Virgin Promises 100Mbps Connections To UK Homes 247
registerShift writes "Virgin said it will roll out 100 megabit-per-second broadband connections to homes in the UK. The company said users will experience speeds 'very close' to what's advertised as it plans to deploy cable instead of ADSL used by competitors. 'There is nothing we can't do with our fiber optic cable network, and the upcoming launch of our flagship 100mbps service will give our customers the ultimate broadband experience,' Virgin Media's chief executive officer, Neil Berkett, said. This is just days after the FCC announced aims of 100Mbps by 2020, and companies panned it as unrealistic."
100MB? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:100MB? (Score:4, Funny)
So that you can exceed your download cap in 5 minutes instead of half an hour?
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Yeah, 640K got to be enough for everybody!
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Re:100MB? (Score:5, Insightful)
Youtube 1080p videos still require some buffering on my 5mb connection. Did I mention they're compressed 1080p? It's pretty compressed video, but it's still compressed, and only in stereo. And only 30fps. Some of us have screens that support larger than 1080p. Some of us have computers that can handle 1080p at 60, or even 120fps. Imagine if Mozilla couldn't complain about which compression method we use because everyone simply had enough bandwidth to stream uncompressed video.
I, for one, welcome our 1080p+, uncompressed 120fps streaming video lords
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I, for one, welcome our 1080p+, uncompressed 120fps streaming video lords
24bpp * 1920 * 1080 * 120 = 5,971,968,000 bps
I'd enjoy a 6 gigabit connection as much as the next geek, but that's faster than some internal connection buses! Heck, until PCI-E v3.0 is ready, that would saturate a 16x slot!
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I'll come out and say it then, if you won't. 5,971,968,000 bps is enough bandwidth for anybody.
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Heck, until PCI-E v3.0 is ready, that would saturate a 16x slot!
No it wouldn't, not by a long way! PCIe 1.0 has a raw bitrate of 2.5Gbps and a data byte rate of 250MBps (that's a capital B for bytes) PER LANE.
x4 would cover your uncompressed stream with room to spare (though in reality the netwok card carrying it would probablly be x8 since 10 gigabit is right on the theoretical max of 1.0 x4 and it's good to have some slack).
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video will always be compressed, even if it is non-destructively so. It would irresponsible to implement a system otherwise.
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Once we have 1.18 Gbit/s connections, then uncompressed 1080 might be possible.
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Uncompressed video is magnitudes more information that uncompressed audio.
Here's my rough calculation for uncompressed hi def video ...
1920 pixels x 1080 pixels x 24 bit color x 25 frames per second
= 1244160000 bits per second
= 1215000 kilobits per second
= 1185 megabits per second
= 1.15 gigbits per second
And that's using the more generous 1024 base than the sneaky 1000 base that the DSL companies use when reporting speeds.
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Youtube 1080p videos still require some buffering on my 5mb connection.
For me (and many other people, you among them apparently) Youtube videos always buffer slightly too slow. It only happens with Youtube and if I launch 3 videos at the same time, they all buffer at the same just-a-few-percent-too-slow speed.
The solution is to start buffering a few videos and while you watch them you keep buffering new ones in other tabs. Of course that's not what you'd call convenient and they periodically fsck up their client so you can't pause before the video's running. But until our fri
Re:100MB? (Score:5, Interesting)
Personally the reason I'm looking forward to fibre-based networks is not so much the increase in downstream speed (my 24 Mbps ADSL2+ service is great for the moment), but better upstream speed (my 1 Mbps upload rate is becoming increasingly inadequate as the size of data I upload increases, e.g. uploading photos to Flickr which are 6+ MB each).
ADSL (and to a lesser extent cable) are highly asymmetrical services. You can get symmetrical DSL links (SHDSL for instance), but they tend to have lower aggregate speeds (e.g. 5Mbps/5Mbps) and be very expensive. Fibre gives us the opportunity to have some truly beefy, symmetrical home links, which we'll need as applications become increasingly two-way/interactive.
Put it this way. I'd rather have a 20/20 Mbps connection than a 100/1 Mbps connection (or even a 1Gbps/1Mbps!). Upload speed is nice!
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Thanks for the info. A project for the weekend.
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honestly my measly 1mbps up is fine, I'm more concerned with wireless. iPhone is one of the few phones that upload videos wirelessly, but to save the 3g network it first compresses the crap out of the video, and even then it takes several minutes to upload just 1 minute of highly compressed standard definition video. We really need better wireless.
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It was just an example from personal use, as I don't personally upload videos. But precisely - that's another thing that would benefit from higher upstream speeds.
