doronjosama: (Default)
doronjosama ([personal profile] doronjosama) wrote2009-04-01 07:32 pm
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Internet News...

Time Warner Cable to roll out metered internet billing in San Antonio.

Not an April Fool's joke, it's serious. If this is the case, we'll have to get a different provider, because we regularly deal with large files on a weekly basis. And not having broadband isn't an option, since all our business stuff pretty much relies on the web.

We currently have Time Warner's Turbo package, but if they don't put the caps on the business package, we may have to upgrade to that. There isn't any Verizon FiOS here locally (which we would get instead, if we could), Grande only serves certain areas of San Antonio that we aren't in, and AT&T is planning to use the metered bandwidth caps as well.

Why are the caps bad? Well, for one, you won't be able to know how close you are to your cap. For two, watching videos online (YouTube, Hulu) uses a ton of bandwidth. I don't even know how much bandwidth playing online games like Warcraft takes. Basically, it seems to me that it's a way for them to charge you whatever they feel like in a month and you won't know how much you've gone over till you get your bill (it's looking to be $1 per GB over the cap limit). Not cool.

When I paid our cable bill, I asked the one good employee there (the one who always knows what's going on, and who is actually intelligent) about this, and she said they hadn't received any information about it yet. (She was genuinely confused too, as all the video screens in the place were still advertising the flat rate pricing plans...) It's hit the local news already, so they're probably going to be getting a lot of calls soon.

[identity profile] doronjosama.livejournal.com 2009-04-02 03:01 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah, it'd be one thing if they tested it in a high internet usage city or something, but BEAUMONT?! Seriously?! Not only does San Antonio have a lot of colleges, we have a TON of military guys and you bet your ass those guys are internet savvy and online constantly. (All the military guys who shop at the comic/game store I work at have iPhones, seriously... and they love looking stuff up while they are in the store.)

This blows, so much. Austin is a really net-friendly city, I have no idea how this is going to work. I expect a lot of people will dump Time Warner in a big way, and maybe that will send them a message?