Increased Bandwidth Irrelevant? 366
halbert writes "ArsTechnica has a story about AT&T COO Randall Stephenson telling folks that there is 'no discernable difference' between AT&T's 1.5 Mbps service and Comcast's 6 Mbps, because the backbone is slowing everything down. The main argument from the article is that fiber to the home is not necessary. How about letting the consumer decide that?" From the article: "This is a direct response to the criticism that AT&T has suffered for deploying a fiber optic network that reaches only to the local node, not directly into a customer's home--which means that the 'last mile' connection is still copper wire. Verizon, by contrast, is deploying fiber directly into the home, making for much higher speeds. AT&T argues that its model is cheaper, faster to deploy, and just as capable as Verizon's, which currently uses much of its massive bandwidth to distribute RF TV channels."
Vested interests... (Score:5, Informative)
So, the COO of company A who provide a worse service than company B says that there's no service-level difference in practice. Well, he *would*, wouldn't he ? It's always worth remembering the wisdom of ages... "cui bono"
IMHO (and it's only a single datapoint) it's certainly worth it for me... I have servers located in the UK on a 100mbit link, and at least 80% of the time I can download at ~500 kBytes/sec (sometimes more) from there to San Jose (CA). Since I transfer large numbers of multi-megapixel images, it's important to me that I have a fast link.
So, basically, picture me blowing a loud raspberry at Mr. Stephenson, thumb on the end of my nose, and waggling my fingers at him. I'll take the Comcast service, thanks.
Oh, BTW, you can get HDTV down the same wire too
Simon
Re:Vested interests... (Score:5, Interesting)
I had two 1.5Mbps DSL lines back at my parent's house(they work for ATT) and the connections were fine. But I couldn't connect too many computers to one connection and run anything more than one or two torrents without bottlenecking the connection. And the ping times were around an average of 100-200ms. Now I'm on a 4Mbit connection with ping times around 50-100ms while running a few torrents.
You can't blame the guy for trying to help his cause, but you most certainly can blame him for being blind about the facts. Sure, I know they're putting fiber down in Southern California with ~30Mbit connections (I have no idea of the cost). But until that happens in my area, I'll stick with my 4Mbps connection (yes, it's not as good as some, but fast enough right now).
Re:Vested interests... (Score:4, Informative)
With bittorrent, your upstream bandwidth is generally going to be more of a problem than your downstream bandwidth. You need to tell your BT client to cap its upload at no more than 85% of your upstream speed, otherwise the dropped ACKs will kill performance for everything else. You didn't say who your 4Mbit connection was with, but if it's a cable modem, you may either have a decent upstream or your ISP is doing some "bandwidth shaping" to limit your BT uploads to a reasonable rate.
Re:Vested interests... (Score:3, Informative)
The Ultimate Traffic Conditioner: Low Latency, Fast Up & Downloads [ibiblio.org]
or use the WonderShaper script [lartc.org], probably a lot easier than wading through the docs. Although I haven't used this...
Re:Vested interests... (Score:4, Interesting)
The real problem with Bittorrent on ADSL is on the upload side. The send queue on the modem fills up and packets will take a few 100ms to get through if they don't get dropped. This makes for a painfully slow experience.
Greater than 1.5mbit service only really required when you want to offer services like streaming media. Using a MPEG4 codec like xvid you can stream fairly good quality TV at 1.5mbit but that dosn't leave much for overhead and other applications. Also thats only one channel, these days your typical home may have 4 people watching 4 different things on 4 differnt channels, so then you need 6mbit of bandwidth.
No major provider is going to get behind peer to peer. The idea behind p2p is to avoid the bandwidth cost. Well thats lost income for the provider. Peer to peer is a cool idea but in the long run its going to be squashed.
I can see the day comming when its impossible to get a publicly routed IPv4 address to your home. Some ISP's are already using private addressing for their subscribers. The switch to IPv6 just isn't happening and there really isn't a need. Between virtual hosting and NAT the IP address shortage has been solved. No desktop computer really needs an Internet routable IP and this also adds a layer of security.
As much as I love getting my weekly fix of TV for free off Bittorrent, I just don't see ISP's allowing this to continue for much longer. Once they work out an effective way to stream content I can see them filtering it out all together. They are not going to let people to get what they are selling for free. Both of the local broadband ISP's here already are cracking down on it by heavly throttling all traffic to users who exceed a cerntain threshold.
