The Internet in India
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Well I have no idea about the current rate of currency conversion so I'll post it in my currency format for now. I pay nearly 900 rupees for that per month. :sigh: !
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
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Henry Minute wrote:
Bingling
Do you need more hint?! :-D PS: Joke icon because I know Bing isn't that bad. ;)
..Go Green..
Bingling = Bing + googling = generic term for searching t'Interwebs using more than one search engine.
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.” I wouldn't let CG touch my Abacus! When you're wrestling a gorilla, you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is.
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Nithin Sundar wrote:
By the way what speed do you use with a 25 GB limit?
I currently use a 4 Mbps connection.
"Real men drive manual transmission" - Rajesh.
Rajesh R Subramanian wrote:
I currently use a 4 Mbps connection.
Is it true 4 Mbps?
Regards, Nish
Are you addicted to CP? If so, check this out: The Code Project Forum Analyzer : Find out how much of a life you don't have! My technology blog: voidnish.wordpress.com
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5! Good Lounge Discussion.
// ♫ 99 little bugs in the code, // 99 bugs in the code // We fix a bug, compile it again // 101 little bugs in the code ♫
Thanks!
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
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The way businesses operate in India, they mostly only get into fair prices if the government steps in and changes the law. Even the cheap cell phone services were only due to the fact that the telecommunications ministry put in a policy and set guidelines for prices and other access terms. The same is true for internet as well. The telecommunications ministry defines what can be called "broadband" i.e. speeds of 2 Mbps or more, and also sets guidelines for the maximum that can be charged to the consumer.
SG Aham Brahmasmi!
Unfortunately this is what is happening today. :(
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
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I'm in UK, pay around £20 a month plus about £10 a month line rental for my home ASDL connection and have a bandwidth cap of 20 GB a month. Annoyingly the cap got introduced just after I signed up and has a 12 month minimum contract but I think most other ISPs have a similar cap. I think it is pretty ridiculous - roughly 10 years ago I remember my friend complaining about a 30 GB/month soft cap that NTL introduced. That was back when 30 GB was quite a lot and I didn't understand why that was such a problem for him - but these days I hit 20 GB in a month frequently, just through general use and software updates etc and end up paying extra for the extra gigs. I've never looked into streaming internet TV services etc and won't until the cap issue is sorted.
Over here streaming internet TV services or such aren't that common and still we get unfair limits with very low speeds. Sad to hear that the caps came as soon as you signed up though. That's totally frustrating when you have a different idea as a new customer.
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
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1 TB? Of downloading? That's crazy. I could see that for a business, maybe a server (though that's outgoing traffic). I'm on AT&T U-Verse, 12mpbs, and they recently implemented 250GB caps. The page that lets you check your usage isn't up yet (last I checked), but 8GB a day is quite a bit... we use Netflix, but at most a couple hours a day so I'm quite sure I won't even come close to touching 250 GB. What's it take to use 32GB per day? Just curious. If I used 100% of my 12mbps 24/7 for a whole month, it would be "just" 4 TB. You sir, might have to cut back on the porn. ;) The only other thing I can think of would be wholesale piracy, but I'm sure no one on CP does that. This is of course all thinking in terms of today. I could easily see a day when online streaming "HD" is actually decent HD quality, and when live events are streamed online making TV obsolete, but the networks and studios are a long way from letting that happen (eventually they'll have no choice, but I think we're years away, which is why AT&T and everyone decided to go with caps now, when people won't mind).
He said, "Boy I'm just old and lonely, But thank you for your concern, Here's wishing you a Happy New Year." I wished him one back in return.
It was mostly uploading (about 80%). Torrents, for TV series that don't air when I want to watch them. I suppose that's technically piracy, but watching TV is free as well.. edit: also my connection is exactly ten times as fast as yours (in the downstream direction anyway), so it's easier to use lots of bandwidth
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Bingling = Bing + googling = generic term for searching t'Interwebs using more than one search engine.
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.” I wouldn't let CG touch my Abacus! When you're wrestling a gorilla, you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is.
Henry Minute wrote:
generic term for searching t'Interwebs using more than one search engine.
I wasn't aware of that. The word isn't very common I guess. I Googled it and the first page doesn't show me any explanation. Anyways I will remember that now. :)
..Go Green..
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Henry Minute wrote:
generic term for searching t'Interwebs using more than one search engine.
I wasn't aware of that. The word isn't very common I guess. I Googled it and the first page doesn't show me any explanation. Anyways I will remember that now. :)
..Go Green..
Ankurm/ wrote:
I wasn't aware of that. The word isn't very common I guess.
As far as I know, I invented it. :-D
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.” I wouldn't let CG touch my Abacus! When you're wrestling a gorilla, you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is.
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Well I have no idea about the current rate of currency conversion so I'll post it in my currency format for now. I pay nearly 900 rupees for that per month. :sigh: !
