Time Warner Boosts Broadband Customer Speed — But Only Near Google Fiber
An anonymous reader writes " Rob is a Time Warner Cable customer, and he's received two really interesting things from them lately. First, a 50% speed boost: they claim to have upgraded the speed of his home Internet connection. That's neat. Oh, and they've also cut his bill, from $45 to $30. Wow! What has prompted this amazing treatment? Years of loyalty and on-time payments? No, not exactly. Rob lives in Kansas City, pilot site for Google Fiber. Even though they have shut off people in other states for using too much bandwidth. Is Google making them show that it's not that hard to provide good service and bandwidth?"
This is what healthy competition is supposed to do to the market. Now, we need google fiber in more cities and the average speed and price of internet will get better for everyone (unless you live in a rural area).
In Canada they are both the same company.
It's called competition, which is something that has been sorely lacking in the broadband market. It's actually missing in just about any market that is dominated by a few large corporations. See the publishing industry etc.
I mean, look, it lowers corporate revenue and increases operating expenses! Competition lowers tax revenue and taxes are how corporations support our troops. This competition thing has *got* to stop!
It wasn't a response to Google, it was a response to a report that they were slow. But hey, the fact that it was nationwide doesn't destroy the theory, if you define the Kansas City "region" as big enough.
The Devil can answer...
I'm not at all one to defend the Cable/Internet/Cell monopolies that currently exist, but the linked story about people getting shut off is 4 YEARS old!
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Who cares about those? Really, who cares?
Cable TV, hands down. If I wanted to, I could switch cell carriers fairly easily (though likely from bad service to worse service), whereas if I want cable (not satellite), my choices at my home are currently Comcast or.... Comcast
It is in Google's best interest to have a world that is as fully connected as possible. Driving down the artificially inflated price of consumer-grade bandwidth is a win for Google and a win for everyone outside of the colluding or monopolistic telcos.
I was one of the first Road Runner customers in the RTP, NC area. I've been a good customer. TW recently upped my rates and their remote is terrible. Unfortunately for TW, some real competition recently showed up for what once was a monopoly. I switched and just got off the phone to tell them that I am canceling. Amazingly, some promotions, that I was previously unaware of, became available to me. No way. A little competition can be a good thing.
I had my Time Warner Cable bandwidth increased without asking about a month ago here in Cincinnati because of competition from Cincinnati Bell laying down their fiber service all over town. That being said, if I could kick Time Warner to the curb and get Cincinnati Bell's Fioptics service where I live, I would in about three shakes of a lamb's tail.
This isn't only happening where Google is doing their fiber experimentation.
Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
But cable TV companies are often the only option for decent home internet.
Devil's Answer:
They are both good minions. I can't favor one or the other like a father can't his two sons.
HA, my capatcha was "meanings".
I work for TWC. The standard internet was bumped up from 10/1 to 15/1 across the Midwest region (KC/WI/OH/KY/TN). The top end internet was bumped up from 50/5 to 100/5 in KC only. Can't really speak to the change in the bill though.
Some people care about ppv.
The rest knows about the existence of The Pirate Bay.
Huh? I have Google fiber and I can torrent that stuff just fine.
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
Not me.
AnimePapers.org: Anime Wallpapers Handled With Care
Only in the east. Shaw doesn't run cell phones. They had plans to and bought some AWS spectrum, but they've apparently decided against that and recently sold the spectrum off to Rogers.
upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
Years of abuse from time warner and att makes that a really easy decision to ditch them at the first opportunity.
Yeah, I got that message a while back. They claim a 50% boost, but I haven't seen it. Even after resetting the modem and router, everything seems to download at about the same speed as before. I suspect BS (hardly atypical for Time Warner).
Since you don't list what kind of router you have, what kind of firewall rule processing it's doing, and if you're using wireless it's hard to tell who the weakest link is.
I never use a ISP integrated modem/router(/wireless gack), too many of them suck and lock out too many options. If a regular router you can stick your own server on the WAN port and run something like http://www.speedtest.net/mini.php , across the LAN you should see 100Mbps (or more if it's Gb the entire way). If it's slower then 100Mb on wired your routers performance sucks. Test wired first then add your WLAN in, I have seen many wireless setups that where showing a 150Mbps (good) connection not even perform 30Mbps transfers.