Very few public sites can supply a single user with 6mbit. Most servers are still on 100mbit ethernet and are serving alot more than 20 clients at a time. Currently the only way to get more than 1.5mbit from the public internet is via bittorrent. Unless you have your own server in a datacenter thats not seeing much load. When I had 5mbit DSL I could download at 500kB/s from my colocated server.
nonsense.. (Score:5, Funny)
Along the same lines:
a '86 dodge omni is just as good as a brand new ferrari
rubbing alchohol is just as good as a bottle of wine
pressing hard on your eyeballs is just as good as going out to a movie
Just think of how much money you can save with this line of reasoning!
Re:nonsense.. (Score:2)
have comcast (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:have comcast (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:have comcast (Score:2)
Of course I'm still wanting gigabit speeds to my home and businesses and a backbone that can equal it.
Re:have comcast (Score:5, Funny)
Re:have comcast (Score:2, Funny)
Re:have comcast (Score:2)
This [google.com] might help.
Re:have comcast (Score:3, Informative)
I have NTL cable in the UK and get a consistent 10Mb/s on torrents and downloads from fast servers.
My neighbors have DSL and I have comcast (Score:3, Funny)
Re:My neighbors have DSL and I have comcast (Score:2)
Re:My neighbors have DSL and I have comcast (Score:2)
Re:My neighbors have DSL and I have comcast (Score:2)
Re:My neighbors have DSL and I have comcast (Score:2)
Deciding is hard! (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sorry. I'm incapable of making important personal decisions.
Isn't there a government agency that could decide for everybody at once, including me?
Next you'll be asking me to choose a health-care provider!
Re:Deciding is hard! (Score:3, Insightful)
Only if you have money.
Actually, deciding IS hard. (Score:3, Interesting)
I do agree that the backbone is lagging behind, but don't butcher the users' capabilities simply because the telecos can't get their fingers out. Especially as it seems to be the telecos who are complaining. Doubly so, when it
Re:Deciding is hard! (Score:2)
VERY OT - Appologies (Score:2)
http://www.nationmaster.com/graph-T/hea_spe_per_pe r [nationmaster.com]
% of health spending on 'public' healthcare
http://www.nationmaster.com/graph-T/hea_pub_spe_as _of_tot [nationmaster.com]
As you can see, the US spends an ass load of money on public health anyways (44%), so you can't really say thats its a totally private system anyways. That said, those that can afford -huge- healthcare costs can get adequate if not better service than plain public health can in most countries.
Specious propaganda. private health care is better (Score:3, Insightful)
I've lived in several countries with national health, and they're uniformly underfunded, overworked, and have deeper chasms than anything you'll find in the States. Go to one of the major hospitals in any city. Ask how many patients are foreign nationals. The number will shock you.
Canada's health system is laughable. The British NHS is far worse. Only in Sweden have I seen anything coming close to the quality of health care available in the USA. No, I'm n
I can see the difference. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I can see the difference. (Score:2)
The great thing is that 5Mbps gives you the elbow room to have multiple computers downloading, playing online games and web surfing at the same time.
Re:I can see the difference. (Score:2)
I have (Cable & DSL) and there is a difference (Score:2)
I can tell you from experience that Comcast is a lot faster. It's not the backbone that is the problem--it is the end mile from the local ISP to me. Whenever there is a problem it is 99.999% the problem of the last ISP to me.
The guy is just spinning because they want to save money right now. They figure (and probably rightly so) that they can deliver faster service by no
Faster to deploy? (Score:5, Interesting)
I live in a development constructed in 1999.
When I moved in, there was no consumer-level high-speed Internet access offered in the neighborhood.
Now, in 2006, Comcast has fiber to each and every home.
AT&T? "Sorry, DSL isn't offered in your area."
Faster to deploy? Right.
Re:Faster to deploy? (Score:2)
Re:Faster to deploy? (Score:2)
The implication that every english speaker except the OP understands is, "AT&T's model is faster to deploy [once you start deploying it]."
