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The reason the so called caps are in place is because the service is way oversold namely in cities.. Heck AT&T had to stop selling the Iphone in NY. Excessive useage is highly impacted by subscribers living in certain area's IE highly populated cities not urban America but Verizon cant write locational policy based on population without legal issues. Verizon is also a monopoly. They can do what they want right now.to include taking our country backwards connectively compared to the world as a whole.
We all own part of Verizon through part of our tax dollars that they use to expand.. What good is blazing fast speeds to consumers that can't use it? A person has no need for anything above 256k if all they so is surf and check email. I get 2mbps on my MIFI. I get this above average speed because of no demand on the tower. Verizon knows wireless is the future now and is why they sold ALOT Of there hardline networks to include some FIOS locations. And ot the remarks of where we live.
As to the silly remark about " Well Verizon didn't make you live there comment", City users don't have a high demand for mobile broadband when they have hard wired in just about every location you visit. People in cities long to go on vacations to get away from cities. I don't have to go anywhere i'm always where they want or dream to go while being 35 miles from a very large city. http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/03/1926206 Verizons says it will supply rural America with 4G starting in 2010 of course city folk get first dibs for what? 3G is fast enough for emailing and surfing even VOIP. I wish they would stop selling us speed something we aren't allowed to use much of. Speed means being able to do MORE it always has not LESS..
I think the wireless and it's providers are in for some shocking changes this year to be honest. Net neutrality will pass, etc, etc
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You should switch to AT&T.
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Did you know that you can be grandfathered into the UNLIMITED service!!! If you had a card with the old unlimited service they can give you unlimited on the mifi.. BUT if they change your number you lose that optition. Like if the Verizion guy wants his little commision they will change your numbet and you lose....It happened to me that way and my neighbor was just grandfathered cause he knew my problem...Cost me $190.00 the first month...What a rip........
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I'm here to assist what Zehan has been repeating over and over. Lets start off with some napkin math, shall we?
1 GB = 1,024MB of space.
5 GB = 5,120MB of space.
Assuming that say, I don't know 250 people all have a Mifi/Wifi/whatever card, and reached their cap, that would mean that
250 People * 5 GB cap = 1,250GB of bandwidth. Based off this math, one could determine that 1,024 GB of space/bandwidth equals 1 Tetrabyte(Or is it Terabytes? I forget >.>) of space.
On average, Google's page goes through 50 Tetrabytes of traffic on a day-to-day basis. Lets, hypothtically double that 5GB cap to 10 and see where that takes us:
250 People * 10 GB cap= 2,500GB of bandwidth. Which is already clearly over 2 Tetrabytes of bandwidth.
With Verizon being the lead company in pretty much everything, and seeing as how anyone can assume that more than 250 people use Mifi/Wifi cards you can see how it becomes rather expensive and hard to maintain:
- Over X amount of people constantly connecting to towers for internet.
- Keeping the internet at satisfying speeds.
- Keeping the internet connection well, and healthy at all times so you have no issues connecting.
What strikes me as appauling here no one has really complained of the quality of the service, and neither has anyone complained or put into aspect that per GB you aren't getting the service you need.
All I'm reading here is that people are getting tremendously greedy.
lolwhat?
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Your post make absolutely no sense. You're trying to calculate how much bandwidth 250 people would use in a month if they used their 5 GB allocation twice. Then you're comparing that to Google's usage in one day. Those numbers are meaningless, but good try.
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jimfitzgerald wrote:Your post make absolutely no sense. You're trying to calculate how much bandwidth 250 people would use in a month if they used their 5 GB allocation twice. Then you're comparing that to Google's usage in one day. Those numbers are meaningless, but good try.
Being blinded by greed, when the statement I was making was obvious only makes ^This^ comment as **bleep** as this well...
Thread.