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Comcast
On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 20:19:06 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 3/17/2018 7:33 PM, wrote: I have no doubt it is faster, I just wonder how that really helps unless you have a dozen people steaming movies at the same time. I can support 2 movie streams and browse at 10 meg. My net response doesn't really change in any noticeable way whether I have those streams going or not and it is not unlike my FIL's Comcast connection. For some reason the net seldom ever "snaps" here whether you are on Comcast or DSL. I was actually surprised because he brags about what his speed is supposed to be and he has a machine on W/10. (so Harry can't blame the CP/M machine I am supposed to be running) We must have some kind of choke point upstream somewhere. I know there is a speed bump at Giganews because a big download from them goes about the same speed whether I have one going or 3. If I am downloading music I will start 3 instances of Agent and get one going on each. Per song, it stays the same but I am getting 3 at a time. When Comcast came to our house about 3 years ago and updated all the gear the tech told me that it was part of a nationwide upgrade project, primarily to handle the new (at that time) Xfinity 1 services. He said they were starting on the east coast and west coast and expected to update all areas over the next couple of years. Maybe they haven't got to your neck of the woods yet. Apparently not. Considering the reputation they have here I am sure they will be bombarding us with ads once they do upgrade their physical plant. When they were patching up after Irma they did not upgrade anything that I saw. They just hung up the same old "hardline" that was laying in the road for 2 weeks, only replacing the section that got run over and over and over. One thing I noticed during the recent storms and power outages. There's a large, metal Comcast "box" not far from us that I believe houses distribution amplifiers. During the power outage Comcast had come by and hooked it up to a small Honda generator like the one I have. They put a chain through the generator handle and to a ring welded on the Comcast box so nobody would walk off with it. I assume that's why we still had cable service even though we didn't have power. When I went by it looking for coffee a Comcast/Xfinity truck was there and the guy was refueling the generator. That is pretty normal. Century link had a generator on our distribution box too. That is the flaw in the new technology that takes the luster off of my POTS line. They are not running on the central office "battery" these days. The central office is that box on the side of the road and the battery only lasts about 30 hours. There was a story on the news here about a guy who dragged a cord out from his generator and powered up the neighborhood. I imagine it would only have to be hooked up a few hours to get another day out of the battery. |
Comcast
On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 20:55:24 -0400, Alex wrote:
Our Comcast internet was out for a week. TV was fine. We used our 4G Hotspot until they arrived today I thought about getting an air card for my travel laptop and using that to feed a router when we were suddenly made Amish. I just don't think it happens often enough to justify the expense. We also have a fairly new Samsung smart phone that my wife replaced that would work I suppose. |
Comcast
On Saturday, 17 March 2018 21:19:12 UTC-3, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 3/17/2018 7:33 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 17:52:00 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/17/2018 5:07 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 16:43:18 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/17/2018 4:24 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 13:01:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: Apparently Comcast here had a promotion for providing a higher speed package. I wasn't aware of it because I have my Comcast bill paid automatically so I don't pay too much attention to their email announcements. My latest bill went up by $13 a month for the WiFi Internet. Didn't know you had to "opt out" of the speed upgrade. But, I think I'll keep it. My original service was the basic 25Mbs service which worked fine but I noticed a couple of weeks ago when I was comparing Comcast to the AT&T service that Comcast was much faster. So, I just did a speed test from my computer. Over 100Mbps download and 20Mbs upload. Worth an extra $13/mo I think. Only if you can actually exploit it to your advantage. Otherwise it is like owning a Lamborghini. You know it will do 180 but the speed limit is 55 or less everywhere you drive. It may make you feel better but you paid a lot for performance you will never use. I think the faster speed is primarily for having more devices on the system at the same time without it bogging down but I can see quite a difference with only 3 devices on it. My computer is connected via Ethernet cable to the modem so it's only two cell phones on the WiFi.. It's definitely faster browsing or looking up stuff via Google though. No delay at all opening a website. It just snaps. Mikey likes it. Like golf clubs, fishing lures and marital aids, if you think it works, it works ;-) The biggest complaint with Comcast here is reliability. Zero bps is still zero, no matter how fast they say it is when it is working. My board president called me yesterday to get an Email out to the board because Comcast was down. I asked her who did she think would get it? It turned out the DSL and 4G (phone) people. As previously mentioned we don't seem to have your Comcast problem up here. Even in the last two high wind snowstorms and power outages, the Comcast service was only out very briefly and I was able to watch TV powering it and the cable box with the generator. Maybe cables like cold, windy snowstorms instead of warm, 80 degree sunshine. :-) Our problem is Comcast refuses to upgrade the hardware. I am not sure if they are