More bandwidth means (Score:2)
Re:More bandwidth means (Score:2)
RF over Fibre? (Score:2, Redundant)
-Peter
Re:RF over Fibre? (Score:2)
You can do analog optical communications at RF frequencies. It has several advantages, but can be cost prohibitive. Google should dig something up.
the difference comes when (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:the difference comes when (Score:2)
Re:I'm hoarding bandwidth (Score:3, Insightful)
I have Verizon FIOS (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I have Verizon FIOS (Score:2)
I'm not in their database (and I don't have verizon phone number) so no high-speed access for me.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I have Verizon FIOS (Score:3, Informative)
Planning ahead? (Score:5, Insightful)
At that point, people who already have the high-speed "last mile" connection can make full use of the new capabilities, while those who have the slower connection will have to lay new wiring.
So fix it? (Score:5, Informative)
I've got 6Mb DSL from Speakeasy, and I'm pretty certain there's a huge difference between 1.5Mb and 6Mb. Apparently the backbone isn't a problem for Speakeasy, either, since I regularly get between 500 and 700K/s download speeds. (That's bytes, not bits.)
Sounds to me like AT&T is doing what they do best... absolutely nothing, while they sit on their ass.
I'd look into a replacement for SpeakEasy. (Score:4, Interesting)
Not Yet (Score:3, Insightful)
Upload (Score:4, Insightful)
Not everything travels through the backbone (Score:4, Insightful)
1. Many many connections do not travel through the backbone. sure a connection from NY to LA will, but probably not from your house to your neighbors. AT&T only seems to be thinking about IPTV, but people are going to want fast connections for many other uses.
2. Eventually the backbone will be faster, and AT&T customers will be stuck with the slower connection.
Connection not so important (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Connection not so important (Score:2)
I used to have a co-located server hanging off of a 10MBPS link to an OC-12. Most sites were throttled or slower than my link. I was extremely pleased the day I hit 900KBps download speed.
But with Bit Torrent I wouldn't need a single download location with a fat pipe. I could suck 40KBps from 200 different people with ease.
Re:Connection not so important (Score:2)
I have long since moved on. Better pay, slower backbone connections. You take the good with the bad...
Re:Connection not so important (Score:2)
Re:Connection not so important (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Connection not so important (Score:3, Insightful)
My home cable modem regularly exceeds 8Mb and based on the things I do with my time and c
The backbone can be mitigated (Score:2)
The ISP can mirror a lot of content on local servers from which you can download at full speed.
Peer-to-peer traffic between users on the same isp will work better, if your using bittorrent once one user of your isp becomes a seed your sorted and the strain on the backbone will decrease significantly.
The ISP can proxy http traffic, so that static things like the icons on slashdot only need to travel down the backbone once
45.2 Kbps (Score:2, Funny)
Differential Loss of Pissing Off Geeks (Score:2)
They just pissed off every geek by saying bandwidth doesn't matter.
The average schmuck doesn't care or understand.
So all they did was piss off all the geeks. I'm thinking that can't be good.
They can piss off who they want... (Score:2)
How about comparing with elsewhere? (Score:2, Informative)
We have IPTV too. And the fiber only goes to the local node, not to the home. And you're talking about FTTH doing only 6Mbps? Did I read that wrong or are you really talking about a technology that is being used waaay below its re
Re:How about comparing with elsewhere? (Score:2)
1) Monopolies get away with a bunch. This one is obvious, and the success of the EU over Microsoft (in opposition to the DOJ) shows it pretty well.
2) Most of the country is not near a urban area. Running a fiber optic cable for 50 miles is significantly more difficult than 5 miles.
The US has had some of the worst telephone service in the world for quite some time now, and most of the problem is just regulatory.
Re:How about comparing with elsewhere? (Score:2)
What are it's failings?
Re:How about comparing with elsewhere? (Score:2)
The US has had some of the worst telephone service in the world for quite some time now, and most of the problem is just regulatory.
Or more likely economic. The US had by far the best telephone service in the world until deregulation and breakup of ATT. After the breakup companies couldn't make enough bux to build state of the art infrastructure anymore, so service went downhill.
If you live in urban areas you can get decent to very good connections - look up FIOS and Cablevision Boost service for examples.
I was able to discern the difference (Score:2)
I may only be a single consumer, and thus I am statistically insignificant, but I had the 4.0mb comcast cable until about November of 2005. I was getting download speeds of 3700Kbps or so to match, I was very pleased with the speed. Upload speeds left a lot to be desired, the most I saw was around 90kbps.
Now I am on Verizon DSL. I get 40kbps....DOWNLOAD. Sometimes as high as 100. Forget uploads, I can't serve anything.