Even more advanced tests would be to try to run 2 speed tests locally at the same time. Most equipment will starve one stream (one 99Mbps/one 1Mbps), some equipment will give bad jitter and the total speed will be less then 75% of line speed, and latency will be high, and very rarely the equipment will have decent queuing and the two streams will be close to even at around 95% of total line speed and latency will be decent.
Actually getting 20Mbps+ from the random internet host is not very common. Testing a close, fast host inside the TW network is the best way to tell. This might help.
http://www.timewarnercable.com/en/residential-home/support/speed-test.html/
Most people have been sold a bill of goods.
Bandwidth is cheap. Very, very cheap. Getting cheaper all the time. Once it's fiber to the home, the rest is all done. Top tier providers get bandwidth so cheap it's almost free.
It should be a national embarassment there's not gigabit infrastructure everywhere. Props to Google for helping out the shame.. and may they eat the lunch of all the incumbents.
..don't panic
I live in the San Fernando Valley, 20 minutes from downtown Los Angeles. It's a quaint 260 square mile community of 1.76 million of your closest neighbors. Two months ago I had my broadband boosted by 50% (the same 15 Mbps as the Consumerist article customer), I was given free telephone service free for a year (long distance included) and had by bill dropped by 20% as well (I am now pennies over $100/mo), without asking for any of it. My parents, living just a few miles from me, were offered the exact same thing. Does this mean that Time Warner is terrified that Los Angeles is next on the list to get Google Fiber?
This is a story from last month (Dec 12 2012), and it's for all TWC customers. http://news.yahoo.com/time-warner-cable-boosts-internet-speeds-50-standard-022153999.html
Its amazing. For the past 10 years TW has been steadily increasing rates, "confusing" their billing (Oh, sorry sir for the $12/mo mistake for the past 3 years that was hidden in your "bundle"), and their service of ALL types has been getting crappier and crappier. To the point where I was ready to just ditch them all together and do ANY thing else.
Crappy cable box problems. Internet outages. S L O W internet (at times) and OK others. Finally FIOS came around here about a year ago, and several people I know switched. Initially they had some technical issues but nothing really bad, and NO one I know including myself has had any issues at all in the past year.
I called TW 4 times, and got all the way to a management type 3 of those times, to ask about a billing situation after our bill went up $60 a month. For no reason. They were NOT interested in fixing the situation and retaining me at ALL. In fact, the last words they told me, when I said I prefered to stay with them but was going to just go to FIOS if they couldnt fix it, were "Well, you have to do what you have to do". From a manager.
When I turned in my boxes, the girl said "wow, you have been a customer a LONG time, why are you leaving?" I told her, she just rolled her eyes and apologized and said "Thats typical (of the TW customer support folks)".
Now TW is running these commercials on the radio around here 24/7 trying to get people to "come back". "See the difference" "Your money back if you are not satisfied" etc. Too funny really. As long as VZ - another HUGE company - keeps their customer service and value where they are now, Im staying. For sure.
Competition is a GREAT thing....
So I live in Overland Park, a suburb of Kansas City. Google fiber is not in offered in Overland Park yet, but because it is close by and spreading I checked out the prices and signed up for email notification when their service becomes available in my area.
The prices. Holy cow. It's free. A one time $300.00 installation fee but then it is free. So I was wondering for months how is that possible? Is Google taking a massive loss? Did Google invent a new technology which allows them to undercut their competitors?
Then on a drive across town to the local Fablab I was listening to the local public radio station which just happened to be interviewing Susan Crawford, author of the recently published book Captive Audience: The Telecom Industry and Monopoly Power in the New Gilded Age. As the summary at Amazon states:
Well as you might guess from the subtitle of the book, what she finds out when she explores is that internet and cable service in the U.S. are regional monopolies. Even when multiple internet and cable service providers operate in the same city they divide up the city into regions of monopolistic coverage and only overlap on small percentages of territory.
So Google offers such spectacularly low prices by undercutting monopolists, having enough clout to overcome barriers to entry which block startups, and Moore's law has reduced the cost of providing internet service to something pretty close to free. The inflated prices for internet broadband service which we have paid in the U.S. have not followed Moore's law because service provider are monopolies. Now with the disruption of that monopoly in one regional market prices are back on track with Moore's law there.
Ceci n'est pas une signature.