waiting for some new technology (all fiber or something) or they just know they have no real competition so screw you. As for speed, I don't have to "think" it's faster. I did several speed tests using different test providers. It *is* faster now, with the average download speed between 92 and 110 Mbps. It's noticeable on the computer that I use 90 percent of the time to connect to the Internet. I have no doubt it is faster, I just wonder how that really helps unless you have a dozen people steaming movies at the same time. I can support 2 movie streams and browse at 10 meg. My net response doesn't really change in any noticeable way whether I have those streams going or not and it is not unlike my FIL's Comcast connection. For some reason the net seldom ever "snaps" here whether you are on Comcast or DSL. I was actually surprised because he brags about what his speed is supposed to be and he has a machine on W/10. (so Harry can't blame the CP/M machine I am supposed to be running) We must have some kind of choke point upstream somewhere. I know there is a speed bump at Giganews because a big download from them goes about the same speed whether I have one going or 3. If I am downloading music I will start 3 instances of Agent and get one going on each. Per song, it stays the same but I am getting 3 at a time. When Comcast came to our house about 3 years ago and updated all the gear the tech told me that it was part of a nationwide upgrade project, primarily to handle the new (at that time) Xfinity 1 services. He said they were starting on the east coast and west coast and expected to update all areas over the next couple of years. Maybe they haven't got to your neck of the woods yet. One thing I noticed during the recent storms and power outages. There's a large, metal Comcast "box" not far from us that I believe houses distribution amplifiers. During the power outage Comcast had come by and hooked it up to a small Honda generator like the one I have. They put a chain through the generator handle and to a ring welded on the Comcast box so nobody would walk off with it. I assume that's why we still had cable service even though we didn't have power. When I went by it looking for coffee a Comcast/Xfinity truck was there and the guy was refueling the generator. I see you can get a metal bar shaped to attach to the plastic handle of the EU2000i generators. Protects against thieves sawing through the plastic carry handle. Saw a generator attached to a gray box on a lamppost up the street during our 2 and a half day power outage early January. Generator there seemed to be about the size of a 5000 watt model. |
Comcast
On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 20:11:45 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote:
On Saturday, 17 March 2018 21:19:12 UTC-3, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 3/17/2018 7:33 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 17:52:00 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/17/2018 5:07 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 16:43:18 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/17/2018 4:24 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 13:01:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: Apparently Comcast here had a promotion for providing a higher speed package. I wasn't aware of it because I have my Comcast bill paid automatically so I don't pay too much attention to their email announcements. My latest bill went up by $13 a month for the WiFi Internet. Didn't know you had to "opt out" of the speed upgrade. But, I think I'll keep it. My original service was the basic 25Mbs service which worked fine but I noticed a couple of weeks ago when I was comparing Comcast to the AT&T service that Comcast was much faster. So, I just did a speed test from my computer. Over 100Mbps download and 20Mbs upload. Worth an extra $13/mo I think. Only if you can actually exploit it to your advantage. Otherwise it is like owning a Lamborghini. You know it will do 180 but the speed limit is 55 or less everywhere you drive. It may make you feel better but you paid a lot for performance you will never use. I think the faster speed is primarily for having more devices on the system at the same time without it bogging down but I can see quite a difference with only 3 devices on it. My computer is connected via Ethernet cable to the modem so it's only two cell phones on the WiFi. It's definitely faster browsing or looking up stuff via Google though. No delay at all opening a website. It just snaps. Mikey likes it. Like golf clubs, fishing lures and marital aids, if you think it works, it works ;-) The biggest complaint with Comcast here is reliability. Zero bps is still zero, no matter how fast they say it is when it is working. My board president called me yesterday to get an Email out to the board because Comcast was down. I asked her who did she think would get it? It turned out the DSL and 4G (phone) people. As previously mentioned we don't seem to have your Comcast problem up here. Even in the last two high wind snowstorms and power outages, the Comcast service was only out very briefly and I was able to watch TV powering it and the cable box with the generator. Maybe cables like cold, windy snowstorms instead of warm, 80 degree sunshine. :-) Our problem is Comcast refuses to upgrade the hardware. I am not sure if they are waiting for some new technology (all fiber or something) or they just know they have no real competition so screw you. As for speed, I don't have to "think" it's faster. I did several speed tests using different test providers. It *is* faster now, with the average download speed between 92 and 110 Mbps. It's noticeable on the computer that I use 90 percent of the time to connect to the Internet. I have no doubt it is faster, I just wonder how that really helps unless you have a dozen people steaming movies at the same time. I can support 2 movie streams and browse at 10 meg. My net response doesn't really change in any noticeable way whether I have those streams going or not and it is not unlike my FIL's Comcast connection. For