Multichannel News shoots off skyrockets and throws confetti around its survey showing cable's rapid build outs of DOCSIS 3.0. And at Broadband Reports, there's much discussion of cable-provided Internet speeds of up to 105 megabits per second (Mbps), along with some commentary that the market is not ready for speeds that fast. And there is discussion of cable resetting its speed tiers in parity with Verizon's downstream speeds (NOT upstream, though; Verizon can do 35 Mbps upstream and cable can't touch that).
But more importantly, in the comments below the Broadband Reports article, there's this one:
"Can you really get those speeds?
"The speed tier doesn't matter much if it slows to a crawl every evening. Which is what would happen every evening to me when I had Comcast. It still happens to my brother and my parents. All different neighborhoods.
"I've never had that problem with FiOS. And those Comcast speed tiers are almost laughable compared to what FiOS offers. And the FiOS speeds are available 24/7/365."
Every time DOCSIS 3.0 comes up, we make exactly this point. Because the cable systems are based on nodes that serve from 125 to 500 customers, the stem of those service starbursts can clog if a lot of users go online or do big downloads or stream movies or music at the same time.
FiOS, on the other hand, puts no more than 32 customers onto a gigantic 2.4 gigabit per second trunk, which leaves lots of headroom for delivery of promised speeds.
And even FiOS's little brother, Verizon High Speed Internet, is not subject to that kind of traffic jam because the DSL Internet signal rides your personal phone link back to the central office and the Internet connecting point. No shared pipe.
I've had a DSL-based service from another telephone company for about 3 years now. My DSL has NEVER gone down and consistently delivers the 5 Mbps that I pay for and that meets all my Internet needs.
Can a cable TV network designed half a century ago for one-way TV telecasting really deliver what we need in 2010, even if they tweak it? What's your experience?
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