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View Full Version : BitTorrent Forces Comcast Network Upgrade



Broken
01-25-2008, 05:38 AM
http://i29.tinypic.com/2cor43m.jpgThe problem is that residential cable networks -- originally designed for TV signals -- are asymmetric, i.e., they offer much higher bandwidth on the downstream side than the upstream. Bandwidth-thirsty P2P protocols like BitTorrent, which automatically seeks out and uses available connections on the network, need as much or even more capacity in the upload direction. That means a small number of BitTorrent file-sharing sessions can soak up network capacity "like a glutton at an all-you-can-eat buffet who insists on planting himself at the trough," as networking expert Richard Bennett put it in a recent op-ed piece (defending Comcast's practices) on the U.K. tech Web site The Register.

Jim Martin, a professor at Clemson University who has written widely on BitTorrent and the Internet, estimates that just 15 BitTorrent sessions can significantly slow down Web browsing for other users on the network.

"In areas and at times of congestion, which is only created by the P2P services, we manage the upstream part of that traffic," said Fitzmaurice, arguing that such management is entirely legitimate.

BitTorrent CEO Ashwin Navin, for one, does not view this as a competitive struggle: "I'm very sympathetic to the predicament they find themselves in," he said. "Most ISPs sold more capacity than they actually have. In next 12-18 months, with the explosion in BitTorrent-enabled applications that are all going to be using that capacity, they're going to have to really start to invest in their network."

Indeed, Comcast is taking two steps to deal with the predicament: it's planning a major network upgrade, to take effect late this year, that will provide nearly symmetric connections in the 100 Mbit/s range, and it's offering its own video download service.

At CES earlier this month, Comcast CEO Brian Roberts announced the launch of Fancast, Comcast's own high-speed download service for TV episodes and other content (but not full-length movies) over the Internet.

It's not just consumers who will be affected by the outcome of the service providers vs. the P2P-guys battle: enterprises will increasingly rely on high-bandwidth file-sharing, P2P services, and other non-traditional forms of content distribution in coming years, according to Navin. BitTorrent has upgraded its protocols with such customers in mind.

"The BitTorrent client we've deployed commercially is very different than the open-source BitTorrent clients of the past," said Navin. "Enterprise CIOs can take comfort in the fact that we're now aware of other applications, we're polite to them, and we also poke fewer holes in firewalls -- we efficiently take advantage of the capacity existing in local-area networks for content distribution."

:source: Source: http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=205917419

deuce6000
01-25-2008, 06:08 AM
This has to be a good thing right?

Broken
01-25-2008, 06:12 AM
With a 100Mbps symmetric connection (same up/down) I could do some real damage.
That'd be a 4 GB DVD in under five minutes... yea, some real damage. ;)

cerote
01-25-2008, 08:03 AM
I cannot wait for this, hopefully they won't charge an arm and leg because the 8 mbit is already almost $60. But I actually normally get around 14 down.

S!X
01-25-2008, 08:27 AM
That'd be a 4 GB DVD in under five minutes... yea, some real damage. ;)

Dear god, that would be the day :D

aysomc
01-25-2008, 09:37 AM
they honestly needed this if they plan on competing with fios since fios already has amazing plans with great symmetric up/down for great prices. i hope they do it soon and with little or no more money for a nice upgrade otherwise ill be switching to fios asap.

leebSaMmY
01-25-2008, 02:26 PM
thats great news.. but i still love my fios 25dl and 5up! :D

lukee
01-25-2008, 05:03 PM
i would actually move to comcast :O

klink05
01-25-2008, 05:08 PM
yea, i'm really counting on this. due to the fact that there are plenty of much wealthier communities around me, verizon seems to be taking there time making sure all of those guys have fios to look at youtube and myspace. from all i can see there are no plans at all to bring it anywhere near where i live. so this would be a breath of fresh air (for some reason, comcast upgrades hit me alot earlier than other areas).

Sonnentier
01-26-2008, 01:14 PM
they offer much higher bandwidth on the downstream side than the upstream. [..] "In areas and at times of congestion, which is only created by the P2P services, we manage the upstream part of that traffic," said Fitzmaurice, arguing that such management is entirely legitimate.That's really bad - first they offer poor upload capacity, then they further limit the little bandwidth left?

But yeah I appreciate that they want to extend their network and make it more p2p friendly ;)

DKre8ive1
01-26-2008, 08:11 PM
I wonder if people on that 100mbit were to use say 500gigs a month would they get in trouble or would Comcast not care.

I wouldn't mind paying more for that kind of speeds, but I would sure like for them to state clearly how much bandwidth your allowed to use because like broken stated with that kind of connection you could really do some damage.

grimms
01-26-2008, 11:23 PM
Speaking from experience when i worked for them yes! They do care and don't want their customers using up all their network bandwidth in whatever area or neighbor their customers live in. They made promises they no longer can keep at this time. Dut to all the people now using the full capacity of their broadband networks.

zavn
01-27-2008, 01:07 PM
Sounds like a move in the right direction

asmithz
01-31-2008, 09:43 PM
Does this have anything to do with Blast!

http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r19748326-Blast-16Mbps-with-PowerBoost

Some people on the east coast have been getting an upgrade from comcast called Blast! Some get 16000/1000mbit/s others get 16000/2000mbit/s.

I really wish I lived on the east coast right now.

delimare
02-03-2008, 05:50 AM
Does this have anything to do with Blast!

http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r19748326-Blast-16Mbps-with-PowerBoost

Some people on the east coast have been getting an upgrade from comcast called Blast! Some get 16000/1000mbit/s others get 16000/2000mbit/s.

I really wish I lived on the east coast right now.

Right now, here in Minneapolis, we are running a beta of the new Extreme Speed to Comcast employees only. We are running 50Mbps down and 15Mbps up. The upload speed will match the download speed once the kinks are ironed out.

Unfortunately, the price will be high. $150-300 a month depending on what upload speed you choose. The service still runs on docsis 2.0 and it's still single stream. Multi-stream (wideband) is right around the corner (along with docsis 3.0) as soon as the systems get upgraded. The new modems that we're using for the Extreme Speed are already docsis 3.0 and multi-stream ready and can take the full 100/100Mbps when it comes along.

Broken
02-03-2008, 06:02 AM
If that's the price range ($150-300) it's not gonna be very popular.
Right now, if I was willing to shell out the cash Time Warner could hook me up with a 1GBs/1GBs line. How much money would it cost me? Frankly I don't know, but I do know I couldn't afford it.

Just like I know I can't afford $150-300 a month.

mbucari1
02-04-2008, 01:24 PM
they honestly needed this if they plan on competing with fios since fios already has amazing plans with great symmetric up/down for great prices. i hope they do it soon and with little or no more money for a nice upgrade otherwise ill be switching to fios asap.Um, no they don't. Verizon and AT&T have their own territories, few (or none) of which overlap. Do you think people will move just to get a better net connection?