some reason the net seldom ever "snaps" here whether you are on Comcast or DSL. I was actually surprised because he brags about what his speed is supposed to be and he has a machine on W/10. (so Harry can't blame the CP/M machine I am supposed to be running) We must have some kind of choke point upstream somewhere. I know there is a speed bump at Giganews because a big download from them goes about the same speed whether I have one going or 3. If I am downloading music I will start 3 instances of Agent and get one going on each. Per song, it stays the same but I am getting 3 at a time. When Comcast came to our house about 3 years ago and updated all the gear the tech told me that it was part of a nationwide upgrade project, primarily to handle the new (at that time) Xfinity 1 services. He said they were starting on the east coast and west coast and expected to update all areas over the next couple of years. Maybe they haven't got to your neck of the woods yet. One thing I noticed during the recent storms and power outages. There's a large, metal Comcast "box" not far from us that I believe houses distribution amplifiers. During the power outage Comcast had come by and hooked it up to a small Honda generator like the one I have. They put a chain through the generator handle and to a ring welded on the Comcast box so nobody would walk off with it. I assume that's why we still had cable service even though we didn't have power. When I went by it looking for coffee a Comcast/Xfinity truck was there and the guy was refueling the generator. I see you can get a metal bar shaped to attach to the plastic handle of the EU2000i generators. Protects against thieves sawing through the plastic carry handle. Saw a generator attached to a gray box on a lamppost up the street during our 2 and a half day power outage early January. Generator there seemed to be about the size of a 5000 watt model. Those are a worthwhile investment. I use that with a cable attaching the generator to my RV when camping. |
Comcast
On 3/17/18 7:33 PM, wrote:
On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 17:52:00 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/17/2018 5:07 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 16:43:18 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/17/2018 4:24 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 13:01:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: Apparently Comcast here had a promotion for providing a higher speed package. I wasn't aware of it because I have my Comcast bill paid automatically so I don't pay too much attention to their email announcements. My latest bill went up by $13 a month for the WiFi Internet. Didn't know you had to "opt out" of the speed upgrade. But, I think I'll keep it. My original service was the basic 25Mbs service which worked fine but I noticed a couple of weeks ago when I was comparing Comcast to the AT&T service that Comcast was much faster. So, I just did a speed test from my computer. Over 100Mbps download and 20Mbs upload. Worth an extra $13/mo I think. Only if you can actually exploit it to your advantage. Otherwise it is like owning a Lamborghini. You know it will do 180 but the speed limit is 55 or less everywhere you drive. It may make you feel better but you paid a lot for performance you will never use. I think the faster speed is primarily for having more devices on the system at the same time without it bogging down but I can see quite a difference with only 3 devices on it. My computer is connected via Ethernet cable to the modem so it's only two cell phones on the WiFi. It's definitely faster browsing or looking up stuff via Google though. No delay at all opening a website. It just snaps. Mikey likes it. Like golf clubs, fishing lures and marital aids, if you think it works, it works ;-) The biggest complaint with Comcast here is reliability. Zero bps is still zero, no matter how fast they say it is when it is working. My board president called me yesterday to get an Email out to the board because Comcast was down. I asked her who did she think would get it? It turned out the DSL and 4G (phone) people. As previously mentioned we don't seem to have your Comcast problem up here. Even in the last two high wind snowstorms and power outages, the Comcast service was only out very briefly and I was able to watch TV powering it and the cable box with the generator. Maybe cables like cold, windy snowstorms instead of warm, 80 degree sunshine. :-) Our problem is Comcast refuses to upgrade the hardware. I am not sure if they are waiting for some new technology (all fiber or something) or they just know they have no real competition so screw you. As for speed, I don't have to "think" it's faster. I did several speed tests using different test providers. It *is* faster now, with the average download speed between 92 and 110 Mbps. It's noticeable on the computer that I use 90 percent of the time to connect to the Internet. I have no doubt it is faster, I just wonder how that really helps unless you have a dozen people steaming movies at the same time. I can support 2 movie streams and browse at 10 meg. My net response doesn't really change in any noticeable way whether I have those streams going or not and it is not unlike my FIL's Comcast connection. For some reason the net seldom ever "snaps" here whether you are on Comcast or DSL. I was actually surprised because he brags about what his speed is supposed to be and he has a machine on W/10. (so Harry can't blame the CP/M machine I am supposed to be running) We must have some kind of choke point upstream somewhere. I know there is a speed bump at Giganews because a big download from them goes about the same speed whether I have one going or 3. If I am downloading music I will start 3 instances of Agent and get one going on each. Per song, it stays the same but I am getting 3 at a time. You upgraded to CP/M? Congrats! There are "choke points" everywhere along the line on cable because cab;e internet is shared within a neighborhood. All ISPs use shared bandwidth, even fiber. |
Comcast
On Sun, 18 Mar 2018 08:22:38 -0400, John H.
wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 20:11:45 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote: I see you can get a metal bar shaped to attach to the plastic handle of the EU2000i generators. Protects against thieves sawing through the plastic carry handle. Saw a generator attached to a gray box on a lamppost up the street during our 2 and a half day power outage early January. Generator there seemed to be about the size of a 5000 watt model. Those are a worthwhile investment. I use that with a cable attaching the generator to my RV when camping. I suppose it all depends on the determination of the thief. If they are carrying a side grinder or a bolt cutter that will handle the lock or cable, they are taking the generator. I put a 5/8" eye bolt through the wall of the garage, double nutted on the inside to deter a thief but only because that was what I had handy. It is what FPL uses to hook guy wires to light poles. It does look impressive tho ;-) During Irma I had my generator chained to the gas pipe. That really did not seem like a good idea but it was all I had at the time. |
Comcast
On Sun, 18 Mar 2018 10:20:35 -0400, Keyser Soze
wrote: On 3/17/18 7:33 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 17:52:00 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/17/2018 5:07 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 16:43:18 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/17/2018 4:24 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 13:01:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: Apparently Comcast here had a promotion for providing a higher speed package. I wasn't aware of it because I have my Comcast bill paid automatically so I don't pay too much attention to their email announcements. My latest bill went up by $13 a month for the WiFi Internet. Didn't know you had to "opt out" of the speed upgrade. But, I think I'll keep it. My original service was the basic 25Mbs service which worked fine but I noticed a couple of weeks ago when I was comparing Comcast to the AT&T service that Comcast was much faster. So, I just did a speed test from my computer. Over 100Mbps download and 20Mbs upload. Worth an extra $13/mo I think. Only if you can actually exploit it to your advantage. Otherwise it is like owning a Lamborghini. You know it will do 180 but the speed limit is 55 or less everywhere you drive. It may make you feel better but you paid a lot for performance you will never use. I think the faster speed is primarily for having more devices on the system at the same time without it bogging down but I can see quite a difference with only 3 devices on it. My computer is connected via Ethernet cable to the modem so it's only two cell phones on the WiFi. It's definitely faster browsing or looking up stuff via Google though. No delay at all opening a website. It just snaps. Mikey likes it. Like golf clubs, fishing lures and marital aids, if you think it works, it works ;-) The biggest complaint with Comcast here is reliability. Zero bps is still zero, no matter how fast they say it is when it is working. My board president called me yesterday to get an Email out to the board because Comcast was down. I asked her who did she think would get it? It turned out the DSL and 4G (phone) people. As previously mentioned we don't seem to have your Comcast problem up here. Even in the last two high wind snowstorms and power outages, the Comcast service was only out very briefly and I was able to watch TV powering it and the cable box with the generator. Maybe cables like cold, windy snowstorms instead of warm, 80 degree sunshine. :-) Our problem is Comcast refuses to upgrade the hardware. I am not sure if they are waiting for some new technology (all fiber or something) or they just know they have no real competition so screw you. As for speed, I don't have to "think" it's faster. I did several speed tests using different test providers. It *is* faster now, with the average download speed between 92 and 110 Mbps. It's noticeable on the computer that I use 90 percent of the time to connect to the Internet. I have no doubt it is faster, I just wonder how that really helps unless you have a dozen people steaming movies at the same time. I can support 2 movie streams and browse at 10 meg. My net response doesn't really change in any noticeable way whether I have those streams going or not and it is not unlike my FIL's Comcast connection. For some reason the net seldom ever "snaps" here whether you are on Comcast or DSL. I was actually surprised because he brags about what his speed is supposed to be and he has a machine on W/10. (so Harry can't blame the CP/M machine I am supposed to be running) We must have some kind of choke point upstream somewhere. I know there is a speed bump at Giganews because a big download from them goes about the same speed whether I have one going or 3. If I am downloading music I will start 3 instances of Agent and get one going on each. Per song, it stays the same but I am getting 3 at a time. You upgraded to CP/M? Congrats! There are "choke points" everywhere along the line on cable because cab;e internet is shared within a neighborhood. All ISPs use shared bandwidth, even fiber. That is one advantage of DSL. You own that whole channel, all the way back to the fiber backbone so you usually get all you pay for, no matter how badly your neighbors are pounding the connection. Cable shares that channel with everyone on your node. (granted a much faster channel) Comcast is still running on copper here and once I get to the distribution box at the end of the street my DSL is fiber. It is all underground. Comcast is up on the pole suffering the slings and arrows of outrageous weather. Both still share that problem that they need to power the distribution boxes |
