> Steinar Haug wrote: > Telenor, the largest Norwegian service provider, capped their > ADSL customers at a ridiculously low 1 Gbyte/month for a > while. Presumably they lost sufficient business to other > (uncapped) providers that they noticed - the cap has now been > removed.
Ridiculous is the word here. Download two service packs and you're done for the month? I can understand this happening in Brazil or India, where caps are a tool to attract enough customers so they bring revenue that in turn will be re-injected in much needed backbone upgrades, but in Norway or the US it does not make a lot of sense to me. >> Michel Py wrote: >> I agree, but see above: a 40GB/mo cap is not something that >> I care about. Granted, I'm not a hardcore file swapper but >> 40GB/mo are more > Mikael Abrahamsson wrote: > I don't know of any capped service over here, nobody dares > take the first step. The largest 10meg provider here launched > a new 100 meg full duplex service for their approx 200.000 > household reach at USD$110 a month with a 300G cap (their 10 > meg service for $45 a month is uncapped) and there has been > a fair amount of users complaining about 300G not being nearly > enough. When you start swapping DVDRs it just isn't. There is a need for capping 10 and 100 meg residential though; if you want to run your 100 Mb/s pipe full all the time it represents 26TB per month in each direction; you can't give 2/3rds of an OC-3 to a customer for $110/mo. A 300GB/mo cap means that the customer is using their line an average of 1.15%, which brings the interesting question of what a reasonable speed/cap ration should be. 1.5 Mb/s = 389 GB/mo 10 Mb/s = 2.6 TB/mo 100 Mb/s = 26 TB/mo Speed/cap ratios: 1.5 Mb/s capped at 1 GB/mo = 0.25% ridiculous IMHO 10 Mb/s capped at 40 GB/mo = 1.54% 100 Mb/s capped at 300 GB/mo = 1.15% Thoughts, anyone? Michel.