Plus when I send photos, I send lots. Several hundred photos would easily equate to sending a video.
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I think it changes the way you use the internet. In fact I'm quite happy getting 6mbs down at the moment. What I'm unhappy about is is the 448kbs upstream. It's pathetic, and BT will not do a thing about it. Even full speed residential ADSL2+ is slow upstream, and this is a much bigger problem.
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If you move to an LLU provider (eg: Be), you can get a theoretical 20Mb down/2.5Mb up. Some of the top-end BT contracts will give you a whopping 883K up but, in general, I agree with your sentiment about upstream speeds being more of an issue now.
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Domestic users don't currently need it because domestic user don't currently have it, which means content providers don't provide content that requires it. Same way there was no sane reason for a domestic user to have a broadband connection of any variety in the '90s, when content was adapted for modem-users.
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I can't see why a domestic user needs that speed. I've got virgin cable and the 20MB is plenty for me. Perhaps this has something to do with their Tivo deal and on-demand content?
And 640kb of RAM ought to be enough for everybody.
The fact that you can't see past tomorrow, doesn't mean other can't.
The next big thing will be 3D Movies and games.
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I can't see why a domestic user needs that speed. I've got virgin cable and the 20MB is plenty for me.
Perhaps this has something to do with their Tivo deal and on-demand content?
There was a time when you'd only see a single computer in a house. That time has passed. Most homes have more than one computer.
I have three genuine computers in our house (mine, the wife's, the kid's)... We also have a DVR that can download stuff from the Internet, a set-top box that can stream Netflix stuff, and a couple consoles with Internet connectivity.
Our needs are fairly low. While we may very well wind up with a few on-line games and a couple Pandora streams at one time, it isn't like we're try
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Similarly, 100 Mb/s download speeds are helpful for some people (mostly big companies and schools). To a normal person, who cares if you can download a song in
Re:100MB? (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't see the point of mandating that everyone have access that fast when it's fairly obvious that we don't need it right now and there's no reason to think we will anytime soon
One household with a few "normal" users and a couple of power users could simultaneously have people doing hi def 3D chat, or on demand 3D TV, internet radio in 5.1 or 7.1 (pointless for most pop music but you can get some music in surround sound and in future probably it may become more common as we get more storage space and bandwidth to play with), hosting their own website and games servers with possibly thousands of clients, using bit-torrent, downloading updates, backing up their data to an off-site server, hosting your media collection for streaming to mobile devices when you're out and about etc (why bother to get an iPod with 1TB of storage or have to synchronise your collection on multiple devices when you can stream it all from one main server?).
So there's plenty of useful stuff that we could be doing right now if we had a better network infrastructure. And If we don't upgrade the infrastructure now, we won't be able to do those things, and neither will we be able to even have the right mindset to design new applications that can make use of the extra bandwidth.. it's a bit of a chicken/egg scenario, and it's great to have some companies pushing forward despite the usual naysayers.
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Maybe one day we'll need to transfer more data than that, but I don't see the point of mandating that everyone have access that fast when it's fairly obvious that we don't need it right now and there's no reason to think we will anytime soon.
There's a few problems with that...
The biggest one is that, apparently, US ISPs just aren't going to roll out upgrades unless they're forced to.
I keep seeing folks on here talking about their 20 Mbps connections... Other folks have 10 Mbps... The fastest I have available is 5 Mbps. That's it.
The problem is that the local ISPs have a virtual monopoly. I don't have any real options. I either make do with the 5 Mbps, or I don't have Internet.
If somebody doesn't mandate upgrades, I won't see anything more
Something has to be done! (Score:4, Insightful)
Abstinence (Score:3, Funny)
Yes but.... (Score:5, Funny)
...what is she going to charge?
Not fibre (Score:3, Insightful)
It really, really, *really* irks me that Virgin's advertising constantly goes on about it being "fibre optic" where ADSL is copper.
Fact is, Virgin is NOT fibre optic in the sense that their advertising implies - at best and in some areas only, they have fibre to the cabinet. They do not offer fibre to the home anywhere (which ironically BT actually are offering in some new-build areas). BT also has FTTC in some areas already and is rolling this out into more rural areas to improve speeds there.
Re:Not fibre (Score:4, Interesting)
I agree that this is a bit misleading. Virgin isn't alone in doing this - it seems to be a common thing for FTTN (fibre to the node) networks everywhere. In my city (Canberra, Australia), there is a company called TransACT (http://www.transact.com.au) that has an extensive network which they also like to advertise as being fibre. But it's only fibre to each distribution box (each servicing 50-100 homes), then a short copper link which they run to the premises. They run VDSL at 52 Mbps over the copper, delivering IPTV, phone and Internet access. So like the Virgin proposal, it's only fibre to the node, not to the home. Some areas are being upgraded to VDSL2 which brings speeds up towards 100 Mbps.