As for discernable difference, I just discerned it. DSL 1.5MB is A). not 1.5MB and B). the
Re:I was able to discern the difference (Score:2)
Re:I was able to discern the difference (Score:2)
Re:I was able to discern the difference (Score:2)
Yikes. You should be complaining. I have DSL through a third party but on Verizon's lines. The service is rated at 768 Kbps (that's bits) down. I regularly see download speeds of 80 - 90 KBps (that's Bytes) -- so, very close to the advertised speed.
If you're really only getting 40 kbps, there's something very, very wrong with your connection. You just have to squeak enough to get it greased.
What about HDTV over IP? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What about HDTV over IP? (Score:3, Informative)
Here's AT&T's project lightspeed in a nutshell:
25 MBit/sec service to the home.
1.5-6 MBit/sec reserved for internet.
12 MBit/sec reserved for 1 HD stream.
Remainder split up among a maximum of 3 SD streams, and phone service. Yes, this means you can't have more than 1 HD stream on project lightspeed. And you can't have more than 4 video streams, total.
It's About Throughput (Score:2)
Re:It's About Throughput (Score:2)
BS Alert!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
Cablevision if doing a brisk business with it's new premium Boost service (2 Mbps up, 25 Mbps down) so somebody must feel the need for speed.
I wonder if anyone would notice the difference between 1.5 Mbps and 25 Mbps?
Round round get around... (Score:2)
I can say for certainly that with a 15mbit FIOS connection, you absolutely see a difference in everything. Downloads are consistently over a megabyte per second, often pushing 1.5-1.6. Downloading demos from XBox Live takes five or six minutes for 500-600 meg. Bittorrents scream, even normal web access cranks.
Let the customers decide what they *want* (Score:4, Interesting)
Also: "because the backbone is slowing everything down". Well, if the 6Mb is 6Mb only in theory, then it's not 6Mb, and the customers shouldn't pay for 6Mb. I understand that the situation is a bit different in the US than here (Sweden), but still - that sucks and is not acceptable.
One at a time.. (Score:3, Interesting)
"we're not constrained by bandwidth. You're not constrained by the size of the pipe anymore," Stephenson said, referring to the switched-video capacity of the network which delivers only one service to a single customer at a time."
So, he expects every home in America to have only 1 TV hooked to his TV network, and while that TV is on, nobody is using any computers in their house. It's this ignorant management and lack of innovation that makes most current telcos a dying breed. At least Verizon is taking a step forward with Fios and IPTV.
Can 1 HD channel even fit through a 15mbps pipe?
Re:One at a time.. (Score:5, Informative)
However, using h.264, HD 720p video can be run at rates as low as 4Mbit without significant artifacting, mostly due to h.264's incredible behavior when presented with resolution bumps. SD channels can be run as low as 384kbit (yes, you read that right...) at acceptable quality. However, set-tops capable of decoding HD h.264 are currently expensive and not widely deployed, and currently employed digital cable and broadcast standards in the USA call for MPEG2, so this is not likely to be used when compatibility with existing infrastructure is required.
However, even using h.264, 15Mbit leaves you with room for 3 HD channels and no extra internet bandwidth. That's really pushing it. The cable companies have really got the edge in infrastrcuture here. Their infrastructure was built to move high-bandwidth signals directly into the home (most cable systems have an available bandwidht of at LEAST 400MHz), while the telephone infrastructure was originally designed to carry only baseband voice (bandwith ~= 10kHz).
Always ignoring upstream... (Score:2)
Sure, DSL is fine compared to comcast, but compared to Verizon's FiOS, they're only telling half the story.
The Internet isn't the only reason to get fiber (Score:2)
Everything on the fiber side is all fiber. So home-to-home connections will get full speed.
And that's a beautiful thing. Back when RoadRunner first came to our neighborhood and they didn't install the speed caps yet, it was fantastic. We'd run Quake servers and have LAN party speeds across the city.
The home-to-home applications of this kind of bandwidth are a thing of beauty.
Depends on where you are and what you download (Score:2)
The primary reason I switched was cost. I was paying $128/month for Speakeasy's "Gamers" package. Aside from the nice 6 static IPs I got, it offered me nothing that Comcast didn't do.
