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Typical Home Bandwidth Usage?

Broadband writes "With a growing number of internet service providers imposing hard bandwidth caps, I too will soon find myself with a limit. In typical Slashdot fashion I use the Internet for everything from movie streaming to online backup and just realized I have no idea how much data traverses my pipes on a monthly basis. While I have wised up and installed a bandwidth monitoring solution, it'll be some time until I have a normalized average. So my question is: What is the average monthly data usage in your household? How many people share the connection and is there anything you've found essential yet bandwidth intensive that you couldn't live without? (E.g. VOIP, movie downloads, streaming audio, etc.)"

8 of 656 comments (clear)

  1. I guess my ISP is responsiblee by holophrastic · · Score: 5, Informative

    When my ISP added caps, they started by giving statements of the last three months of each person's usage, and did that for a few months before adding the cap. It made life quite nice.

    Turns out, I rarely go over 20GB in a month. I was basically two persons: one 14 year old girl watching youtube, facebook, and uploading hundreds of photographs; while I run a programming business downloading software and uploading text files.

    Don't know if that helps.

  2. Re:I have true unlimited by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Ahem, Speakeasy...

    Ok well full disclosure i work for Speakeasy but there are no bandwidth caps. Of course you pay more for service but you get lower latency, no bandwidth cap and i can personally attest that all the backbone lines that speakeasy runs on are undersold compared to other ISPs.

    Like anyhting in life you pay for what you get. If you pay $20 a month for internet expect to get $20 worth.

  3. Re:first proust! by Hal_Porter · · Score: 5, Informative

    Have you been saving that up in some kind of .txt file, waiting for your chance at first post?

    It's a quote from Proust.

    http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/proust.htm

    Hence the subject "First Proust!"

    If Monty Python had made this joke anyone repeating it here would have got modded up.

    --
    echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  4. Does your ISP already know? by Bazman · · Score: 5, Informative

    If your ISP has accounts with caps, then the chances are they'll have a page where people can go check the usage on their accounts. Log in to your ISP's 'Customer Portal' if they have one, and you can probably find out.

    I've got an uncapped account and my provider has this - they've got historical data going back to May 2006.

  5. 50GB Down & 5GB Up by Raintree · · Score: 5, Informative

    50GB Down & 5GB Up (average)
    100GB Down & 4GB Up (this month)

    Skype has replaced my phone
    Joost & legal sites have replaced my Cable TV
    Streaming music all day long
    Games - online shooters
    Web Browsing/RSS feeds

  6. Surprisingly little by Idaho · · Score: 5, Informative

    The average household really won't use much bandwidth. I was surprised by this, when my parents got broadband a couple of years ago - even with 4 persons at home (not including me), they used only some 250 MB (download) per month. In fact, they often used more upload than download, because of sending photo's to an online photo printing service.

    They do use e-mail and the web really quite a lot (hours a day), also my younger brothers play (online) games all the time, both browser-based and otherwise.

    This was a couple of years ago when youtube didn't exist yet; I'd assume the bandwidth usage would be a bit higher now. But unless you start downloading movies (they rent DVD's instead) and lots of music, you don't use a whole lot apparently.

    I used to share an apartment with 2 other students; we averaged about 1 GB/day, including lots of messing about with Linux distro's and the like, but obviously not just that.

    So I don't know, I'd rather have the 250 GB/month cap than some undefined FUP. It's hardly like 250 GB is a completely unreasonable limit. You will never unconsciously download that much, except perhaps if you're trying to keep up with alt.binaries.* on a daily basis or something.

    (The problem is of course that once there is a strictly defined limit, given the usual lack of competition they will keep lowering it unless you are willing to pay more)

    --
    Every expression is true, for a given value of 'true'
  7. avg 25~GB /mo last 6mos by atarione · · Score: 5, Informative

    lots of VoIP ..fair amount of gaming .. fair amount of downloading distros / patches / updates..etc lots of Streaming audio.. ummm some streaming video

    2x people (who frequently work from home via VPN connection back to respective offices.)

    I have been shocked a how little our usage actually is

    still I'm not thrilled about a cap ... but OTOH wasn't TW talking about testing a lot low cap than this?

    --
    actually I am happy to see you, however that is in fact a banana in my pocket.
  8. Re:I have true unlimited by orangepeel · · Score: 5, Informative

    I was a Speakeasy customer for about 3 years.

    Then they were bought by Best Buy. I learned about it right here on Slashdot. It took me a while but I dropped them by the end of that year. And yes, my decision to drop them was based 100% on who their new owner was.

    In my area, Speakeasy had always just been a reseller of Covad's services. So, I went with Covad instead and cut out the middle-man. It's been about a year now and I have no complaints. The only thing I had trouble with was technician incompetence during the installation. I had a similar experience during the installation of my original Speakeasy service (which, as I said, was always just re-sold Covad service, so it came as no surprise to me).

    Just like it was with Speakeasy though, once the installation stupidity had been bulldozed through, everything has been fine with Covad.

    I will do everything I can to avoid supporting the Best Buy corporation. Hence no more money of mine will go to Speakeasy. They are absolutely not the company they used to be.

    It doesn't surprise me at all that a Best Buy employee would post here with praise for their Speakeasy brand. That's what you are, anonymous coward ... a Best Buy employee. Are you wearing one of their shirts when you pick up the phone and answer, "Speakeasy"?

    --
    Whoever designed level 61 in Frozen Bubble is a sadistic bastard.