Not to say that's a bad thing - the short copper runs mean you are guaranteed the advertised speed (unlike ADSL2+, on which you get 'as fast as your line will allow', which can be pretty bad if your copper line is more than 3 or 4 km long). But to contrast their 'fibre' network to 'crappy old DSL' is plainly wrong (especially considering they even use an xDSL technology for the last mile!).
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But who (average consumer I mean) want real FTTH anyway? Which means you will need to pay for the Fiber-Copper converter, or get a Fiber capable network card.
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Why make your life harder converting fiber to copper, pulling copper cable inside the house, using a modem to convert copper to utp and so on when you can just get a fiber to utp adapter for less than 100$....
The reason they chose to work with adsl and dsl and all that crap is because they can lock users into their own telephony and modems they give you are if not cheaper then proprietary - you'll pay a dollar or so rent for it for as long as you subscribe when it probably costs them 20-30$ a piece.
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Not really, the real reason is so they don't have to spend lots of money digging up the old copper and replacing it with fibre. I don't know how your phone company does it, but in new build areas BT intend to put fibre in from the start, not copper.
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Me!
And it's 'Fibre To The Home' not Fibre To The Desktop, ISP's don't expect you to deploy fibre gear throughout your existing infrastructure any more than cable providers expect you to have a home cable network. Everything is output over Ethernet once it's in your house.
Or were you looking for a +funny?
'very close' to what's advertised (Score:2)
It better be the “very close ABOVE” kind, or they just admitted to not giving you what they advertise. Which would be illegal, wouldn’t it?
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They use the magic words "up to" in their advertising, then they can sell whatever they want as whatever speed they want to call it.
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that's because it's going to be variable, as the last mile isn't fibre optic. See also ADSL connections that promise up to 8MB
Well I can't comment on what exactly the cable coming through my wall is, but I have Virgin cable broadband and my experience is that I get pretty-much every last bit of my "up to 10Mbps" connection.
That compares extremely favourably with my old ADSL connection, which while advertised as "up to 8Mbps" actually reported a line speed of ~2Mbps and rarely delivered much above about 1.5M
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If you define "10Mbps" as "10,000,000 bits / second" then I'm getting 2.4% more than they advertise.
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100MB speed in principle is great. (Score:2, Interesting)
So, how much traffic can they really handle? (Score:3, Insightful)
Availability... (Score:4, Insightful)
> "There is nothing we can't do with our fibre optic cable network,
Apart from get it anywhere near approximately 50% of the population, and that is mostly in the very dense urban areas. Sure, wonderful if you live in an area that NTL cabled back in the 90s.
Re:Availability... (Score:4, Insightful)
Indeed. Has to have been cabled before all the cable companies merged into Virgin, because they haven't laid a single meter of cable since and never will again.
Re:Availability... (Score:4, Interesting)
Ding. I work in a 90's era business park that can only get crappy ADSL. The NTL/Telewest/Virgin cable runs end just across the road, and they are adamant that they have no plans to extend it. This is business custom they're turning down here, and what's amazing is that their attitude is quite openly "Nope, not interested. Go with BT."
Given that their residential service is much more expensive than a BT/Sky package, and that their only USP, content on demand, hasn't been meaningfully refreshed in months, I guess they've decided to just turtle up and squeeeeze their existing customer base as much as possible, rather than invest in getting any new custom.
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Missing words (Score:3, Informative)
Virgin Promises Up To 100Mbps Connections To UK Homes
What you'll really get is something completely different
Try getting my 20Mbit to run at speed first! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Try getting my 20Mbit to run at speed first! (Score:4, Informative)
http://allyours.virginmedia.com/html/internet/traffic.html [virginmedia.com]
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Mod very informative!
Wonderful! (Score:2)
I'll stick with my favoured LLU ADSL ISP (Andrews and Arnold [aaisp.net] - No filtering, no shaping, almost constantly get max connection speed in my area (8Mb/s), first line support is an engineer, not a child with a script).
If your have the optical in the wall (Score:2)
The real trick is the telco nodes seeing you as a bunch of adsl users rather than a single users.
If you live in a new estate or flats with optical rolled out then your just another consumer who would have got a customer pipe deal in the past for the $$$.
The real trick is the back haul and shared links around the UK.
