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ISPs Offer Faster Speeds, Why Don't We Get Them?

Ron Williams asks: "I'm infuriated every time I see that companies are raising their speeds when they can't maintain their current speeds. Here's my biggest issue: my grandmother signed up for the 3Mbps DSL plan through Verizon, however a speed test said she was only getting 750Kbps. Why pay for the extra bandwidth when she's not getting it? She downgraded to the 768K plan expecting to still have 750K. Wrong, instead her speed dropped to 300K. So, how about instead of companies constantly claiming to increase their speeds, they get their actual speeds correct. Comcast has done the same thing, I had their 6Mbps plan at one point, I got 2.5Mbps usually and sometimes 3Mbps, so they're all doing the same thing. In closing, with all these speed increases, why is my Internet not getting faster?" What practices and tools do you use to test your bandwidth speed and how have you approached your ISP when the performance repeatedly fell short of your expectations? One thing to note is that you'll never get the top speed advertised for any connection due to transmission overhead; even so, you should be able to get close (within about 10-20%). Also, ISPs oversell their bandwidth, so if you run your speed tests when other customers are using their connection, you will notice the performance hit.

3 of 688 comments (clear)

  1. SLA? by Jordan+Catalano · · Score: 5, Insightful

    SLA? Bullshit. If I buy a car called "Toyota 85MPH Blue Car" it had damned well better not be goverened to 55MPH. "But when you bought the car, the dealer never signed an agreement guaranteeing speed." Bull-shit.

    1. Re:SLA? by kahanamoku · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually, thats is EXACTLY what the post is claiming...

      She downgraded to the 768K plan expecting to still have 750K. Wrong, instead her speed dropped to 300K.

      Using your example, the user has thus now bought a car that only does 60MPH and now magically the traffic has slowed to 30MPH

      --
      ----- Concentrate on promoting more than demoting.
  2. Re:Welcome to fascism, kid. by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've heard of this phenomenon. I think they call it "lobbying".

    In most parts of the world this is better known as 'corruption'.