W Post
 
Why Comcast may be poised to win the Internet speed  race

 
By _Brian Fung_ (http://www.washingtonpost.com/people/brian-fung)  
 
 August 25, 2015
 
Comcast said this week that it's planning to roll out a next-generation 
cable  technology allowing it to compete at the same speeds as Google Fiber — 1 
gigabit  per second. That's very good news for Internet users in the short 
term, if it  pans out. 
Within three years, and possibly two, virtually all of Comcast's 22  
million broadband subscribers could be gigabit-enabled, _according  to the 
company_ 
(http://www.fiercecable.com/story/comcast-well-cover-our-entire-footprint-10-gpbs-capable-docsis-31-tech-soon/2015-08-21)
 . The only catch? You'll 
have to swap out your cable modem for  a new one that supports that extra speed 
(and probably pay a pretty penny for  the service). 
Still, if Comcast is successful, it would suddenly become one of the 
largest  providers of gigabit Internet in the country. AT&T also provides 
gigabit  
Internet through its U-verse product, and as I just mentioned, so does 
Google  Fiber. But Comcast could conceivably edge out these other providers; 
they  offer gigabit services in only a handful of cities so far, with an  
uncertain timeline for expanding because of the need to build new fiber optic  
infrastructure. There's a race on to become a nationwide gigabit  company, and 
with this move, Comcast could pull ahead. 
_[Verizon’s  new, experimental FiOS service is 10 times faster than Google  
Fiber]_ 
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2015/08/12/verizons-new-experimental-fios-service-is-10-times-faster-than-google-fiber/)
  
If Comcast, Google and AT&T are already competing to get Americans on  
gigabit Internet, however, that doesn't compare to the even bigger showdown  
providers like these are going to face in the next decade. Because the next  
race — to 10 Gbps — has already begun. 
It's hard to put in perspective just how mindbogglingly fast 10 Gbps is. So 
 let's look at it this way: At current top speeds of 500 megabits per 
second, a  Verizon customer can download an entire HD movie in roughly 15 
seconds. At the  speed of Google Fiber, that time would be shaved in half. Now, 
think about how  quickly you could download that same film but with a 
connection that's even 10  times faster than that. 
That's the kind of bandwidth we're talking about, and while nobody at home  
really needs all that power (yet), companies like Comcast know that someday 
 they'll be asked to provide it. A 10-gig connection would help cities 
power  their Internet-enabled infrastructure. It would help businesses support  
media-rich communications and possibly even virtual reality applications.  
Multiply your self-driving car and smart home appliances by a couple billion, 
 and it quickly becomes apparent how much data we're going to be using in 
the  future. 
_[Your  cable Internet is about to get way faster]_ 
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2015/01/06/your-cable-internet-is-about-to-get-wa
y-faster/)  
With that in mind, what Comcast plans to roll out shortly isn't just 
capable  of delivering 1 Gbps speeds. Under ideal conditions, the company says 
it's  capable of 10 Gbps speeds, effectively future-proofing the technology, 
which is  known as DOCSIS 3.1. If it ever makes it to market, a 10 Gbps plan 
would  probably be insanely expensive; Comcast already prices its niche, _2  
Gbps service_ 
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2015/04/02/comcasts-new-internet-service-is-twice-as-fast-as-google-fiber/)
  at $300 a 
month. 
But Comcast isn't the only company looking ahead to 10 Gbps. In a sign of 
how  lucrative Internet providers think this space could be, _Verizon  has 
been testing_ 
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2015/08/12/verizons-new-experimental-fios-service-is-10-times-faster-than-google-fiber/)
  
an experimental version of its FiOS service that is 10-gig  capable. This 
is a different technology than cable that, like Google Fiber and  AT&T 
U-verse, relies on fiber-optics. 
At a time when many Americans are still chugging along on sub-1 Gbps  
subscriptions, Comcast and Verizon are trying to get ahead on the costly  work 
they know will have to be done to support 10 Gbps speeds. And over time,  the 
chances that more companies join this race will only  grow.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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