So get your government to allow it. I have multipair cables (as well as fiber) belonging to two different telecoms crossing my property but the state will allow only one to offer me service. Your cable company has a "franchise" (i.e., monopoly) that they purchased from your local government.
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
I think this is true, and that's why the state grants monopolies to utilities companies.
Generally what you are saying is true. After all, that's the reason Comcast isn't improving in most markets; they're already at the top, and offering a better service than the competition.
The one wrinkle here is that Google's business model is not to profit off the fiber, but to use it as a means to sell other products.
I'm not sure how that one will work out. I don't trust large corporations because they're made up of humans, and if humans screw up badly on their own, in groups they screw up by creating an echo chamber and following each other into oblivion like lemmings.
For that reason, large anything (corporation, volunteer group, government, empire) is prone to fail and fail hard. And with the increasing standardization across the industrial world, "too big to fail" becomes a prophecy of the vast consequences that occur when they do. To substitute a colloquial expression: "the bigger they are, the harder they fall."
AT&T and Austin Time Warner are in a battle for anti-customer supremacy. Both have bizarre and opaque pricing schemes that have stopped me from upgrading to higher speeds. AT&T wants to bundle their overpriced video service or they hit you with added up front fees. Time Warner won't even tell you what their actual prices are after the initial discount period. It's not on their web site, and when I called they said they could not tell me because "things change". They want a long term contract for an unspecified rate... no.
I'm in KC and when "lower end" fiber services in the 24 Mbps range started appearing, so many people started flocking to them that the entrenched service provider started offering better deals. Of course, this didn't happen until they were hammered with defections.
I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
Does this mean that Time Warner is terrified that Los Angeles is next on the list to get Google Fiber?
Is there any other competition coming or recently arrived there?
(As an irrelevant but amusing aside, Chrome thinks "Los Angeles" is spelled wrong, but "LA" and "L.A." are not.)
I am not a crackpot.
This is a story from last month (Dec 12 2012), and it's for all TWC customers.
What about the price cut? I didn't see a mention in the yahoo story, have you seen anything about that? Is it nationwide, too?
I am not a crackpot.
I would generally agree with you but also don't toss the baby out with the bath water.
Government's grant monopolies all the time -- usually for essential services. i.e. The Government has a monopoly on how the country is run.
Standards are a good thing. It is only when they are abused (and I'll agree that monopolies tend to be abused) is when the problem starts.
I always resent when a company does this. This is akin to leaving a job for more pay, then your employer offering you more money to stay. It's insulting.
If Google ever creates network in Canada (there is almost no competition there) I will switch to their service immediately.
SHAW is no better than Time Warner in this regard. They whined and whined that they cannot keep up with the data needs of streaming video and then pushed through their new data caps. So we ended up paying the same amount as before - but now its capped. SHAW aggressively pushes their cable service and their On-Demand service. But its an obsolete business model - they need to get with the times. Lets asy I wanted to catch Game of Thrones on Shaw's On-Demand service.. I can't just subscribe to it - I have to pay for their Digital service .. then pay for the Movie Central service .. THEN pay for the On-Demand service. So $80/mo later I am able to pay the premium on-demand rental price which happens to be the same amount that I'd pay by renting from iTunes, Playstation, or XBox stores.
Furthermore - I'd bet the farm that the only people that are being pestered about their data usage are the people using Netflix and competing services.
Its Greed - plain and simple.
Pirate Bay does not work for live sports / events and stuff like NHL game center live has a poor frame rate
Conversely, cable TV is becoming a niche for viewing live sports broadcasts.
I am not a crackpot.
They're rolling out those changes wherever they fear competition. For us, it was the nearby Verizon FiOS install that caused TW to change.
Here in my small town, the locally-owned cable company ran fiber and whatever else they needs back in 1997, ready to plug in the equipment and throw a switch for broadband.
Then Charter bought them out.
Since Ameritech wasn't offering anything beyond expensive ISDN, Charter didn't feel the need to enable broadband for 4 years. Likewise... Ameritech didn't feel the need to upgrade to DSL. It was a stalemate of stubborn stupidity, with the residents of our town being the victims.
Local utilities commissions need to hold the threat of bringing in competition to get broadband providers to start playing fair. It's the only thing that will work.
