So, Sprint buys Nextel, SBC buys AT&T, and now Verizon buys MCI, all in the space of two months. Will all this movement in the telecom sector mean that I’ll finally be able to get an internet connection that isn’t castrated in the upstream bandwidth department?
Mine is 100kb/s, and my download is 500kb/s. We dont really have a bandwidth limit either. But i mean, if your pushing 80gb/month, they will think something is up.
My upload is capped at 256 kbit/sec (32 kbyte/sec). And it makes me really angry.
Adelphia is supposedly selling me an "internet connection" -- that’s what I pay them for. But really I only have half an internet connection, the receiving half. I can receive (download) data at 3000 kbit/sec but can only transmit (upload) at 1/12th of that speed. So according to my calculations I am paying for 100% of an internet connection but am only able to utilize 54.3% of an internet connection.
I should be able to transmit at the same rate that I can receive at -- 3 mbit each way. But I’d be happy even just to be able to have 3 mbit TOTAL, if it could be allocated in a way that isn’t brain-dead, i.e. when you’re not currently receiving at 3mbit you can use that bandwidth for transmitting.
15kb/s, really?? Lowercase "b" as in bits? That IS brutal. I mean 15kB/s is half of my current cap, and even that would be terrible... but 15kb/s? Dial-up is four times faster than that.
If you have an account on a remote Linux/Unix/BSD system, scp is one of the simplest ways to test your tx rate:
scp bigfile.log user@remotehost:/tmp/
Depending on the version of scp, it’ll show you the tx rate in kB/s (most Linuxes) or else just the total elapsed time in seconds and the number of KB transferred (OSX I think), so you can do the math yourself.
Will these mergers cause monopolies? Didn’t the government split telecom back in the day because one of the telephone companies was charging a fortune for service and had no competitors?