The fact that I now pay $45/month for a *full* 8Mb is icing on the cake. When I say full, I mean full... I actually get a hair *over* 8Mb. (8317 Kb on my last nyc.speakeasy.net speed test.) Up speeds hover around 716 Kb/sec.
My D
Re:Depends on where you are and what you download (Score:2)
For me, it's totally worth it, and I'm never going back.
Re:Depends on where you are and what you download (Score:2)
If you know different, HOOK ME UP!
Having used both (Score:4, Interesting)
Fine (Score:2)
AT&T should be told then fine and we'd like those tax breaks back that were givin for this very thing.
Time to retire Bill's quote... (Score:3, Funny)
How about not? (Score:2)
How about letting those who read the article and wish to post a comment say that?
Between the recent submissions by editors who have trouble fashioning a simple sentence from words containing the requisite letters arranged in the correct order and this lame-assed rhetoric, I'm left wondering whether Slashdot is devolving into something that resembles a grade-school newspaper.
Maybe a Slash
Survey says: False! (Score:2, Troll)
On occasion, I've see downloads in the 1100 KBytes/sec range. This is on comcast's 8 mbit service.
Works as advertised, for me.
AT&T, you suck. I can't wait to see the cable providers quoting your CEO on their advertising literature.
Oh, and I believe their service maxes out at one HD stream per residence.
Huh, you say?
I've got 3 HD boxes at my house right now. I can get 3 HD on demand streams at any given time. Project Lightspeed = already outdated.
The article is right on (Score:2)
If qwest improves their service or comcast gets worse, then I will switch to them. Keep in mind that for years, I
Somewhat relevent. (Score:2)
It depends on what you're doing... (Score:2)
I'm just waiting to see what I can get after they light up the Project Lightspeed box down the street. I hear they'll be using VDSL2, which gives some really ni
yes indeed the AT&T guy is full of shite howev (Score:2, Funny)
why is it people in korea have like 20000000000Mbs connections for $10 a month (ok maybe i exaggerated slightly)
and in the US we will be lucky to keep only paying $50 a month of 3.0Mbs connections.
We in the US are getting Screwed on data pricing and speed.
And what would you do with a gigabit? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:And what would you do with a gigabit? (Score:2)
Distributed Systems (Score:2, Informative)
I have Fiber to the House... (Score:4, Informative)
You not only can upload faster, but you also do not get capped for using your service. Try that with a cable broadband provider. Sure they may advertise 6/1, 10/1, even 15/1 and 30/2 now (optonline) But if you use that upload bandwidth for even an hour straight, you will get capped down to ridiculous levels and your bill will not reflect it. Nothing is worse than having Optonilne's 30Mb/2Mb service and realizing you've been capped down to 6Mb/15KB/s AND you're bill is still the same $60 a month price.
For some reason cable broadband providers love to charge you full price even though they've capped your service down to near 56k speeds.
Fiber is the future. Anyone claiming other wise is not up to par and is affraid of it. They cant deliver the speeds the market demands. Frankly the market demanded it years ago, and only a few have stepped up just recently. Verizon being the major player. Bravo Verizon.
Coax can do a lot of things but everyone should laugh at these companies when they tell us that we dont need speed.
The net would be so much more if we had faster speeds.
Just look at what verizon is doing. They're delivering HD TV through Fiber to the house at a much cheaper package price than cable providers.
The sooner we get faster speeds, the sooner we have a more advanced civilization with new developing markets and utilities that make our lives far better than yesteryear.
Anyone holding us back, should be left to die like the peice of shit company they are. No hand outs. You suck. Build up your infrastructure or find a different market.
Re:Tell that to my Familly (Score:5, Funny)
Did I have first post?
No. Apparently your cable speed is too slow.
Re:my two cents (Score:2)
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Really? The vendor says their product is amazing? No shit!
Re:Makes a diff for P2P downloads (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Can't Wait for FiOS (Score:2)
I've had FiOS for 6 months, and I had cable for 6 months.
I haven't had any FiOS downtime yet. None. I had my cable modem go down for a few seconds several times per day.
Plus, 2Mbit upstream!
Get the business version. It's worth it.
Re:latency vs. bandwidth (Score:3, Informative)
You really want both as the formula is fixed_latency+data_size/bandwidth.
The last part is not insignificant - for a chunk of 8KB the pipe with 1.5Mbps contributes 44 milliseconds while a pipe doing 6Mpbs contributes only 11 milliseconds.