Time Warner Cable scraps broadband capping plan in Rochester, NY

It’s already delayed its controversial broadband capping plan in a number of markets, and it looks like Time Warner Cable has now gone one big step further in Rochester, New York (one of the initial test markets), where it has reportedly scrapped the new tiered pricing plan altogether. As you no doubt recall, the plan was more or less modeled on cellphone pricing plans, and had intended to cap customers’ data usage at a certain level and charge upwards of $1 per GB for any overages (eventually maxing out at $150 per month). That, naturally, didn’t go over so well with folks, and even New York Senator Charles Schumer eventually got in on the act and complained directly to Time Warner Cable. Of course, this still doesn’t officially mark the end of the pricing plan in other markets, but it certainly seems to be getting increasingly difficult for Time Warner Cable to move ahead with it.

[Thanks, Phil]

Update: As a few of you have helpfully pointed out in comments, Time Warner Cable has now put out a statement of its own that confirms in not-at-all Orwellian terms that it is shelving all of its consumption-based billing trials “while the customer education process continues.” The company also says that it’ll soon be making bandwidth measurement tools available to customers, which it hopes will “aid in the dialog going forward.”

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Time Warner Cable scraps broadband capping plan in Rochester, NY originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Apr 2009 15:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Public rage stalls Time Warner trials of consumption-based internet

Time Warner’s new data capping broadband scheme was never expected to win any popularity contests, and the details of its plans are so frustrating, that this probably should not come as a surprise. Regardless, it looks like the company’s plan to further roll out testing of the consumption-based billing method has been foiled, or at least stalled, because it couldn’t find enough customers to participate in the testing. TWC had planned to test in several locations, including San Antonio and Austin, Texas, but the response has apparently been so negative, and there were so many complaints, that the company has “delayed” the trials until October. So… maybe if we keep moaning about it the plan will be abandoned altogether? Here’s to hoping, anyway.

[Via The Register]

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Public rage stalls Time Warner trials of consumption-based internet originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Apr 2009 11:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mobile data card growth slows dramatically in Q4 2008

Who woulda thunk it? A global recession leads to belt tightening, and belt tightening leads to fewer mobile data card sales. According to a new report from ComScore, that’s exactly what happened at the tail end of last year, where WWAN card growth slowed to just 5 percent compared to 28 percent in Q4 2007. Still, carriers can’t grumble too loudly — after all, at least it grew. In fact, PC data card adoption rose 63 percent overall in 2008, and if any of these 4G services can see rollouts of significance, we suspect 2009 will show equally positive numbers. The reality is that mobile data is still priced far too high for the average Joe or Jane to stomach; most mobile broadband plans run upwards of $50 per month and require a two-year contract to get a free or cheap card, and unless one is planning to be on the road an awful lot, buying in just doesn’t make sense when times are tough. In other words, cut us a break on these mobile data rates, operators — it’s what Uncle Sam would want.

[Via mocoNews]

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Mobile data card growth slows dramatically in Q4 2008 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Apr 2009 10:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Time Warner Cable lays out broadband capping plans, says $150 for “unlimited” use

In a move seemingly designed to further our frustrations with broadband providers, Time Warner Cable has soft-announced an “unlimited” package once its new data caps go into place… for an affordable $150 monthly charge. Responding to criticism over the company’s plans to start capping usage and charging for overages, Landel Hobbs clarified the provider’s stance, letting users know that the capping would be limited to a $75 ceiling, thus (when paired with its top tier plan) would provide “virtually unlimited” usage. Virtually unlimited. Here’s a rundown of what the COO proposes:

  • A limited package for “light users” at 1GB/month, 768KB down / 128KB up, with overage charges of $2/GB/month.
  • Road Runner Lite, Basic, Standard, and Turbo packages at 10GB / 20GB / 40GB / and 60GB caps, respectively, and overage charges at $1/GB/month.
  • A big daddy, 100GB Turbo package at $75/month with overage fees of $1/GB, which, when coupled with that magic threshold of $75 in charges, becomes the “unlimited” plan.



