According to Hyman, "Bandwidth caps with fees piled on top are a lousy way to manage traffic." He goes on to accuse ISP’s of creating the false impression among consumers that “bandwidth is a scarce resource and that imposing caps and overage fees will relieve pressure on high-speed networks." Many high profile ISP’s have very publically come out against bandwidth caps as a method of controlling infrastructure costs, and almost all network experts seem to agree that the cost of delivering 1GB of data is around one cent, and falling at a rapid pace. "Wireline bandwidth is an almost unlimited resource due to advances in Internet architecture. Adding more capacity is easy.”
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NetflixSlamsISP Bandwidth Caps InThe WallStreetJournal
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NetflixSlamsISP Bandwidth Caps InThe WallStreetJournal
According to Hyman, "Bandwidth caps with fees piled on top are a lousy way to manage traffic." He goes on to accuse ISP’s of creating the false impression among consumers that “bandwidth is a scarce resource and that imposing caps and overage fees will relieve pressure on high-speed networks." Many high profile ISP’s have very publically come out against bandwidth caps as a method of controlling infrastructure costs, and almost all network experts seem to agree that the cost of delivering 1GB of data is around one cent, and falling at a rapid pace. "Wireline bandwidth is an almost unlimited resource due to advances in Internet architecture. Adding more capacity is easy.”Tags: None
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Originally posted by Tx Redneck View Posthttp://www.maximumpc.com/article/new...street_journal
According to Hyman, "Bandwidth caps with fees piled on top are a lousy way to manage traffic." He goes on to accuse ISP’s of creating the false impression among consumers that “bandwidth is a scarce resource and that imposing caps and overage fees will relieve pressure on high-speed networks." Many high profile ISP’s have very publically come out against bandwidth caps as a method of controlling infrastructure costs, and almost all network experts seem to agree that the cost of delivering 1GB of data is around one cent, and falling at a rapid pace. "Wireline bandwidth is an almost unlimited resource due to advances in Internet architecture. Adding more capacity is easy.”
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I've got a 1Gb cap a day on my net right now but I live outside the city. Pisses me off because I pay so much but then get capped.2004 Mustang GT: BBK shorty headers, BBK O/R X, Flowmaster catback, JLT cold air, Trickflow 75mm TB and Plenum, UD pulleys, upper and lower CA's, 3.73, SCT XCal 2 ---- SOLD
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I have FIOS Internet and I downloaded 1.3 Gig last month according to my router logs. I average about 1 Gig every month between Netflix HD streaming and periodic CPanel Home directory/My SQL backups for some of the sites I manage.
I've never been capped or received any notices. Well, as of yet.
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Originally posted by Tx Redneck View PostTim, did you mean 1.3TB?
Here's my router log for total data from June. This is just for the Premium QoS traffic I've designated for VOIP phone and video streaming traffic. Even with everything aggregated, I don't think I get near Terabyte levels.
DD-WRT (build 13064) June 2011 (Incoming: 138,375 MB / Outgoing: 3,519 MB)
135 Gigabytes downloaded over 30 days
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