If its all saturated in the city or suburbia and then ont
C'mon guys this is Virgin your're talking about (Score:3)
The stated speed of 100MB/s will only work as long you don't actually use it that often. If you use Bittorrent and/or Youtube/iPlayer too much Virgin will trottle down your connection (they do it alreay with their current 40MB/s fibre offer.
Oh, and by the way, your connection will be silently censored.
And let's not forget that Virgin is also a media company: if you, your kids, the neighbour (that managed to hack into your Wireless connection because you used no or easy encryption) or anybody else actually downloads music-tracks/videos/games/apps from some fishy place or other through your connection, expect a call from the appropriate industry's lawyers.
Last but not least, most Virgin companies have incredibly bad costumer service: even when their products are good, you can't trust them not to overcharge you, auto-renew your contracts against your wishes and/or other fishy practices. Usually they include incredible clausules in their contract designed to make it impossible for you to leave (good luck remembering to cancel your contract at a very specific couple of days in the year before they auto-renew).
Wrong (Score:2, Informative)
http://allyours.virginmedia.com/html/internet/traffic.html [virginmedia.com]
Sounds great (Score:2)
When are they actually going to lay fibre to my town then? I realize 60k people is far too few for them bother with - no cable provider has ever rolled out cable to Maldon.
Up (Score:2)
I'm on their 20Mbit package at the moment; I don't really need any faster downstream at the moment, but I would like a faster upstream (currently 1Mbit), so what's the upstream going to be on the 100Mbit downstream package?
Cable is crap (Score:2)
Cable is crap and will always be crap due to the way that its shared bandwidth.
At least with my 1.5Mbps ADSL, I can actually GET 1.5Mbps even in peak time.
Hate to be a party pooper... (Score:2)
This is not uncommon, rather it's the rule. It's also quite rare to see services below 10 Mbit/s unless you are in a rural area.
The reason you don't see 100 Mbit conenctions in the US is because the big telcos are not feeling the heat, they are lazy.
Re:Unrealistic? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm pretty sure Virgin isn't rolling out Fibre-to-the-home, just using their existing cable network, it really irks me that they get to advertise 'Fibre Optic Network' when it's set up pretty much the same as BT Openreach's, just with newer cables to the home.
If I'm not mistaken, BT Openreach is beating Virgin laying out fibre-to-the-home by presumably a long .. long time:
http://www.thinkbroadband.com/news/4068-openreach-fibre-to-the-home-coverage-to-double.html [thinkbroadband.com]
Re:Unrealistic? (Score:5, Interesting)
Not only are they deceitful in their advertising (few if any get the advertised speeds), but Virgin are also one of the biggest enemies of fair Internet access in the UK. Witness the CEO of Virgin Media's reported comments [theinquirer.net] that net neutrality is "a load of bollocks" and that Virgin Media are arranging deals with various content providers to deliver their content faster over their competitors.
Virgin can promise me whatever amount of bandwidth they like (not that they've ever delivered on their advertising from what I hear), I'll never support them and I'll continue to explain to those that ask my advice (I'm one of the go-to technical people for a lot of friends) exactly why I don't like them and suggest competitors.
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I'm on their 10Mb service and getting close to what they advertise. Specifically my cable modem is reporting that it is connected at 10240000 bits/sec.
I have seen downloads (normally from steam) hit 1.2MB/s.
Even better, my cable modem's uptime is currently 108 days 18h:11m:16s, my (admittedly custom) router's uptime is 107 days, 12 hours, 12 minutes. I've never seen an ADSL connection stay up that long.
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I've seen. Be Internet in London, around Stockwell. My uptime was the same as my Linux server - both shutdown when I forgot to top up electricity after 9 months...
Yes, it can happen, but most companies don't give a damn about that as most customers don't have a clue.
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my cable modem's uptime is currently 108 days 18h:11m:16s, my (admittedly custom) router's uptime is 107 days, 12 hours, 12 minutes. I've never seen an ADSL connection stay up that long.
Virgin Media had a wide-area crapout for about 3 hours yesterday; my cable modem didn't reboot at all during that time. Uptime is not an indicator of connection stablilty!
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True. However, it hasn't been down during the times I've been using it in those 100 days, or probably at all as my non-static IP hasn't changed.
I haven't seen an ADSL connection that doesn't need the modem rebooting at least once a week (though in a lot of cases, it's the router's fault, not the connection).
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I get 512 kbps. Bit slow at times, but it beats the pants off of the 256 kbps upload "up to 8 Mb" ADSL connections.
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Hahahahah.
No, they don't advertise an upload speed of 10Mb, in fact it's only 0.5Mb upload on the "L" package. However, I do get that too.
