Difference between revisions of "Comcast"

From Gobblerpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
imported>Matthazinski
(Controversies)
imported>Mutantmonkey
(Remove unsourced and likely outdated comment out IPv6)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Comcast''' is the primary cable [[:Category:Blacksburg ISPs|Internet Service Provider]] in Blacksburg. In the past, students have had far less complaints about Comcast's service in contrast to their main competitor, [[NTC]]. Comcast offers both residential and "business-class" connections to the vast majority of Blacksburg, and may also offer metro Ethernet in some areas. Many individuals use "business-class" connections for themselves due to static IP support, less restrictive contracts, and [http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2013/01/six-strikes-boss-insists-new-system-wont-harm-public-wi-fi/ potential exemptions] from new "six-strikes" policies. Comcast's basic business-class plan costs about $70/month for 12 Mbps down/2 Mbps up, including modem rental fees. Blacksburg users have not noticed any support for [[vtluug:IPv6|IPv6]] and have resorted to using a tunnel from [[w:Hurricane Electric|Hurricane Electric]].
+
'''Comcast''' is the primary cable [[:Category:Blacksburg ISPs|Internet Service Provider]] in Blacksburg. In the past, students have had far less complaints about Comcast's service in contrast to their main competitor, [[NTC]]. Comcast offers both residential and "business-class" connections to the vast majority of Blacksburg, and may also offer metro Ethernet in some areas. Many individuals use "business-class" connections for themselves due to static IP support, less restrictive contracts, and [http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2013/01/six-strikes-boss-insists-new-system-wont-harm-public-wi-fi/ potential exemptions] from new "six-strikes" policies. Comcast's basic business-class plan costs about $70/month for 12 Mbps down/2 Mbps up, including modem rental fees.
  
 
==Controversies==
 
==Controversies==
Comcast employs [[w:packet shaping|packet shaping]] on both residential and "business-class" customers, which previously led to an FCC investigation.<ref>https://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/09/business/media/09fcc.html?_r=2&ref=technology&oref=slogin& FCC investigation</ref> In 2010, Comcast published an RFC on their new packet shaping practices, which result in the customers using the most traffic being given the least priority.<ref>https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6057</ref> This is extremely problematic, as users must limit their ''downstream'' bandwidth, which is extremely difficult. Some users have reported average ping times to Google on the order of 1800 ms as a result, which have partially been alleviated by [[w:Quality of service|QoS]] scripts on their routers.
+
Comcast employs [[w:packet shaping|packet shaping]] on both residential and "business-class" customers, which previously led to an FCC investigation.<ref>https://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/09/business/media/09fcc.html?_r=2&ref=technology&oref=slogin& FCC investigation</ref> In 2010, Comcast published an RFC on their new packet shaping practices, which results in the customers using the most traffic being given the least priority.<ref>https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6057</ref> This is extremely problematic, as users must limit their ''downstream'' bandwidth, which is extremely difficult. Some users have reported average ping times to Google on the order of 1800 ms as a result, which have partially been alleviated by [[w:Quality of service|QoS]] scripts on their routers.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 05:12, 16 April 2017

Comcast is the primary cable Internet Service Provider in Blacksburg. In the past, students have had far less complaints about Comcast's service in contrast to their main competitor, NTC. Comcast offers both residential and "business-class" connections to the vast majority of Blacksburg, and may also offer metro Ethernet in some areas. Many individuals use "business-class" connections for themselves due to static IP support, less restrictive contracts, and potential exemptions from new "six-strikes" policies. Comcast's basic business-class plan costs about $70/month for 12 Mbps down/2 Mbps up, including modem rental fees.

Controversies

Comcast employs packet shaping on both residential and "business-class" customers, which previously led to an FCC investigation.[1] In 2010, Comcast published an RFC on their new packet shaping practices, which results in the customers using the most traffic being given the least priority.[2] This is extremely problematic, as users must limit their downstream bandwidth, which is extremely difficult. Some users have reported average ping times to Google on the order of 1800 ms as a result, which have partially been alleviated by QoS scripts on their routers.

References

External links