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Date:      Wed, 10 Jul 1996 23:34:38 -0400
From:      "Jacob M. Parnas" <jparnas@jparnas.cybercom.net>
To:        Narvi <narvi@haldjas.folklore.ee>
Cc:        Richard Foulk <richard@pegasus.com>, hardware@freebsd.org, bsdi-users@bsdi.com
Subject:   Re: your mail 
Message-ID:  <199607110334.XAA00559@jparnas.cybercom.net>
In-Reply-To: Your message of Sat, 06 Jul 1996 12:31:33 %2B0300. <Pine.BSF.3.91.960706122641.15886A-100000@haldjas.folklore.ee> 

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In message <Pine.BSF.3.91.960706122641.15886A-100000@haldjas.folklore.ee>you write:
>
>
>On Fri, 5 Jul 1996, Richard Foulk wrote:
>
>> } >Cable has a good chance of blowing ISDN away.  Much faster and cheaper.  And
>> } >it will be available in many places this year.  More, next.
>> } >
>> } >Keep your eye on the cable companies.
>> } >
>> } >
>> } >Richard
>> } 
>> } Cable is a pain.  It works only one way.  If you want to send a large file
>> } you still have to go slow.  And, you still need to be a member of a ISP
>> } as you can't write to cable, from what I've read.
>> 
>> Slow compared to what?
>> 
>> There are a few different configurations.  Eight megabits in, three
>> megabits out is one.  Still way faster than other modes, even on the
>> slower half.  As far as I know, the slowest slow in cable modems is
>> still fast.
>> 
>> Our cable company here in Honolulu is apparently going to use modems that
>> provide 6Mb in both directions.  The promise is $50/month.  The cable
>> modem connects to your ethernet.  The cable company is becoming an ISP,
>> in a big way.
>> 
>> Imagine how that kind of throughput could change the landscape.
>> 
>
>And from where should trans-ocean, trans-continent, tnrans-etc. pipes 
>come from through which to press all that data? I can get around 500KB 
>from the local University's ftp setrver allmost anytime, but it doesn't 
>carry much I care about - and all that is at best around some KB/s - so 
>what's the big deal?
>
>	Sander
>
>> 
>> Richard

If its bidirectional, and they keep throughput up as usage goes up and you
know you won't move too soon for it to make sense, cable sounds good.

I think comparing home <-> internet connection to a transatlantic line is 
really comparing apples to oranges.

Jacob



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