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
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Well I have no idea about the current rate of currency conversion so I'll post it in my currency format for now. I pay nearly 900 rupees for that per month. :sigh: !
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
That's only $20[^] us. For comparison, my ISP offers me[^]: 1m/512k @ $27-35/mo (discounts if you also buy their TV or phone services) 5m/768k @ $40-51/mo 10/1m @ $50-61/mo 15/1.5 @ $55/mo (no TV discount offered) They don't have any explicit caps and didn't care when I was using ~75GB/mo on the 2nd tier. I'm currently on the highest, but after stomping a misbehaving program my bandwidth usage is only 40-50GB/mo. In the us $20 will typically only buy dialup. X| edit: I have no trouble sustaining >95% of rated speed on long up/downloads.
3x12=36 2x12=24 1x12=12 0x12=18
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It was mostly uploading (about 80%). Torrents, for TV series that don't air when I want to watch them. I suppose that's technically piracy, but watching TV is free as well.. edit: also my connection is exactly ten times as fast as yours (in the downstream direction anyway), so it's easier to use lots of bandwidth
David1987 wrote:
edit: also my connection is exactly ten times as fast as yours (in the downstream direction anyway), so it's easier to use lots of bandwidth
Yow, that's fast. You already exceed what would be necessary for live Blu Ray quality streaming, which is when I figure it'll be as good as it needs to get (even TV -- off air, dish and cable -- are nowhere near that yet). My upstream is only 1.5mbps, which I only notice as inconvenient when backing up a ton via carbonite. AT&T hasn't said anything about upload caps, maybe it's included in the 250GB, but I don't think so. Before I had a DVR I used torrents as my DVR too; I really fail to see the difference. One is technically illegal, but I don't watch commercials in either case. In fact even for live sports these days I'll usually pause it for a while and do something else so I can skip the commercials. Actually with AT&T u-verse it's all over IP anyway (the TV and voice), 12mbps is what's allocated for internet. I'm not sure what the TV uses, though I'm curious. It goes through a regular switch I have behind my TV, I could measure it easy enough.
He said, "Boy I'm just old and lonely, But thank you for your concern, Here's wishing you a Happy New Year." I wished him one back in return.
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Ankurm/ wrote:
I wasn't aware of that. The word isn't very common I guess.
As far as I know, I invented it. :-D
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.” I wouldn't let CG touch my Abacus! When you're wrestling a gorilla, you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is.
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Disclaimer: We are not responsible for those dying of shock by looking at the abyssmal internet speeds offered here in our country. For safety guidelines please consult your doctor. Does any country have something as ridiculous as a term called "Fair Usage Policy(FUP)"? For those who are unaware here is an example: Let's say that you have a 512 KBPS Unlimited connection. Now according to FUP, there's a 8GB "limit" for 512, 15 GB for 1 mbps and so on. Once you cross this limit, your speed will be cut to 256 KBPS for the rest of the month. The average person in India cannot afford connection speeds which go higher than 512 KBPS or 1 MBPS. Yes you heard that right. KBPS. It would at least serve to be a soothing balm if they offered speeds like 4 mbps or 8 mbps at an affordable rate but no. We're still stuck with the same "concept" of broadband. What do you guys think?
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
Nithin Sundar wrote:
What do you guys think?
I think it sucks :) Here in Arkhangelsk (North European Russia) unlimited 128 kbps ADSL appeared around 4-5 years ago. There were higher speeds but 128 was 15 euro/month, cheap as dirt compared to other ISP that used cables with 2Mbps at 10 cent/Mb (it had no competitors at that time, and you had to choose between dial-up and those robbers). The good thing is that the speed is now 30 timer higher, and the price hasn't changed at all. And in Moscow and Saint-Petersburg, Internet connections are much faster and cheaper then here.
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Rajesh R Subramanian wrote:
I currently use a 4 Mbps connection.
Is it true 4 Mbps?
Regards, Nish
Are you addicted to CP? If so, check this out: The Code Project Forum Analyzer : Find out how much of a life you don't have! My technology blog: voidnish.wordpress.com
Yes, it is a true 4Mbps connection.
"Real men drive manual transmission" - Rajesh.
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Well I have no idea about the current rate of currency conversion so I'll post it in my currency format for now. I pay nearly 900 rupees for that per month. :sigh: !
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
Actually, exchange rates are pretty much irrelevant. Usually, anyway. Sure, it would be nice to know how many euros 900 rupees is (fyi its around EUR 14 or USD 20), but since your income is in rupees, what really matters is how much 900 rupees is in relation to your income. Or, if you'd like, how hard is it for a local to afford that. For example, I pay EUR 47,50 for my 3play service and while it may seem expensive if you compare with what you pay, I can easely afford it. Because 47,50 is a lot less than 900. That's what you have to compare.
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum viditur.
