![]() |
Internet Tech Help Please!
I have a question... I'm not real savvy about this type of thing. Currently we use broadband cable as our internet connection. Since we don't subscribe to the cable TV service, it seems that we are penalized and pay more for just internet service.
I keep getting advertisements in the mail about A T & T internet service. Their "Elite" plan (best) is less than my broadband connection. It states "up to 6.0 Mbps". (Whatever that means.) :noidea Can someone who has used both tell me if the speed is comparable? I have gotten used to having fast service and would hate to lose that just to save a few dollars. So........... if you have made the switch from broadband to A T & T - are you happy? Thanks so much for any input! :sos |
I had Sonic.net out of Santa Rosa for I think $13 a month and loved it.
I had Yahoo/Att/SBC for a year at $14.95 and the only thing I did not like was email. So I started moving EVERYTHING to gmail. :woot. SweetPea PM me a number and I can explain more. I have a Bellsouth modem here too not being used. When I moved I am too far from the switch so I have Cable - Horrible but all there is and $50 a month.... |
Quote:
A megabit (Mb) is a million binary pulses, or 1,000,000 pulses (or "bits"). A megabyte (MB) is 2 to the 20th power bytes, or 1,048,576 bytes in decimal notation. Basically they're measuring two different things but trying to get you to think it's "all the same." Is AT&T's 6 Mbps faster than Cable's 4 MBps? No. AT&T's 6Mbps really comes out to .75 MBps when you compare apples to apples. So it's less than one fourth the bandwidth you're probably already getting. Of course, the price difference might make AT&T the better deal over all. It all comes down to a consumer decision. Just look for the capital "B's" verses the lower case "b's". It's an old slight of hand trick. I have used both DSL and Cable- for most practicle purposes they are indistinguishable - at least to me. I use cable at home right now and DSL like connection at work and I have to be doing some heavy downloading to see any difference. If price is a factor- go with the cheaper DSL. |
The "Elite" is AT&T's highest level of residential DSL (they have 1.5 Mbps, 3 Mbps and 6 Mbps)... I'm getting it installed next Tuesday so I can let you know then... I'm currently getting about 4 megabits per second on Comcast (was TimeWarner until a few months ago).
I'm going to be trying out the new broadcast television service through my phone line (not cable and not satellite)... I wonder if that will put a new wrinkle on whether you have an antenna or not. lol. Unfortunately, I have to disagree with Pelathais here. When referring to network speeds, it is measured in bits and not bytes... for example a T-1 is 1.54 Mbps not 1.54MBps. |
You should also note that when it says (up to) that does not mean this is the performance you will actually see. My current connection is rated at up to 7.0 Megabits but right now I am getting about 4.0 Megabits per second... which is way more than most people need anyway, some of us are just bandwidth hungry.
|
Quote:
Actually I looked and paid attention this time - you are correct. My confusion stems from the old @Home service - I think. I went through their customer service training several years ago and they were banging it into everyone's heads that they were dealing with "MB" and not pulses at Mbps like everyone else. It was like a marketing angle. @Home, through many iterations became Comcast and I've still been spewing what they told me without looking into it. And you do have shaggy shin-bones - just so I save a little face here! http://apostolicfriendsforum.com/ima...ons/icon11.gif |
lol, I'm not self-conscious about my legs at all, except for the big scab where I wiped out on my bicycle last week... but hey, skin grows back... if i would have ripped my pants they would have been ruined. No worries. :)
|
Thank you for your responses!!!!!!! I guess the bottom line is the savings - and the change of e-mail addresses. :roseglasses
Currently we pay 59 (includes all taxes)for comcast cable and it looks like we can have the "elite" for 34 (don't know if this includes all taxes). Our cell phones are A T & T as well as our landline. I'm trying to find the "combo package" that best suits our needs and saves the most money. But I didn't want to change internet providers if I am going to lose speed. Can you tell me how to find out what speed I am actually getting now? Again......... thanks for the input. |
Quote:
check out sonic.net also. |
I found a site that let me do a download bandwidth test. I did it twice. These are the results. Is this good?
Download speed: 2499 kilobits per second Test details: 1577 kilobytes downloaded in 5.047 seconds. Receive buffer size: Not available Download speed: 2354 kilobits per second Test details: 3200 kilobytes downloaded in 10.875 seconds. Receive buffer size: Not available |
| All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:00 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.