We only have two questions, guys. First, how will you let end users know they’re hitting caps? Right now there’s no centralized solution for monitoring bandwidth. Even cell phones show minutes used, so will you give us the infrastructure for broadband monitoring? Secondly — instead of giving users a “virtually” unlimited package, why not just sell an unlimited package at $150 a month? The impression we get is that you want to leave the door open for aggressive users, and that your capping of capping charges might be a moving target in the right situation.

[Via eWeek]

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Time Warner Cable lays out broadband capping plans, says $150 for “unlimited” use originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Apr 2009 10:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Time Warner Introduces Really Expensive Unlimited Bandwidth Plan

The good news: Time Warner is ready to give you unlimited bandwidth for your high speed Internet connection. The bad news: it’s gonna cost you. A lot. The company issued new price plans for users in a blog post yesterday.

Ten to 60 GB a month will cost somewhere between $25 to $65, depending on where you’re located. Up to 100GB will run you $75, plus $1 for every gigabye above that–up to $150 a month.

National Broadband Plan to bring high-speed access to all Americans… ideally

Hey, what do you know? All those meetings over the proposed National Broadband Plan has amounted to something: a “yeah, we should probably hit this up.” Today, the FCC has kicked off an immensely ambitious project to bring “high-speed internet access to every corner of the United States.” $7.2 billion of the economic stimulus package has already been allocated for the task, but it’ll be ages before anything becomes of this. For starters, the FCC is asking for input from consumers, businesses, etc, yet it doesn’t require a response until February of 2010. Meanwhile, nations like South Korea, Japan and Australia are all looking to implement similar rollouts, albeit with much higher speeds. You see, the FCC currently defines “broadband” as 786Kpbs, which obviously isn’t anywhere near median rates in some of the aforementioned countries. Pardon our skepticism in this becoming a reality, but at least we’ll be extra elated if our rock-bottom expectations are met.

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National Broadband Plan to bring high-speed access to all Americans… ideally originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Apr 2009 10:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Australia’s A$43 billion broadband project: up to 100Mbps in 90% of homes and businesses

In what he’s calling “the single biggest infrastructure decision” in the country’s history,” Australia Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s announced an A$43 billion (US $30.6 billion) project to create a nationwide high speed broadband network. The goal’s to get 90 percent of homes and business up to 100Mbps speeds with fiber optic connection, with a less impressive 12Mbps wireless / satellite for the rest. Up to 49 percent of the funds will be from the private sector; the government will initially invest A$4.7b, while A$20b will come from a national infrastructure fund and the sale of bonds. The venture’s expected to take seven to eight years, and Rudd said the government intends to sell off its stake after five years. Sure, it’s not 1Gbps by 2012, but hey, they might end up beating us at the “nationwide broadband” game.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Read – Sydney Morning Herald
Read – Reuters

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Australia’s A$43 billion broadband project: up to 100Mbps in 90% of homes and businesses originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Apr 2009 03:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TWC moves consumption-based internet billing to more markets

No, folks — this is no prank. Time Warner Cable really is throwing caution (and public opinion) to the wind and moving forward with its evil consumption-based internet billing. If you’ll recall, we heard that the operator was trialing the method — which imposes premium rates on big broadband users — back in early 2008, but now it seems it’s quietly hoping to roll it out into more major markets. Starting this month, TWC will start gathering information on its customers’ internet use in Austin, TX, San Antonio, TX, Rochester, NY and Greensboro, NC; if all goes “well,” consumption billing will hit those markets this summer or sooner. We’ll point you to the read link if you’re interested in just how outrageous these capped plans look (particularly for internet TV viewers), but we’d be remiss of our duties if we didn’t share this gem of a quote from TWC CEO Glenn Britt: “We made a mistake early on by not defining our business based on the consumption dimension.” Thanks for clarifying, Glenn-o.

[Thanks Kevin, image courtesy of Corbis]

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TWC moves consumption-based internet billing to more markets originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Apr 2009 14:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Review: Clear Spot Portable WiMax Wi-Fi Hotspot

Today Clearwire yanked the cloth off of its rumored Clear Spot portable WiMax-to-Wi-Fi hotspot, a shiny little battery-powered device that lets you bestow real 4G bandwidth upon anyone in Wi-Fi range.

The $140 thing fits in your pocket, runs for four hours on a lithium-ion battery, connects up to 8 laptops via Wi-Fi, and works like a charm when you’re in a decent WiMax coverage area. (You still need to connect a WiMax modem, which costs $50 and requires a data plan.)