Comcast
On 3/18/18 11:49 AM, wrote:
On Sun, 18 Mar 2018 10:20:35 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 3/17/18 7:33 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 17:52:00 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/17/2018 5:07 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 16:43:18 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/17/2018 4:24 PM, wrote: On Sat, 17 Mar 2018 13:01:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: Apparently Comcast here had a promotion for providing a higher speed package. I wasn't aware of it because I have my Comcast bill paid automatically so I don't pay too much attention to their email announcements. My latest bill went up by $13 a month for the WiFi Internet. Didn't know you had to "opt out" of the speed upgrade. But, I think I'll keep it. My original service was the basic 25Mbs service which worked fine but I noticed a couple of weeks ago when I was comparing Comcast to the AT&T service that Comcast was much faster. So, I just did a speed test from my computer. Over 100Mbps download and 20Mbs upload. Worth an extra $13/mo I think. Only if you can actually exploit it to your advantage. Otherwise it is like owning a Lamborghini. You know it will do 180 but the speed limit is 55 or less everywhere you drive. It may make you feel better but you paid a lot for performance you will never use. I think the faster speed is primarily for having more devices on the system at the same time without it bogging down but I can see quite a difference with only 3 devices on it. My computer is connected via Ethernet cable to the modem so it's only two cell phones on the WiFi. It's definitely faster browsing or looking up stuff via Google though. No delay at all opening a website. It just snaps. Mikey likes it. Like golf clubs, fishing lures and marital aids, if you think it works, it works ;-) The biggest complaint with Comcast here is reliability. Zero bps is still zero, no matter how fast they say it is when it is working. My board president called me yesterday to get an Email out to the board because Comcast was down. I asked her who did she think would get it? It turned out the DSL and 4G (phone) people. As previously mentioned we don't seem to have your Comcast problem up here. Even in the last two high wind snowstorms and power outages, the Comcast service was only out very briefly and I was able to watch TV powering it and the cable box with the generator. Maybe cables like cold, windy snowstorms instead of warm, 80 degree sunshine. :-) Our problem is Comcast refuses to upgrade the hardware. I am not sure if they are waiting for some new technology (all fiber or something) or they just know they have no real competition so screw you. As for speed, I don't have to "think" it's faster. I did several speed tests using different test providers. It *is* faster now, with the average download speed between 92 and 110 Mbps. It's noticeable on the computer that I use 90 percent of the time to connect to the Internet. I have no doubt it is faster, I just wonder how that really helps unless you have a dozen people steaming movies at the same time. I can support 2 movie streams and browse at 10 meg. My net response doesn't really change in any noticeable way whether I have those streams going or not and it is not unlike my FIL's Comcast connection. For some reason the net seldom ever "snaps" here whether you are on Comcast or DSL. I was actually surprised because he brags about what his speed is supposed to be and he has a machine on W/10. (so Harry can't blame the CP/M machine I am supposed to be running) We must have some kind of choke point upstream somewhere. I know there is a speed bump at Giganews because a big download from them goes about the same speed whether I have one going or 3. If I am downloading music I will start 3 instances of Agent and get one going on each. Per song, it stays the same but I am getting 3 at a time. You upgraded to CP/M? Congrats! There are "choke points" everywhere along the line on cable because cab;e internet is shared within a neighborhood. All ISPs use shared bandwidth, even fiber. That is one advantage of DSL. You own that whole channel, all the way back to the fiber backbone so you usually get all you pay for, no matter how badly your neighbors are pounding the connection. Cable shares that channel with everyone on your node. (granted a much faster channel) Comcast is still running on copper here and once I get to the distribution box at the end of the street my DSL is fiber. It is all underground. Comcast is up on the pole suffering the slings and arrows of outrageous weather. Both still share that problem that they need to power the distribution boxes We have occasional Comcast outages. Nothing significant. |
Comcast
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