This is actually the only good thing that justifies the free market. Not the right for someone to make money. It's the fact that competition reduces prices and improves quality to consumers. (This used to be common knowledge in circa 1970's-80's, but many free-market defenders nowadays don't even pretend it's supposed to be good for anyone except the profiteers.)
That said, it only works for products and services for which (a) you have a choice, (b) you have quality information about the prices and benefits, (c) it's something you have time to carefully weigh the benefits (non-emergencies), and (d) you have the ability to easily change the choice from time to time. Other than that, free-market solutions are not going to benefit the public.
We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
I live in LA and I also got a 50% speed boost for free. I think this is because they changed their pricing tiers. Probably to compete with at&t not Google Fiber.
TW is trying to underprice Google in hopes of driving them from the market. classic reaction. I have heard from a local telco exec that their strategy if somebody overlays the fiber and service they run to homes with, they will undercut whatever competitive price by a buck for a year beyond what the other guys do, and will knock on every single door in the area with installation within 2 hours.
if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
Excuse me, but have you tried a Roku box? Or Apple TV? You can subscribe to services for live sporting events without having cable TV.
Unfortunately, it isn't free, but I'm sure someone is figuring out a way to pirate those services.
Of course they're doing it because of Google.
Where I grew up, we were close to a military base. The town allowed a cable company to have a monopoly. The base didn't, and had competing cable companies. Guess who got much lower prices and a broader selection of channels? Thankfully, the town council at least had enough sense to notice that the base was getting better deals, and to apply pressure to the cable company each time their monopoly came up for renewal. Thus, while they didn't have quite as good prices and selection as the base, my parents still get better prices and selection than I do, even though I now live in a city with about five times the population.
Competition does wonderful things to markets.
Google, please come to Poulsbo, WA and Ocean Springs, MS where the local cable monopolies (Comcast) and (CableOne) have a monopoly stranglehold on service and pricing. I'll switch in a heartbeat.
I live in a rural community that limited DSL through Verizon and cable through TWC. A company called Cinergy Metronet, now just Metronet, came in and started offering fiber-to-the-home. The day they went live, TWC doubled their advertised speeds and dropped their prices to match Metronet.
Probably not. Like so many of these ideologues, he is just a one trick pony.
10-15 years ago I thought I would never be able to get a "fast enough" internet connection (of course that was after 10+ years on 28.8 dial-up). But now, I am using just a basic cable modem and I can't find a good reason to upgrade my speed. Cable company calls or mails me every week or two with offers and I always turn then down. My wife and I each have a laptop and a smart phone, we also have a blu-ray player doing netflix and an ipad. Yet we never really seem to find ourselves starved for bandwidth.
I get the argument for decreasing the cost of high-speed internet access in general, but if the cause is just for more speed, I'm not sympathetic.
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
This explains why they raised my rates last month. I pay at least $10 dollars more with no change in service. Didn't even send a letter to tell me why.
They're all the same. Scumbags and assholes. But I can do without all the garbage that makes up TV... so aside from cable Internet if for whatever reason I have to switch back from DSL, I will likely have to deal with the cell phone companies before the cable companies. And even then, I'd likely get satellite TV if I absolutely must have TV; problem is, their "package" deals are designed to screw you in the same way as cable's, so again, I'd more likely just avoid TV as I have for years.
I really don't know why people continue to do business with a company that repeatedly bends them over and fucks them in the ass, especially for a completely unnecessary service: subscription television.
20 years ago, my dad was in a test city for AT&T digital cable (?), and instantly his Comcast bill dropped from $70 to $35 and Comcast rolled out digital itself.
Competition works. Beware politicians wanting to grant exclusivity using the "this here town ain't big enough for two" argument.
Hint hint, taxis in major cities.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
Um...what now? If you believe that list reads from worst customer service to best, then you apparently believe that our highway departments and the post office have the best customer service in the entire service and infrastructure industries.
The fairness of price is certainly better as you move up the list, and the quality of service is much more consistent...but let's not delude ourselves into thinking the US postal service or the federal highway administration represent paragons of efficiency and politeness here.
Says someone who doesn't live where they are rolling out fiber.
I am John Hurt.
"Where do you live that you have no choice of cell carriers?"
It's not a lack of choice of cell carriers, it's having a cell phone means having to deal with a cell phone carrier, which is sort of like having your choice of slow, painful, fatal diseases. You still die before your time and do so slowly and painfully.