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I'm on their 20mb service, and have been with them for several years now. My location has overheard phone cables, so fast ADSL is not an option leaving me with Virgin cable as my only broadband option.
Over the past few months the speed has practically collapsed. Now I never get any more than about 6mb from sites like Microsoft.
More alarminly, is that it's not a constant speed. If I watch the traffic graph in DownThemAll (using a single stream, single file download) it looks like a row of mountains, peaking
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I know if I contact them, they'll argue that it's my equipment (it's not - nothing has changed on my side of the network for a couple of years now), and they'll never admit to it being their problem...
You are probably right, but you imply you have not even tried. My advice is to try and contact them letting them know you have a problem.
They may be able to suggest a fix. It may be some weird conflict between your equipment and theirs so listen to any suggestions they make, try them, and if it does not fix it change it back. All this will cost you is a bit of time. If you do not have time to spare then change to a different supplier and see if everything works perfectly with them instead, just remember tha
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I know if I contact them, they'll argue that it's my equipment (it's not - nothing has changed on my side of the network for a couple of years now), and they'll never admit to it being their problem...
Except one thing has changed. Your equipment has got older.
It also sounds like you're more stubborn than they are.
Re:Unrealistic? (Score:4, Informative)
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I'll never support them and I'll continue to explain to those that ask my advice (I'm one of the go-to technical people for a lot of friends) exactly why I don't like them and suggest competitors.
Go on then - who offers a reliable, honest, cost-effective UK broadband service (preferably with a static IP)?
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There must be more of us "few" than you think. I pay for 10 (their slowest speed BTW) and get 9.7. I switched after years of paying for an 8Mbps ADSL line that would max out at about 3.
Re:Unrealistic? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Agreed. It all looks smooth till you go and download that Linux ISO (DVD). The first 3Gb come across at close to the advertised speeds, then you're capped down to 768Kb/s.
I suspect they do something to the stream, too. I've never managed to d/l an ISO yet where the checksum tallied.
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I highly recommend BitTorrent, unless it's throttled. If the torrent is properly seeded, you should be able to max out your connection (just make sure you set the max number of peers high enough - that way, even if you get stuck with a lot of slow uploaders, you'll still be able to go at a decent pace), and any good torrent client will do checksum verification and redownload chunks of the file as necessary ensuring you get a proper copy of the
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and any good torrent client
Are there any torrent clients that don't do that?!
BTW a quick tip, sometimes you will see one chunk keep failing. Usually that is because something is messing with the stream so if you see that issue turn on "encryption" (I put encryption in quotes because if you think you have any privicy at all when torrenting you are dangerously ignorant).
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Which happens very often on Virgin, at least if my experience is anything to go by. 500 ms pings / 10% packet loss does not make for a satisfactory internet experience.
My current 1.5 Mbps ADSL connection is much more satisfactory overall than the allegedly 10 Mbps Virgin one I had a couple of years ago.
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I'm pretty sure Virgin isn't rolling out Fibre-to-the-home, just using their existing cable network
Correct. I'm always amazed they've got away with advertising like this for so long. It's coax to the house.
I used them for eight years through the Telewest/NTL merger and the Virgin rebranding while they got steadily worse and worse. I had their 10Mbps/512kbps service which struggled to provide half that most of the time. I suspect they spend more on advertising than they do on infrastructure.
The awful upload
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Virgin suck - don't go near them. My customer is stuck with them because the broadband over phone wires is hopelessly slow -- too far from the exchange.
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I just wish governments would wise up, and only let them advertise caps at 100% saturation...
You have a 1mbps cap? ok
that's 1000000bits/s * 3600s/1hour * 24 hours/1day * 30days/1month * 1byte/8bits, here's your cap
This also takes care of overselling, anyone want to promote such a regulation in the web hosting industry?
Re:Virgin sucks (Score:4, Informative)
You're talking about ADSL: Virgin offer ADSL in non-cable areas. Of COURSE you don't get the advertised speeds: ADSL is notorious for that. Those of us who live in Virgin Cable areas get much faster connections at the advertised speed: I'm paying for 20Mb and I'm getting 20Mb (& I checked the modem before I wrote that).
Basically your complaint is "ADSL is shit. I wish I had cable."
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What I mean by this is, on their 24Mbit plan, I would get no higher than about 200Kbytes per second
24Mbps is an ADSL speed not a cable one, ADSL is notoriously poor because of BT's shitty telephone wires. Virgin cable broadband offers speeds in whole 10s of Mbps - from memory, 10, 20 or 50 currently. I have the 10Mbps service and get pretty-much exactly that; downloads speeds of 1.1MB/s or higher are the norm for me, not the exception.