I tested it on the outskirts of Portland, at a Burgerville right off of I-5 in Vancouver, WA, essentially becoming a totally unwired, totally portable wireless hotspot for anybody with a computer or smartphone in the vicinity. Anyone can see the hotspot itself, as it has a standard Wi-Fi SSID, but once on, you have to enter a password, like you do in hotels or airports where the Wi-Fi network itself is technically public.

I can’t make enough of the experience, and how much it could change businesses, sales forces or mobile bloggin’ teams like Gizmodo. You don’t even have to be plugged in, you can just all hop on and work as usual for up to four hours, more if you can find an electric socket. And with WiMax, you’re not nearly as limited as you are with 3G—though there are some constraints, you at least have access to a network that, in certain coverage areas, bestows blistering broadband speeds similar those from today’s wired cable modems.

One big constraint, of course, is that WiMax from Sprint/Clearwire is currently limited to Baltimore and Portland, OR, but is growing this year and next to many cities.

There is also an internal limit to how much WiMax bandwidth you can harness. Since the Clear Spot uses the same Motorola WiMax USB modem that Clearwire sells for its standard WiMax service, I could test how well the bandwidth was passed through.

• What I got when connecting an HP Pavilion dv4 Windows laptop to WiMax: Around 7Mbps
• What I got when connecting the same modem to the Clear Spot, then connected MacBook Pro via Wi-Fi: 3-4Mbps

That does certainly represent a bottleneck, and there’s a reason for it: The wireless hotspot itself—which you might have seen under the brand Cradlepoint for a year or more—was designed for 3G, for whom 3Mbps downstream is a frickin’ miracle. It has a gimped USB port that throttles bandwidth over 5Mbps.

Though that’s a flaw, it’s not a big deal when you consider most Clearwire WiMax plans will be sold with a 4Mbps cap.

Beyond the hardware bottleneck, my other complaints are relatively minor:
• There’s no Ethernet port, so this can’t fundamentally replace home broadband.
• In areas of low coverage, you get an error message saying the modem was not found, which is inaccurate.
• There’s no good way to read WiMax signal strength on the device itself.

The good news for patient people is that, according to Scott Richardson, Clearwire’s chief strategy officer, the company is exploring selling an unfettered WiMax account, so you’d get an experience closer to the one I got in my uncapped testing. Also, Scott tells me there will be another portable WiMax-to-Wi-Fi hotspot device available—probably in the fall—that’s even smaller, and that wouldn’t be restricted by the USB bottleneck.

This is one of those products that’s totally niche but totally cool. Like, even if there are many people who are interested in getting WiMax, or better yet, a combo EVDO/WiMax modem from Sprint, I am not anybody would, at that point, also feel the need to share it with others. Maybe it’s good for bringing your work-supplied modem home, or maybe it’s a good way to split the cost of wireless modem service between a team of people who are always working together, on separate devices.

Regardless of all these scenarios, the fact is, it’s a truly new experience, and hopefully something we see more of in the future. I would say this is one of hell of a reason for Big Cable to be shaking in its boots—that is, if only Comcast wasn’t already part owner in Clearwire. [Clearwire Clear Spot release]

Broadband stimulus plan comes to life, rural teens ‘psyched’

The broadband stimulus project is moving forwards in the manner most familiar to our federal bureaucracy: meetings. Lots and lots of meetings. The inaugural soiree was recently held at the National Telecommunications and Information Administration’s swank Washington, D.C. headquarters, and included bon mots such as this one by acting FCC Chairman Michael Copps: “Where’s the policy for broadband? Where’s the action? Where’s the beef?” Ouch. Among the first items of business, the group must figure out exactly which connectivity solution to back, with several companies weighing in — most of ’em (including Spaceway and Wild Blue) going the pure broadband route, while an outfit called AlphaStar has a hybrid satellite / terrestrial service (where the satellite backbone connects to homes over terrestrial wireless systems). Also to be debated is the wisdom of privately owned vs. municipally owned wireless broadband. Either way, we sure hope that our nation’s unwired get some help soon — why should Boxxy have all the fun?

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Broadband stimulus plan comes to life, rural teens ‘psyched’ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Mar 2009 18:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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