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Originally Posted by AbyssUnderground
NTL must have known this would happen. If there is only around 33Mbps on a UBR then 3 and a bit people maxing out their 10Mbps is going to kill it. Surely they knew that?
Traffic shaping is a good idea until they get their act and their network together but the shaping they must be enforcing (if any) seems rediculous in speed terms. I can 99.9% of the time max out my 2Mbps connection no problem at all.
You pay for 10Mbps, you should get at least half of it garunteed (at least within the NTL network).
Just my £0.02!
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umm its 27mbps not 33 so not even 3 people can be simultaneous.
---------- Post added at 22:28 ---------- Previous post was at 22:26 ----------
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Originally Posted by Fawkes
It was a marketing decision, not a technical one.
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does that make it ok?
sorry but if marketing can get a go ahead when their isnt the means to provide it from a technical point of view it shows the company is a shambles for communication between its departments and leadership.
---------- Post added at 22:32 ---------- Previous post was at 22:28 ----------
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Originally Posted by jtwn
Well it wasn't like they were just going to sit by and let ADSLMax take their customers.
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Am I right that BT have been spending a while on their 21CN network and preparing exchanges for ADSLMax and also running trials for a while.
NTL just decide over a meeting with some biscuits and coffee, next thing we know their is 10meg configs been rolled out and the option added to the online package change screen.
Bit of a difference.