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scottj1

join:2001-11-24
Claymont, DE

reply to b1gdr3

Re: whats this mean for current comcast pro customers

With regard to the comment "and you don't need more than 384 up, unless you are running some crappy game server" you are mistaken. There are remote administrative tasks that are done on some large networks that run slow at 384, and considerable better at 10MB plus. Perhaps you ahould re-evaluate before posting on things you may not understand.


b1gdr3
I Blame Your Mother

join:2001-07-28
York, PA

said by scottj1:
There are remote administrative tasks that are done on some large networks that run slow at 384, and considerable better at 10MB plus.
Better suited for a business line and not your residential line. Nuff said.
--
I wasn't born with enough middle fingers.


markinpa

join:2000-12-30
Doylestown, PA

RE: "Better suited for a business line and not your residential line. Nuff said."

No, not "nuff said". They have the infastructure and the means to deliver higher speeds than what they're offering. If we the CUSTOMERS, business or residential, have the willingness to PAY for it, so be it!

Some people like in homes that are large enough to be department stores, does that mean it SHOULD be a department store? No, it's still a home. So super high speeds should only be reserved for businesses? Why? Why can't that gap be bridged? Long gone SHOULD be the days when the little guy had dial up and the amazons of the world used T1-T3. Even the biggest companies cqan benefit from their customers having higher bandwidth.


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