I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.
Which is absolute shit, at least now. Shaw is a member of the Netflix SuperHD program, which means they have (or otherwise directly hook into) a Netflix appliance on their network, so they don't pay any transit fees for netflix data now. If they're complaining about Netflix users "taking all the bandwidth" then it's because they've oversold their network.
Karma: Can only be portioned out by the Cosmos.
Bob, your problem here, as always, is that cable companies do not operate in a free market: they're regional monopolies, not by market forces, but because your local politicians / committees voted, into law, that these particular companies would receive special treatment in return for certain considerations. They have rights of ways, special low rates / taxes, etc. and whatever, for the thousandeth time, that their competitors do not get, and have trouble competing against. That's about as free market as blue is red.
Free market, like it or not, is kind of an all or nothing deal. The entire market is free, or it isn't. There is no middle ground, because any compromise destroys the part of it known as 'free.' Guess which part everyone compromises on? If you said the free part, you'd be right. Everyone wants what the free market offers, unless it's not in their favor; they all want a little button to press to 'fix' the market whenever it looks like it might do something they don't like. The problem is, is that the market is kind of like the AI that controls a jet engine -> you may not like a time T0 that the engine suddenly requested more fuel than you deemed necessary, but that's because the AI was trying to prevent an engine stall at T1; your little override causes a much worse problem than if the engine was completely manual, or completely controlled by the AI. The market is a state-machine, like what you have in a logic course, a computer science course, or a math / engineering course; once put into action, it will continue to reassert valid states in the event of any exceptions. Your problem is that you are denying it that opportunity, and in doing so, making things worse.
But it's more idiotic than that. You're the guy who, despite using a program that can work, and work well, wants to run the program, after it's out of QA, in debug mode, just so you can swap individual values on the stack when you feel like it. It doesn't matter that that's not how it's meant to work, nor that you're not a programmer; it's just what you want to do, and think, hey, instead of getting someone to rewrite the code if there's a problem, I'll just randomly swap values that the program thinks are constants. Holy ^*^*&, the program didn't like that! Well, I guess I need to keep tampering with it, until it stop throwing up errors / output I don't like. You could drive an AI mad, like batshit crazy; you would be the General who would demand an AI be outfitted with a robotic arm so it could salute you whenever you walked by.
I am John Hurt.
TWC increased my throughput by 50% a month or two ago, yet I live in the coastal southeast, nowhere near Kansas City. I certainly haven't received any price cuts though. In fact, just two months ago Time Warner implemented a "modem rental" fee of $3.99/mo on top of the existing rate. If only I could get Google Fiber or a municipal ISP :-/
It's not that they are paragons of efficiency and politeness. They clearly aren't. It's merely that the rest are worse. (Well, since the post office went private, they've gotten a lot worse...but there are plausible reasons why that don't have anything to do with going private. But it *sure* didn't get better. Not even briefly.)
I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
I may know about the existence of Pirate Bay, but I decline to use their wares. Their ethics may be higher than those of the MPAA, but that's an extremely low bar.
I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
Moore's law has no bearing on the big-ticket items for ISPs:
- cabling. Stringing new cables or worse, digging up the street is never going to be free. If Google is putting in FTTH, they're spending a lot.
- subscriber equipment: cramming ever more bandwidth into a phone line means ever more complicated signalling equipment. Using fiber simplifies this (although fiber signalling equipment isn't cheap either), but then you have to lay the cables first, see the point above.
- support
- administration
If you live anywhere that is served by Verizon FIOS they can also be the same company. So far as I know, none of the other cable companies have any presence in wireless, though some have cross-marketing agreements with wireless carriers.
Even though they have shut off people in other states for using too much bandwidth
The link provided is 4 years old. I moved to a TWC area a couple of months ago, and this was the first thing I asked, as I am a fairly heavy bandwidth user. (Usually between 80-150 gig a month, depending on the month, with 100 being average. I have gone as high as 400 gig with Charter when I was using newsgroups alot, and as little as 20 gig). I was assured that they no longer do this, and the bandwidth usage portion on their website is for informational use only (although I did read somewhere that if you go UNDER a certain amount of data a month, they will give you a discount).
If someone has a more recent story about TWC cutting user's services for abuse of bandwidth (say from 2011 or 2012), I would like to see it, and know exactly how much data those users were using.