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I'm in UK, pay around £20 a month plus about £10 a month line rental for my home ASDL connection and have a bandwidth cap of 20 GB a month. Annoyingly the cap got introduced just after I signed up and has a 12 month minimum contract but I think most other ISPs have a similar cap. I think it is pretty ridiculous - roughly 10 years ago I remember my friend complaining about a 30 GB/month soft cap that NTL introduced. That was back when 30 GB was quite a lot and I didn't understand why that was such a problem for him - but these days I hit 20 GB in a month frequently, just through general use and software updates etc and end up paying extra for the extra gigs. I've never looked into streaming internet TV services etc and won't until the cap issue is sorted.
Dave Parker wrote:
I'm in UK, pay around £20 a month plus about £10 a month line rental for my home ASDL connection and have a bandwidth cap of 20 GB a month. Annoyingly the cap got introduced just after I signed up and has a 12 month minimum contract but I think most other ISPs have a similar cap.
You should try Dalek Dave's UK, his has better internet.
He said, "Boy I'm just old and lonely, But thank you for your concern, Here's wishing you a Happy New Year." I wished him one back in return.
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David1987 wrote:
edit: also my connection is exactly ten times as fast as yours (in the downstream direction anyway), so it's easier to use lots of bandwidth
Yow, that's fast. You already exceed what would be necessary for live Blu Ray quality streaming, which is when I figure it'll be as good as it needs to get (even TV -- off air, dish and cable -- are nowhere near that yet). My upstream is only 1.5mbps, which I only notice as inconvenient when backing up a ton via carbonite. AT&T hasn't said anything about upload caps, maybe it's included in the 250GB, but I don't think so. Before I had a DVR I used torrents as my DVR too; I really fail to see the difference. One is technically illegal, but I don't watch commercials in either case. In fact even for live sports these days I'll usually pause it for a while and do something else so I can skip the commercials. Actually with AT&T u-verse it's all over IP anyway (the TV and voice), 12mbps is what's allocated for internet. I'm not sure what the TV uses, though I'm curious. It goes through a regular switch I have behind my TV, I could measure it easy enough.
He said, "Boy I'm just old and lonely, But thank you for your concern, Here's wishing you a Happy New Year." I wished him one back in return.
The connection was just 20mbps/3mbps at first, then it went up to 50/5, then 80/10, then finally 120/10 - all free upgrades :) It would have been fine with me if they had stopped at 80/10, those 40 extra mbits are rarely useful anyway. But it's still the same price, so I have no reason to complain. This is all over Cable, TV (analog + digital) and phone are included as well
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I'm in UK, pay around £20 a month plus about £10 a month line rental for my home ASDL connection and have a bandwidth cap of 20 GB a month. Annoyingly the cap got introduced just after I signed up and has a 12 month minimum contract but I think most other ISPs have a similar cap. I think it is pretty ridiculous - roughly 10 years ago I remember my friend complaining about a 30 GB/month soft cap that NTL introduced. That was back when 30 GB was quite a lot and I didn't understand why that was such a problem for him - but these days I hit 20 GB in a month frequently, just through general use and software updates etc and end up paying extra for the extra gigs. I've never looked into streaming internet TV services etc and won't until the cap issue is sorted.
-
Disclaimer: We are not responsible for those dying of shock by looking at the abyssmal internet speeds offered here in our country. For safety guidelines please consult your doctor. Does any country have something as ridiculous as a term called "Fair Usage Policy(FUP)"? For those who are unaware here is an example: Let's say that you have a 512 KBPS Unlimited connection. Now according to FUP, there's a 8GB "limit" for 512, 15 GB for 1 mbps and so on. Once you cross this limit, your speed will be cut to 256 KBPS for the rest of the month. The average person in India cannot afford connection speeds which go higher than 512 KBPS or 1 MBPS. Yes you heard that right. KBPS. It would at least serve to be a soothing balm if they offered speeds like 4 mbps or 8 mbps at an affordable rate but no. We're still stuck with the same "concept" of broadband. What do you guys think?
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
Nithin Sundar wrote:
It would at least serve to be a soothing balm if they offered speeds like 4 mbps or 8 mbps at an affordable rate but no. We're still stuck with the same "concept" of broadband.
Don't underestimate the cost of infrastructure verse the HUGE increase of internet usage in India (and most ex/still/soon to be developed countries), (I'd like to see the internet usage curve for the last 2, 3 years); Providers will implement FUP to have people who use a lot of internet pay (a small part) for infrastructure upgrade for the huge masses that does not exceed limits.
Nithin Sundar wrote:
The average person in India cannot afford
Isn't this the main issue ? why invest for infrastructure when there is no way to quickly get the money back? from what I remember from a quick visit to Mumbai about 10 years ago, the city was not prepared to have massive safe and secure investment in cable for just a few who "want" (not talking about commercial usage) high speed but cannot pay for it.
Watched code never compiles.