
Comcast’s plan:
Customers’ accounts must exceed a certain percentage of their upstream or downstream (both currently set at 70%) bandwidth for longer than a certain period of time, currently set at fifteen minutes.
A significant amount of normal Internet usage by our customers does not last that long. For example, most downloads would have completed within that time, and the majority of streaming and downloading will not exceed the threshold to be eligible for congestion management. And the majority of longer-running applications, such as VoIP, video conferencing, and streaming video content (including HD streaming on most sites) will not exceed these thresholds either.
I still think it sucks. It’s about time that Comcast built up their networks to a specification that allows not only for present usage but near future usage too. More and more data of all kinds is going to be transmitted via the Internet, much of which isn’t illegal P2P either.
I watch video, stream audio (internet radio stream). Comcast wants to dissuade its users from these kind of activities as they want subscribers to sped huge amounts of money on ever more premium rate TV channels.
With ISPs with an attitude like Comcast, it’s no wonder the US is 16 or 17th in the world league table for Internet speed and reliability.
Tags: audio internet, comcast, congestion management, fifteen minutes, hd, internet radio, internet speed, internet usage, isps, p2p, period of time, plan customers, premium rate, radio stream, threshold, thresholds, tv channels, video conferencing, video content, video stream

Well it’s always been one of my mottos if you like. No use crying over spilt milk. Try and learn from your mistakes and move on. Take a little time to look at yourself however, when things don’t go quite right. It’s not always all the other person’s fault! Sometimes, even if it is, a little diplomatic shuffling can work wonders.
Having a partner or buddy, that you can vent to can work wonders too. Let it all out, and you’ll feel better afterwards, as long as you can talk to them in confidence of course.
Writing this, on an extremely pleasant Sunday afternoon, one is reminded there is a lot to be thankful for. The glass is half full not half empty.
I’m looking at the window at a beautiful sunny day, a deep blue sky, and the temperature is hovering around 70F.
I’m also indulging, in a superb local beer, Charleston’s very own Palmetto Pale Ale. I can smell the beef that is roasting in the oven, along with the potatoes.
Aah bliss.
Then, I look at the blog statistics here. More readers taking an RSS feed; more readers dropping by – over 2,500 a month now, which, while not in the top echelons of anything is certainly going in the right direction. Advertising revenues are up too. I know, it’s such a dirty word in some quarters, but it helps keep the whole shebang – not just my blog – reasonably free. I feel this is important as I’ve been only long enough - over twenty years now – to know how expensive it COULD be.
When I first got online in 1986, I had to make long distance dial-up calls to get a connection at 300bps, and I had to pay a penny a page for most information then, and some was 4 or 5 pennies. My phone bill alone was around $200 a month just for the net. I am not exaggerating.
So you see, I really do appreciate that it’s way way cheaper now, even though, I join in the mutterings about how the USA is 24th in the league table for internet speed and reliability, and the service is expensive.
So, although it could, should, and surely will get much faster and more reliable, in truth, to use a few words from British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan’s 1957 speech, “we’ve never had it so good”.
Tags: 5 pennies, advertising revenues, bliss, british prime minister, conservative, crying over spilt milk, deep blue sky, dirty word, echelons, economy, going in the right direction, harold macmillan, inflation, internet speed, little time, long distance dial, mottos, mutterings, pale ale, potatoes, quarters, sunday afternoon, sunny day, tory, twenty years, whole shebang