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Comcast Considering Hard Bandwidth Limits and Overage Charges

With cable companies trying to squeeze every penny out of their subscribers and to manage costs Comcast is strongly considering placing a hard limit on how much bandwidth a subscriber can use and charge overage fees if you go past that cap.

A Comcast insider tells me the company is considering implementing very clear monthly caps, and may begin charging overage fees for customers who cross them. While still in the early stages of development, the plan — as it stands now — would work like this: all users get a 250GB per month cap. Users would get one free “slip up” in a twelve month period, after which users would pay a $15 charge for each 10 GB over the cap they travel. According to the source, the plan has “a lot of momentum behind it,” and initial testing is slated to begin in a month or two.

“The intent appears to be to go after the people who consistently download far more than the typical user without hurting those who may have a really big month infrequently,” says an insider familiar with the project, who prefers to remain anonymous. “As far as I am aware, uploads are not affected, at least not initially.” According to this source, the new system should only impact some 14,000 customers out of Comcast’s 14.1 million users (i.e. the top 0.1%).

[...]

The new cap will be coupled with plans to increase enforcement of DMCA letters sent to P2P pirates. “Up until now, letters sent out to account holders have not been tracked,” the source says. “This will change, with progressively increasing penalties, up to disconnection of the account after four letters within a 12 month period.” This will be one way Comcast can maintain their promise to be “protocol agnostic,” while still booting some high-consumption users.

How about before Comcast upgrades their billing and tracking system, they focus on better quality of service for their users.

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eeeeeeeeeeeeeeePC Now Sporting Windows (And Same Great Price)

Want to know the cheapest Windows XP ultra portable out there? Its the Asus eeePC! Best Buy has taken the wraps off of (and is stocking) the $399 mobile sales wonder.

This little guy is VERY similar to its Linux counterpart with the following specs:

  • Intel® Celeron® M processor with 400MHz frontside bus and 900MHz processor speed
  • 512MB DDR2 memory for multitasking power
  • 7″ WVGA TFT-LCD widescreen display with 800 x 480 resolution
  • 4GB flash-based hard drive; shock-proof design
  • Intel® UMA graphics with up to 64MB shared video memory
  • Built-in Web cam
  • 3 high-speed USB 2.0 ports
  • Built-in high-speed wireless LAN (802.11b/g); 10/100 Mbps Ethernet LAN (with RJ-45 connector)
  • Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition

Not bad for $399 if you ask me and based upon my experience with the Linux eeePC that I installed Windows XP on the performance is perfectly acceptable for a secondary travel laptop.

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Comcast Teams Up With BitTorrent, Promises to Be Net Neutral

Comcast, who is one of the internets most flagrant offenders of packet shaping, has teamed up with BitTorrent and has announced that they will keep their network neutral.

Comcast has announced that it will lift the ban on BitTorrent traffic, which prevented its users from sharing files using the popular protocol. The ISP and BitTorrent Inc. will work together on finding customer friendly solutions for the congestion allegedly caused by BitTorrent traffic.

Comcast has announced that it will stop targeting BitTorrent transfers and has said it will invest in its network capacity. For the time being the company will throttle users who use the most bandwidth, not all BitTorrent users per se.

I’m glad that Comcast decided that spending money on capacity, rather then filtering equipment is the way to keep customers happy. A decision like this can also add to Comcasts bottom line in that with additional Comcast can offer premium data packages that customers could subscribe to.

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Feed Help

Ok, riddle me this…

How come my feed shows up full text in some readers and in some readers it is cut off?

The biggest offenders of cutting off a feed is the dumb .Mac reader on the iPhone and Firefox. I’m using Feedburner and am completely stumped. Any advice is welcomed. (This post WILL self destruct)

Have Vista SP1? Microsoft Will Give You Free Telephone Support

So, you made the plunge to Vista SP1 and things are not necessarily going according to plan, Microsoft is here to help – so long as you don’t mind waiting over 40 minutes.

They are graciously (?!) offering FREE telephone tech support for compatibility problems up until March 18, 2009. If using a telephone isn’t your style they also offer online chat support as well as email responses.

Not a bad deal to help push this poorly adopted OS.

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Get an iPod 4GB Nano for $100

Gotta love deals, right? If you want to step up from your shuffle, Buy.com has the 4GB silver model for $99 – with shipping included. It’s a reconditioned model, but bests Apple’s price by $30.

If you want to upgrade, now would be the time to do it.

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hulu goes public

huluTM_355

Hulu, the online video service offering videos from more than 50 content providers, including FOX, NBC and others launches today. After being in beta for 18 weeks, the site is now open to all. The downside is that you can only view the shows if you’re within the US, unless of course you discovered some sort of way around it. A circumvention if you will. I’ve been playing around with the site and have to say I am pleased. Watching full episodes of The Office, The Simpsons and Family guy is nice, knowing it shouldn’t be pulled down and the video quality is decent as well. Thoughts?

Try It

Get Your Fill of Free WiFi

Have a laptop and a need for connectivity, but never know where to find free wifi? There are a few websites out there that help catalog all the ways to get your Internet fix:

  • OpenWiFiSpots: 24,000 Wi-Fi hotspots. No sign-up or login required. US Only.
  • Hotspotr: 7300 Wi-Fi hotspots in over 1800 cities. Signups required. Logs paid for access sites too.
  • JiWire: 200,000 Wi-Fi hotspots in 135 countries. Revenue made by advertising with targeted data. Although vast, can be inaccurate.

What is your favorite location for free or cheap Wi-Fi?

iPhone SDK Event: Games, Enterprise and Free Money*

  • iPhone 2.0 Software available in June, Beta available now to selected developers and enterprise customers.
  • iPhone 2.0 beta includes iPhone Software Development Kit and new enterprise features, including support for Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync, providing secure, over-the-air push email, contacts, calendars and remote wipe as well as Cisco IPsec VPN for encrypted access to private corporate networks.
  • iPhone SDK provides API for developers to create applications for both the iPhone and iPod Touch.
  • Anyone can download iPhone SDK beta for free and run the iPhone Simulator on their Mac.
  • SDK allows developers to make native iPhone apps.
  • iPhone 2.0 software release will contain the App Store, letting users browse, search and purchase third party applications wirelessly to their iPod Touch or iPhone.
  • Developers set their price and retain 70 percent of all sales revenues.
  • Developers can make free apps as well – free to developer and user.
  • Apple will handle all the hosting, infrastructure, web hosting, credit card and DRM (yuck) stuff with the Apple Store.
  • Apple must approve applications first and they will only be available in the App Store.
  • $100 Million iFund started to invest in Application developers.
  • Spore is coming to the iPhone as well as another space-shooter, both use the accelerometer.

Quite a bit of stuff so I tried to get what was important. Check out live coverage by Engadget and Techcrunch if you like wading through all the info.

*made up the free money thing to get your attention

Sync Google and Outlook With Google Calendar Sync

calsync.jpg

Want to use a web-based calendar but can’t because of syncing, or lack thereof? Google Calendar Sync was unveiled tonight allows you to sync your Google Calendar with your Outlook Calendar. The program works both ways and should prove useful for anyone who fancies having their Calendar data available wherever they are.

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