waffleironhead
Diamond Member
- Aug 10, 2005
- 7,014
- 512
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15 years of broadband service and never once did I have to check a meter to be sure I haven't used up all my minutes.
at&t = 600GB
Comcast = 1TB
Divide by members in your house. Four divided by 1000 = 250GB.
Remember that 4K video streaming uses 25GB per film. D:
Check your meter before you post that lengthy reply. :sneaky:
If you have a 4k TV absolutely and the right viewing distance/size tv of course.
In many ways it's just as big of a differnece that SD/HD was. And you are repeating the same things said back then also.
Disagree completely. The SD/HD difference was huge.
Who said that back then? I remember the first time I saw a 1080p movie, and I definitely did not say "Can you really tell the difference?"
Looking at 4K, though, I question if a 4K screen under 55" makes any difference whatsoever for TV viewing. For monitors, sure.
The assault on the cable industry has continued. As a result, we will be testing a 700GB cap in a few selected regions. In the meantime, you shall continue to enjoy the same excellent customer service Comcast has historically provided."I think caps are bullshat. But Comcraps 1TB isnt terrible. I'd imagine in 10 years it will be raised as well.
That's about where I was at in the dorms. A bit more though: 2GB/week.When I was in college I had a 250MB daily allowance at an apartment I lived at.
Beat that
I'd think adding 8 or 9 competitors might make the business a bit less lucrative.
I'm for broadband companies getting the long distance company treatment. Make them lease services to independent companies for cost plus a few percent.
15 years of broadband service and never once did I have to check a meter to be sure I haven't used up all my minutes.
at&t = 600GB
Comcast = 1TB
Divide by members in your house. 1000 divided by 4 people = 250GB.
Remember that 4K video streaming uses 25GB per film. D:
Check your meter before you post that lengthy reply. :sneaky:
Most cable Internet services employ Netflix caching servers, so popular content doesn't count against your data since it never goes off network.
Well I can choose between about 10 - 12 ISP's where I live in Sweden, though only some offer faster speeds like 1000/1000 Mb/s. It seems to be working well with the companies specializing in different areas rather than just price. If my current ISP were to introduce data caps, I'd just switch
Yeah, right. Hold your breath until they actually honor that. :\