More than partially plausible. The average rate doesn't jibe with my own
experience in places such as Poland, for example, which has terrific broadband
speed in urban areas, at least as fast as urban experience in the Czech
Republic and Slovakia. And what to think of Finland, the most connecte
Right now it cold be Canadian or US. They are almost on par.
Stewart
At 10:44 PM 4/3/2010, you wrote:
Can't speak for others, but I am on an account with Rogers Cable
Systems in Ontario that gets me consistently up to 25 Mbps speed.
And there is an account type that is one higher than that w
Can't speak for others, but I am on an account with Rogers Cable Systems in
Ontario that gets me consistently up to 25 Mbps speed. And there is an account
type that is one higher than that which tops out at 50. Mind you it doesn't;t
come cheap but there it is.
How much does Rogers Cable charg
Don't know if this is good or bad. Advice, please.
10 mbps is basic LAN speed. That's broadband in my book.
If that's what you're paying for that's what you should be getting.
*
** List info, subscription management,
I agree. We all have to stop living in the past.
No kidding. We can anticipate the iJack shortly.
Absolutely painless.
*
** List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy **
** policy, calmnes
Reading the "Broadband Speed Map" message, I checked my speed at
http://www.wugnet.com/myspeed/speedtest.asp
Download Speed is 10.0 Mbps
Upload speed variable for 3 tests: 0.76 Mbps, 1.51 Mbps, and 1.6 Mbps.
Don't know if this is good or bad. Advice, please.
I have Verizon FIOS in Vienna, Vi
On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 4:57 PM, mike wrote:
> I saw a guy eating a bowl of cereal once while on the freeway. Why not
> compute?
I agree. We all have to stop living in the past. Technology has
shown us that there is another way. We need to begin to let the
technology, and those corporations
I was just catching up on some of the technology videos at the NY Times
site:
http://video.nytimes.com/video/playlist/technology/1194811622271/index.html
I think it was the video of their 2nd day of CES coverage where they had
a guy talking about a new Garmin unit that can communicate with a dev
So things in the USA are really much worse than the map would
indicate. You are not making us feel better.
Farthest thing from my mind (to not make you feel better).
I'm saying that the data used to create that map is insufficiently
granular, that's all. I wouldn't be privy to the methodology
In municipalities we are well served by high speed Net access.
It is when you get on the fringes of these municipalities and into
the suburban areas that there is a stark difference.
There are a number of smaller towns in this area, 10K population or
so that have varying degrees of service.
On Apr 3, 2010, at 4:12 PM, Eric S. Sande wrote:
The speeds on the map are somewhat misleading. The FCC says that
anything over 768 kBPS qualifies as "broadband." Nothing in that says
anything about symmetric or asymmetic (and they are setting the bar
too low).
So things in the USA are really
I saw a guy eating a bowl of cereal once while on the freeway. Why not
compute?
On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 1:11 PM, phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 1:29 PM, tjpa wrote:
>
> > It solves a big problem for car makers by letting them add many
> computerized
> > features to the car w
On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 1:29 PM, tjpa wrote:
> It solves a big problem for car makers by letting them add many computerized
> features to the car without having to go into the computer building
> business. They can just write apps or have somebody else write them. I
> wonder if the dock connector
For those who say that USA has rotten broadband speeds because we
have such low population density, why is Canada ahead of US?
A variety of reasons. The real question is how you define broadband.
The speeds on the map are somewhat misleading. The FCC says that
anything over 768 kBPS qualifies
On Apr 3, 2010, at 1:45 PM, mike wrote:
The day must end in Y, Tom is blaming the neomicrosofticons again.
And the neomicrosofticons continue to insist that our slow connections
are just fine and that any news of better service in other countries
must be some statistical aberration. The onl
The Amen Corner checking in.
Friends on the Lower North Shore of Quebec have neither dependable dial-up,
nor hydro.
- Original Message -
From: "Rev. Stewart Marshall"
To:
Sent: Saturday, April 03, 2010 1:47 PM
Subject: Re: [CGUYS] Broadband Speeds Map
Absolutely.
My in-laws li
First you must live in a Rogers Cable served area.
Stewart
At 12:51 PM 4/3/2010, you wrote:
Can't speak for others, but I am on an account with Rogers Cable
Systems in Ontario that gets me consistently up to 25 Mbps speed.
