![]() |
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
---------- Post added at 12:07 ---------- Previous post was at 12:07 ---------- Quote:
---------- Post added at 12:18 ---------- Previous post was at 12:07 ---------- Quote:
No connection in existence has unlimited throughput. |
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
I think the ASA were very leniant, personally I think any product which has deliberate throttling of any kind should not be sellable as a unlimited product, if isp's want the label then they pay the price for it. But I am not the ASA and its not my decision to make. Quite how you comparing ip profiles and line speeds to deliberate brutal throttling of p2p I dont know. |
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Hope everyone had a pleasant Christmas BTW :) Best regards, |
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
|
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
|
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
We should end the pain now. You want to say you have an unlimited connection but the reality is it is limited with P2P traffic shaping. You can argue industry allows unlimited to be used in these cases but at the same time you have to admit your isp limits in one similar way to how virgin media limit their customers ;) Sky = The only truly unlimited in all areas broadband BT Option 2 = Unlimited data except....they limit the P2P data you can download for a large percentage of the week. So not really unlimited, but currently allowed to say it is unlimited by the advertising standards agency. So when you say you have an unlimited connection from BT, expect others to point out it is only unlimited in name, not unlimited in reality. |
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
The Plusnet offering is also unlimited with the advantage over Sky that there's prioritisation on your downlink to ensure that real time data (Video streaming, VOIP etc) is not adversely affected by other less critical data requested by users on your LAN. If it works as advertised, I believe this to be superior to a service with no prioritisation, but then I would as I've signed up for the product :) Cards on the table time, at the risk of driving the thread OT again - I think the concept of 'traffic management' is a good thing but the solutions used to date (i.e speed reductions no matter what's going on) are very poor. Despite what others have posted, I believe that there should be the concept xMb of streaming data is more important than xMb of download data as, for example, buffering and pausing while watching a film via Lovefilm is intrusive whereas taking a bit longer to download the latest Linux ISO(!!!) is not. The Internet, and each ISP's network, is a shared, contended, resource and ISP will (and should) continue to evolve stategies to ensure the best 'experience' for their customers. In time I'd expect (and applaud) wider use of prioritisation (aka QoS) to achieve this. |
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
It has been mentioned before that home routers can do the QoS on a users connection. As bpullen said, traffic management has been given a bad name due to how it has been used in the past although it can actually be useful. But plusnets own graphs showed that by paying more you could have P2P and other traffic with the same priority as lower paying customers gaming traffic, which blew their credibility/honesty out of the water. If they came along and said the traffic shaping is actually QoS and individual to each household, then fair enough. Otherwise its nothing more than telling customers we are limiting our unlimited product for your own good, so they don't seem so bad. Traffic shaping has its benefits on congested networks, so maybe Plusnet will be congested? ---------- Post added at 10:34 ---------- Previous post was at 10:26 ---------- Quote:
QoS is a good stop gap until then. ISP's will abuse it though by allowing you to pay more to have your traffic prioritised higher and net neutrality out the window. |
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
I can't help wondering if the problem is that we all want something extra special for as limited payment as we can get..and that's just not possible.It's not possible whatever the product or service we could be talking about.
The fact is if we want the best then we may have to just pay more.If we pick the cheapest option every time we are just in danger of over subscribing that particular system. And yes it could be argued that VM and others really shouldn't take on more subscribers than they can handle but in such a cut-throat business I thing we could be urinating in the wind to assume such a thing. Perhaps it's down to the advertising but I think at the end of the day a lot of people want something that just isn't feasible given that people's expectations keep outpacing the realities. Is there a danger that Plusnet will not be able to sustain this offer given that their customers will take them at their word? I suspect the answer is yes. |
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Yeah to be fair to plusnet if they keep to their word their product is probably now the best BTw based FTTC product and only 2nd to sky on paper.
Arguably it beats sky if you believe the priotisation is beneficial on a per connection basis. In practice I still think its a time will tell situation whether or not they get overwhelmed on bandwidth demands. Sky dont pay for their capacity the same way as plusnet do the maths are different and of course sky charge more for their product as well. Maggy and of course you are right, the broadband market has been trashed for a number of years probably from when talktalk first came on the scene, not eveyrone is as you say but probably a big chunk of the market people just look for the cheapest service, Proper regulation would go a long way to fixing some problems in the market, but as always the protection of profit is considered. We not all like that tho, some of us dont mind paying extra, but then some will jump on that and think we should be paying for leased lines if we dont want over subscription. With all due respect to all 3 FTTC isp's mentioned in this thread tho I think plusnet,BT and sky are all significant improvements over VM. |
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
---------- Post added at 13:36 ---------- Previous post was at 13:32 ---------- Quote:
For example you have port 443 SSL traffic prioritized on the basis it's used for interactive, speed sensitive web browsing. Then you have a VPN or newsgroups connection on that same port that also gets prioritised, thus drowning out your gaming traffic because your game runs on an unrecognized port and protocol and gets classified as bulk. Good if it works properly, not good if one-size-fits-all doesn't fit you. ---------- Post added at 13:37 ---------- Previous post was at 13:36 ---------- Quote:
---------- Post added at 13:43 ---------- Previous post was at 13:37 ---------- Quote:
|
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
|
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
Edit 21:47 - See the post from Bob Pullen here Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
On discussions like this generally contending means having customers share capacity, but if performance isnt affected its considered not oversubscribed. Obviously I meant having too many customers sharing to the point the impact is visible. |
Re: Plusnet to provide unlimited broadband
Quote:
Not actively marketed means it is still available if you ask for it? ;) If Plusnet had no worries about bandwidth, they wouldn't have had to include the QoS stuff in their plan. If they had full confidence in the network for the next year they could have offered it as fully unlimited/unmanaged like sky. Maybe small print to say that they may add it at some point if needed so they could revisit it in a years time. So it just says to me that within a year Plusnet expect the network to be running hot and having congestion issues that require traffic prioritisation. QoS makes perfect sense as the best option in that situation. Just don't agree with them trying to imply it is for other reasons. In the future we will probably come across some technology that makes bandwidth abundant with little cost, which is where I was coming from. If someone said to you 15 years ago that you will have a mobile phone that is more powerful than the computer on your desk in 15 years time..... |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 16:10. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum