So ISP commercial the other day, was promoting Xfinity from Comcast.
They said that Centruy Link's going speed right now was at about 57 MBPS or so, in the 50s range.
Then Xfinity said that it's high-speed internet was going for several times that, and showed what I remember was 300 MBPS. I spit my drink out and laughed, there's no way common civilian accessible internet of that speed could be available, I've not heard of anyone before that had anything above 100 even.
Fill me in here guys.
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I get about 6Mbps down and 0.3mbps up. It's alright, I can still watch youtube in HD. Netflix works fine and gaming doesn't suffer much because of it. When we finally move into an area with fibre-optics then it will be fun >:D Our ISP screwed us over for months and we were getting 0.01mbps up and down for no apparent reason whilst they charged us for 8 / 1. When they finally fixed it we got unlimited and decent speeds again. I have made them pay for it every day up until fairly recently. >:D Hmmm 40GB download? Why not. *delete* Redownload *delete* Rinse and Repeat.
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5 回复of course it's available, it's just very expensive. you've obviously never heard of google fiber.
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3 回复ISP's are assholes. They could easily speed up our internet and it wouldn't cost them shit. Internet is not finite. Luckily, Google is about to wreck everyone's shit from here to Argentina.
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Well most people are idiots and think that the number they see on the screen is the number they'll get. Every advert I've seen says you [b]COULD[/b] get [b]UP TO[/b] x speed but people just ignore those words and focus on the big number they're going to pay £30 a month for. And then they complain it's the company's fault when they don't get those speeds. Under ideal conditions you could get the sorts of speeds advertised but a lot of people won't get then because of factors out of the ISP's control, like the condition of the tech.
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9 回复由dazarobbo编辑: 3/30/2014 6:15:09 AMThey're typically theoretical maximums ("[u][b]up to[/b][/u] x Mbps") and/or very likely do not take into consideration the quality (degradation of the line) from the last mile (this is a thing, look it up), demarcation point, and customer's equipment. Edit: ISPs can't really place guarantees on the connection anyway (more-so ADSL - think about what the name means) since it's highly dependent upon factors outside of their own control (ie. transcontinental cables, server throughput, server bandwidth, etc...).
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5 回复I ran X-finitity through Oolka at a friends house about 4 times to check the results and only pulled a 15. At my house I run Century and I pull a steady 37.76, so uh. [i]No.[/i]
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2 回复[url=http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/tech/webguide/internetlife/2007-07-19-swedish-woman-fast-internet_N.htm?csp=15]Yeah. . .[/url]
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