And there is an account type that is one higher than that which tops
We have cable here like that, in most areas too...just not MINE which is
what matters. heh
On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 10:51 AM, Michael Wosnick wrote:
> Can't speak for others, but I am on an account with Rogers Cable Systems in
> Ontario that gets me consistently up to 25 Mbps speed. And there is a
..and look for Hyundais to contribute to other kinds of hits, in short order...
the iPad
will easily take care of that vexing problem. There are already a
number of vehicular mounts for the iPad, and you can bet that more
will hit the stores very soon.
Steve
--
WARNING: Due to a Presidentia
Can't speak for others, but I am on an account with Rogers Cable Systems in
Ontario that gets me consistently up to 25 Mbps speed. And there is an account
type that is one higher than that which tops out at 50. Mind you it doesn't;t
come cheap but there it is.
And that it standard cable, not F
Absolutely.
My in-laws live 300+ miles north of the border.
The services they can get and the cost are far, far different than
what is offered in the lower half of the province.
The farther you get from the border the more remote and rugged it
gets. Leave any of the population dense sites a
The day must end in Y, Tom is blaming the neomicrosofticons again.
On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 7:48 AM, t.piwowar wrote:
>
>
> The real reason is lack of competition and 8 years of neocon rule resulting
> in no national broadband policy.
>
>
> *
http://i.imgur.com/It9To.png
On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 9:33 AM, phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
> I see that at least one car maker, Hyundai, is already going to
> include an iPad as an accessory to at least one of their models. Look
> for more car makers to quickly follow suit. The iPhone or iPod Tou
On Apr 3, 2010, at 12:33 PM, phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
I see that at least one car maker, Hyundai, is already going to
include an iPad as an accessory to at least one of their models
It solves a big problem for car makers by letting them add many
computerized features to the car without havi
On Apr 3, 2010, at 12:24 PM, Steve at Verizon wrote:
Technically Canada has a low population density when you divide its
population by the size of the country. However, it is highly
concentrated. Over three quarters of its population lives within 90
miles of the US border. Also see this map
I see that at least one car maker, Hyundai, is already going to
include an iPad as an accessory to at least one of their models. Look
for more car makers to quickly follow suit. The iPhone or iPod Touch
had screens too small to view movies or easily read and write e-mails
or surf the web as you
On Apr 3, 2010, at 11:40 AM, Stewart Marshall wrote:
I think many of the LCD panels are made there.
But of course, it is LCD that make their broadband so fast. Why did I
not think of that? America needs more LSD right away!
**
Technically Canada has a low population density when you divide its
population by the size of the country. However, it is highly
concentrated. Over three quarters of its population lives within 90
miles of the US border. Also see this map of the distribution.
http://media-2.web.britannica.com/
South Korea is pretty high tech.
I think many of the LCD panels are made there.
Stewart
At 10:26 AM 4/3/2010, you wrote:
> For those who say that USA has rotten broadband speeds because we have
> such low population density, why is Canada ahead of US?
>
> http://www.cnn.com/interactive/2010/0
> For those who say that USA has rotten broadband speeds because we have
> such low population density, why is Canada ahead of US?
>
> http://www.cnn.com/interactive/2010/03/tech/map.broadband.speeds/index.html
Interesting factoid: Unless I missed someone, South Korea is the fastest in the
world
Less competition more regulation!
Stewart
At 09:48 AM 4/3/2010, you wrote:
For those who say that USA has rotten broadband speeds because we have
such low population density, why is Canada ahead of US?
http://www.cnn.com/interactive/2010/03/tech/map.broadband.speeds/index.html
The real reaso
For those who say that USA has rotten broadband speeds because we have
such low population density, why is Canada ahead of US?
http://www.cnn.com/interactive/2010/03/tech/map.broadband.speeds/index.html
The real reason is lack of competition and 8 years of neocon rule
resulting in no nationa
On Apr 2, 2010, at 12:58 AM, Stewart Marshall wrote:
This smart phone thing is getting competitive.
I'm finding the terms on the iPad very interesting. 3G connectivity is
sold on demand in by-the-month units. To start it is $15 for a capped
connection. If I go over I can convert that to unl
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