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Comcast's 105MBit Service Comes With Data Cap

itwbennett writes "Comcast just announced the ultrafast, ultra-broadband 'Extreme 105' 105 Mbit/sec Internet service for an introductory price of $105, when bundled with other services. That's the good news. The bad news: Comcast 'put a data cap on the service of 250 GB per month — about five hours worth of full-bandwidth use,' writes blogger Kevin Fogarty."

3 of 372 comments (clear)

  1. Is this really a surprise... by QuietLagoon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... coming from a company that made it into the final four of the worst companies in America? It took a company as bad as BP to knock Comcast out of the running.

  2. Re:I'm using the 105Mbit service. The datacap is r by zero0ne · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why are you judging? Maybe he has more than one kid? One child is watching the new pixar movie, while another is upstairs working on a online college course that has them running through some online lectures.

    Then, you have the Mom, who is a work at home mom and has to constantly keep up-to-date with their training materials.

    Now, this mom that works from home, always has to have some type of white noise in the background so jumps onto a hulu channel herself.

    250GB is easy to burn through if you are single, and EVEN EASIER to burn though if you are married and have kids.

  3. Re:That's normal by vakuona · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Speed is not just about downloading more. It is also about downloading stuff quicker, believe it or not. Even if I wouldn't go anywhere near the cap, I would love that speed if I needed to download a movie or two onto my iPad to take on a long journey, because I might not think about it until it's rather late. If I can do that in 10 minutes, then grand.

    And ISP have a clue, believe it or not. They know that only about 0.5% or less of their customers regularly go over the cap, and very few actually find the caps to be a problem. If they could just not take that bothersome 0.5% as customers, they would probably be better off. Here in the UK, I just signed up for a broadband deal that has a 60GB cap, but allows me unlimited downloads that don't count towards my cap between midnight and 8am. That seems a reasonable compromise to me. Downloads as much as you want but don't affect other customers who have lower needs, but who still want to watch Youtube videos in HD.