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#4361 | |
Senior Member
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#2 - Paying more defeats the entire purpose. That's like saying I can only watch 30 disks a month and then I have to pay extra. NOPE! #3 - Your idea of data caps is completely wrong with infrastructure. Comcast has ZERO congestion and only put caps in place to stem the tide of cord cutters. https://www.theverge.com/smart-home/...ork-congestion * |
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#4362 | ||
Blu-ray Samurai
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#4363 |
Active Member
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Data caps are the worst thing that could happen to digital. It's literally counter productive to mass adoption of digital and is the main reason why discs will remain. Greed on all sides of the spectrum from cable companies upset about cord cutters to movie studios not agreeing on one digital locker for all films. The customer always gets screwed that's the point of all this. Comcast & ATT are not hurting because some people use over 300gigs per month. The fees for "unlimited" are nonsense because the fine print tells you that once you've used 39gigs of your monthly allotment they can "throttle" your service. Until the internet is free and open for all digital will never reach it's true potential.
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Thanks given by: | whipnet (05-31-2017) |
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#4364 | |
Senior Member
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Thanks given by: | zarquon (05-30-2017) |
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#4365 | ||
Blu-ray Samurai
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#4366 | |
Special Member
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Yes, all consumer offerings are oversubscribed. The result is that during peak hours customers have the potential of seeing congestion. But capping the total amount of data per month doesn't affect peak usage. People still primarily use their home internet service from when they get home in the afternoon through the evening. Data caps are a measure of your total usage through the month, which has nothing to do with what hours you're using the service. It has nothing to do with the speed or type of physical layer you're using (copper, coax, fiber, etc.). Even in the mobile space, which has a more restricted physical layer, Verizon has been pounding the table with their customers and government agencies that metering is the only way to manage the network. Except, gosh, T-Mobile, AT&T, and Sprint all have unlimited data plans. Guess who revived their unlimited plan in response... Data caps are a symptom of a lack of competition, that's all. |
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#4367 | ||
Blu-ray Samurai
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#4369 | |
Special Member
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Data caps are a false narrative targeted at consumers and should be easily debunked by someone in The Industry. Caps have nothing to do with network utilization and everything to do with increasing revenue. Caps don't encourage customers to use data during off-peak hours; they continue to use their data during peak hours. ISPs still have to build out their networks to handle peak congestion, not the total amount of data customers use over a month. Some ISPs figure that they can bill based on data usage even if it's unrelated to network management. Data isn't like water or electricity but the public can be intentionally misled to think it is. If customers think that their total data consumption actually contributes to costs ISPs can raise revenue without raising base plan prices. Cha-ching! What wireless companies are doing with their unlimited plans given their finite bandwidth is network management. You are guaranteed "full" speed up to a certain point after which you may be deprioritized if you are connected to a congested tower. Instead of implementing a data cap and charging for additional blocks of data, ISPs could follow wireless's lead. They could deprioritize the heavy users (that have exceeded a soft cap) if their neighborhood is currently congested. Other customers would see no slowdown. When traffic has returned to lower levels the heavy customers can be reprioritized. And if the heavy user isn't in a congested neighborhood there's no reason to deprioritize them. But what Comcast wants is stealth revenue hikes so we won't see that from them. Pretend that Comcast can't implement actual real network management and instead is forced to handle it only via billing regimes. They could choose some kind of peak pricing or use 95th percentile pricing. Both at least try to solve a network issue instead of a revenue issue. The two are different. |
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Thanks given by: | Dynamo of Eternia (06-01-2017), Greyman (06-01-2017) |
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#4370 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#4371 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2005
England
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![]() ![]() Digital is fine for convenience but if you're pushing that through a decent home theatre set up, then why did you bother buying a decent home theatre set up?! |
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#4372 |
Senior Member
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Yeah, that's a problem for me. I not only don't do iTunes, I despise Apple. I also don't buy non-porting movies. Life of Brian used to be available, but was yanked from Ultraviolet markets. If you bought it or even D2D'ed it back when you still have a copy, but it's no where for sale.
I own the movie on VHS, DVD, and Blu-ray, but came too late to the digital game. Now it's one I cannot obtain. I've even begged Sony. * |
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#4373 |
Expert Member
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I'm starting to side with digital for convenience and quality. I buy seasons passes for The Expanse because I don't have cable. The quality is so good (I watch it on a projector at 110"), I'm not tempted at all to upgrade to disc. It's also nice to have it available on my phone or tablet when I'm away from my home setup.
I've started getting into Orphan Black, and will def get that digitally (Also because BBC stuff never comes with a digital copy). It's another show I'm sure will look great, because like The Expanse it has a clean digital look. For alot of newer content, digital seems a better value. |
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#4374 | ||
Blu-ray Samurai
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#4375 | |
Senior Member
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#4376 |
Active Member
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Thanks given by: | dublinbluray108 (06-03-2017), Dynamo of Eternia (06-01-2017) |
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#4377 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#4378 |
Senior Member
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You've mentioned these before; what exactly are "Optical Fiber Sony Headsets"?
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#4380 |
Blu-ray Champion
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I love both too. I just used Apple tv with my 4k 65" tv for the first time, (I usually use it with a smaller screen) watched 'The Great Wall' and the PQ/AQ were very good
buying every movie I was interested in physically made my collection a mess, so I decided to split my purchases between blus and itunes and I'm very happy with the decision so far, it actually rejuvenated my interest in blu rays (and movies in general), cause I used to dread looking at my shelves and see dusty blu rays I'll never watch |
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