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Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
Personally I think that I am in Happy Valley.
Over the years my telecoms bill has remained virtually the same, if you take inflation into account it has actually reduced considerably. My first acoustic coupler (300/75 Baud) + voice call charges used to cost me what I am paying for Phone and 1.5 MB BB today. In the past when speeds increased you had to buy a new modem to take advantage of them, initially these were incredibly expensive, this cost had to be added to your overall telecoms costs. It seems to me that you could complain about the price of houses, food, clothes, booze, cars, petrol and virtually every other commodity, but surely not telecoms, be fair. In todayââ‚ÆšÃ‚¬ÃƒÂ¢Ã¢â‚¬Å¾Ã‚¢s telecom world we are spoiled rotten. :hugs: [img]Download Failed (1)[/img] |
Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
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and there speaks the voice of reason :tu: |
Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
NTL claim to have 1m broadband customers, and also that 5% of them use too much bandwidth. Let's say those 5% left NTL and went to another unlimited ISP. That's 50,000 lost customers. These people won't change their downloading habits. Let's say all these people are spending at least £50 a month for their broadband and TV and they take their custom elsewhere, that is a loss of £30m a year. Is NTL really losing more than that in bandwidth costs?
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Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
I presume they must be as NTL will already have done the math before they decided to upset 5% of their customers.
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Why are people not given an unlimited option? Instead they are being forced elsewhere. It's not the quality of service that will keep these people with NTL after they've been kicked off their broadband. |
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Give these guys 3Mbit, which I'd remind you is about 1/10th of an entire EuroDOCSIS downstream normally good for hundreds of users, they'll be pulling over 800GB. From a datacentre I would pay £120 a month for such bandwidth; include the various costs of traversing the ntl network as well as the transit cost and you are looking at hundreds of pounds a month for this. Do you consider it acceptable for a single user to force upgrades costing tens of thousands prematurely, cost hundreds a month to a provider, and for what, the £50 or so a month where most people would draw the line as absolute maximum they would pay? You hear about 'resegmentation'. This process involves numerous man-hours, five figures in parts and equipment as well. Full downstreams require this sort of upgrade. The end result being that costs go up for everyone. Would you rather people pay more money for less speed, or that the majority are catered for with fast products that suit their needs, rather than trying to look after them and a small minority who impact on costs. Look at Telewest's packages. The 750k is £24.99, 1.5Mbit £34.99, 3Mbit £49.99. NTL's packages will be 1Mbit @ £17.99, 2Mbit @ £24.99, 3Mbit @ £37.99. Then tell me that allowing unlimited usage doesn't impact both on the quality of service that can be offered, and on the prices that have to be charged to maintain the quality that UK users have become accustomed to, and demand. |
Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
I personally could <edit> not <edit> give two hoots about increased speed. 1.5MBit is more than ample for my needs. What I do care about is limiting the amount I can use my connect which is what capping will do. If NTL where to offer an all you can eat 512/256Kbit connect at a reasonable monthly sum I'd most likely jump at it. As it stands now I'll probably move providers next year when the new caps come into play. I do not and will not return to 'clock watching' my usage.
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There's no such thing as a free lunch, and the days of all-you-can-eat broadband are numbered. |
Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
You make it sound like BT are the only back haul carrier? If and when all the back haul carriers join the PAYG party then and only then will we see the death of all you can eat.
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Re: [Now Official] More ntl speed changes
There are plenty of backhaul carriers, but most are not interested in the domestic market.
BT have edged themself into a nice position. They've made LLU too expensive for most ISPs, and they've made datastream pretty unreliable, by selling extremely highly contended virtual paths. The whole thing is run of an antequated SDH and often even PDH infrastructure. Most tier-1 ISPs have been forced to opt for IPstream, and others are shifting that way too. Few tier-2's have the ability to get backhaul, possibly with the exception of wanadoo, who have energis. And I doubt the vISPs even care, as long as they make their quick buck... Oh, and once it gets back to the ISP, they're certainly no all-you-can-eat for peering and transit anyway!! |
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One good thing about the deteriaration (sp) of this into 'Another Capping Thread' is the fast self 'outing' of the 5%, providing NTL with even more 'public domain' ammunition from 'its users' to verify (wrong word I know) any action that NTL may take IF and WHEN the new limits are written into the T&C and for any action they MAY take against 'offenders'. The writing is on the wall and has been for the past few years, just another 'thing' you'll have learn to live with when it comes to t'internet, along with the raft of virii, scams and other associated crap that the majority of users now take daily into the stride of their 'online' experience. |
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it is true the unlimited downloads is running out of time just like unlimited dial up ran out of time same thing brought down both over use. |
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Anyone that's used genuine high speed internet will tell you that once you've gone above 1mbit you see no difference in downloading webpages. NTL is offering a gimmick pure and simple. Back to this much used car analogy, not only are we being limited in the speed we can drive, we are now being limited on how far we can drive our car each month. Fine some people only need a car to drive 5 miles into work, some people drive long distances. Offer capped services, but give people the option to download a sensible amount. Are you saying people are going to pay an extra £13 a month for the priveledge of an extra 10gb? On a high speed, high end 3gb connection, costing almost £40 a month, quite frankly 40gb takes the ****. Fair numbers would be.... Low Tier: whatever, it doesn't matter it's for people that need little bandwidth, 5gb is fine. Mid Tier: 50gb. This is FAIR. It is a reasonable amount. High Tier: Remember these people pay A LOT compared to other countries (most of which need to use the bandwidth of the UK to get to USA) give them 100gb. It's why they're paying so much for net access. Most of the users in this category can get 2mbit DSL with unlimited bandwidth for £40 (location permitting) All I'm saying is most people can accept the need for caps, but make them realistic for the money people are paying. |
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