Why Comcast is a great ISP.
August 7th, 2007 by Jake
Comcast, my ISP, is great. They sign you up for (in my case) an 8MB/1MB connection, but after the first few months of service, I noticed my bandwith increasing. I did a speed test, and the download was for the most part unmetered. The upload had a small increase. I don’t know why Comcast does what they do, but my internet is about 3x faster than it was (I get burst speeds of up to 2.5MB/sec, and solid downloads at about 1.2MB/sec). Here’s a speed test I ran just a few mintues ago:
For the most part, I can tell what kind of internet or bandwith limits a server has when I’m downloading from it (i.e. one site may cap its downloads at 200k/s whereas another may give me as much as 800k/s, others are as fast as my cable line). I really like their policy on home networks, too, they guarantee an internet connection to your house, but after that it’s up to you to configure your home network the way you want it to run (no router support unlike AT&T DSL, for example).





Geek and a Half » Blog Archive » Why Comcast is not a great ISP. says:
August 24th, 2007 at 6:41 pm
[…] A little contradictory considering my last entry, I know. But I just recently found out that Comcast, using a special network application, is blocking BitTorrent seeding. Using specific software known as Sandvine, it allows Comcast to allow upload traffic, but only when a download is in progress. As soon as you start seeding, this application tags all BitTorrent traffic with the “RST” flag (read more about the RST flag at Wikipedia). […]