And we're off: Twin Cities get first DOCSIS 3.0 deployment
Although we just heard that Comcast's DOCSIS 3.0 rollout was on track for 2009, folks in the Twin Cities region now have exclusive bragging rights for an undisclosed window of time. Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota have become the first markets to have access to an all new "extreme" broadband (or wideband, as it were) connection, which promises 50Mbps down / 5Mbps up. As expected, the carrier isn't being modest about the launch, claiming that users can suck down a 4GB HD movie "in about ten minutes," compared to "more than six hours" on a 1.5Mbps DSL connection. The newfound speed won't come cheap -- for residential users, look to lay down $149.95 per month for the privilege. Even if you aren't springing for the good stuff, current customers in the area will have their existing broadband connections hastened gratis, with 6Mbps / 384Kbps users moving up to 1Mbps uploads and 8Mbps / 768Kbps users seeing 2Mbps uploads. Kudos, Twin Cities -- you just made most of America sick with envy.
[Image courtesy of TheRedWoodMotel]
[Image courtesy of TheRedWoodMotel]





















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
BRANDON @ Apr 3rd 2008 8:29AM
Sick with envy??!?! I think not.. I have had 50Mbps VERIZON FIOS for over a year. I locked in a price of $59.99 with a promo they had in my area.
UnnDunn @ Apr 3rd 2008 8:57AM
I have 20M/20M FiOS. Green with envy? Not me. :)
Flashpoint @ Jun 18th 2008 8:27AM
If they could put together a $150 a month pacage for internet, tv and phone, I'd bite.
I got Verizon FIOS too and I'm paying $80 a month for phone + internet
igG4 @ Apr 3rd 2008 8:30AM
If Comcast has so much freaking bandwidth maybe they should stop putting the screws on their HD signals. Maybe they will try to charge for uncompressed TV by calling it a premium service and ask $150/month for it.
Yubastard @ Apr 3rd 2008 9:56AM
If some cable company did just that and offered uncompressed video, I would have to be in.
Unfortunately is less of a problem with the masses of people out there.
sn1per @ Apr 5th 2008 2:34PM
Ever heard of fios?
sn1per @ Apr 3rd 2008 10:33AM
50/5 for $150/month, plus they throttle your connection when you decide to actually use it? No thanks, I'll stick with my 20/5 for $45/month with Verizon. They won't throttle my connection, and they won't sell me out to the RIAA.
Dave @ Apr 3rd 2008 10:35AM
I'm a Twin Cities resident, and I'm sick with envy when I think of all the folks who have access to FIOS.
Dan S @ Apr 3rd 2008 10:40AM
Score, my sling box will greatly appreciate this.
I suspect eventually they'll try and move everyone to DOCSIS, as it will free up bandwidth.
dean-l @ Apr 3rd 2008 1:29PM
I live with COMpressionCAST in the Twin Cities.
I'm jealous of all the dish and Fios people.
Comcast quit compressing my HDTV!!!!
Sam Winter @ Apr 4th 2008 7:04AM
Ha.... It now shouldn't take more than an hour or two of torrenting and you'll be throttled down to 56K modem speeds! No matter what, Cable is a stop-gap until Fiber is rolled out everywhere.
Remember, even with DOCSIS 3.0, cable is a shared medium.
There is only 160mbps down/120mbps upload per ~32 home neighborhood. If you happen to have some serious leeches on the line, you won't be seeing 50mbps often!
Fios is cheaper, faster, and NO CAPS! I would KILL to be in a FIOS area. Verizon, GET YOUR ASS OUT TO THE WEST!
efhand @ Apr 4th 2008 7:42PM
Re: "Ha.... It now shouldn't take more than an hour or two of torrenting and you'll be throttled down to 56K modem speeds!"
Please define "torrenting" & "thottled" as used here, including real world effects on customers.
Thanks.
sn1per @ Apr 5th 2008 2:40PM
Torrenting = The use of BitTorrent protocol, which allows for very fast filesharing.
Throttling = The limiting of bandwidth supplied to a connection.
In the past, Comcast has throttled users who use BitTorrent. Recently, they finally agreed to stop this practice, instead replacing it with a policy to throttle ANYONE who they think is using too much bandwidth (i.e. using it for more than just surfing the web). This basically means that once you download or upload more than a certain amount of data in a month, Comcrap will limit your speeds for the rest of the month.
loosely_coupled @ Apr 7th 2008 9:37PM
@sn1per
Thank you sir..
@efhand
Yes, "torrenting" is just a method of transferring large files. But it doesn't matter what or how you download/upload files. If you are an AppleTV/ITunes/Xbox360 movie downloads fanatic and cross over a certain arbitrary limit, Comcast will slow your connection speed to the internet to a crawl.
Fred @ Jun 19th 2008 3:33AM
Fios internet is great, but their DVR is ABSOLUTE CRAP and they seem to have no interest at all in fixing it.