problem.. Of course, if Comcast has problems further upstream where the two networks are muxed together, then there is nothing that can fix it besides an upgrade to the backbones.
-Tzale -- They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety. -:- "I believe the very heart and soul of conservatism is libertarianism."~Ronald Reagan -:- www.freestateproject.org - LIVE LIBERTY |
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1 edit | reply to k1ll3rdr4g0n While I do not claim to know anything about Comcast's internet setup, the representative who gave you this information clearly has no concept of networking if they believe that having a static IP address means that it must be on a different network as clients who have dynamic IP addresses.
A mix of static and dynamic IP address allocations has nothing to do with whether a common network is being shared. |
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 | reply to fiberguy said by fiberguy:You've proven nothing by posting that 'in your face' chat.. sorry.  Asking some $8 per hour chat representative a question, and getting a very VERY vague answer to a very vague question (which is much bigger to what we're talking about based on the question of what a separate network is) doesn't change things. Just because there is a different set of IP addresses doesn't make it a "different network".. especially in the context of what we're talking about. The "network" is the same and does not effect the available data on the node.. (you need to apply what you're talking about based on the CONTEXT of the thread, and not what you're defining as network)... Yes, business class runs on a different "network" than residential. However, both services still run through the same "pipes".. I dunno, but if I were you, I'd not be seeking technical answers from a chat representative.. That's like trying to ask the person who rings you up at the supermarket how their entire delivery chain works. Your proof is where? I posted evidence to backup my statement and the most you can say is "your wrong because you didn't talk to the right person so therefore I'm right".
If you are going to make a claim, the least you can do is back it up, otherwise it is just a fallacy. |
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