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Lyion wrote:
Not at all. Onling gaming uses very little bandwidth. This will mostly crush P2p stuff, and hurt pirates who download 10s of gigs every month.
KaiineTN wrote:Well, the internet is going to become more and more video intensive. Youtube and such is just the beginning. Sure, this might slow down massive torrent users, but people who watch a lot of streaming content probably end up using a lot of bandwidth as well, and they aren't really doing anything wrong and shouldn't need to pay more for that, should they?
Harrison wrote:Once internet access becomes free this will all be a moot point.
We aren't far from this at all.
KaiineTN wrote:
Shouldn't bandwidth become cheaper anyways? How does it work? You'd think with how cheap disk space has gotten that other technologies would follow. What would allow bandwidth to be cheaper?
10sun wrote:Harrison wrote:Once internet access becomes free this will all be a moot point.
We aren't far from this at all.
I don't see people ready & willing to give away cable that they have spent billions to lay.
Return on the investment is a long time coming for a lot of it.
Yamori wrote:10sun wrote:Harrison wrote:Once internet access becomes free this will all be a moot point.
We aren't far from this at all.
I don't see people ready & willing to give away cable that they have spent billions to lay.
Return on the investment is a long time coming for a lot of it.
I think he might be referring to massive wireless WANs or whatever those are called, where the city provides free wireless access within a certain-mile radius of the signal's broadcast point. There's some talk of that being in the future.
Yamori wrote:KaiineTN wrote:
Shouldn't bandwidth become cheaper anyways? How does it work? You'd think with how cheap disk space has gotten that other technologies would follow. What would allow bandwidth to be cheaper?
My un-informed impression is that installing new technologies on the cable company side is filled with red tape and legal issues that make it very difficult.
Isn't there some law that says that cable companies have to share their lines with any competitors that want to use it? I'd guess that would make no one want to put the money up for it.
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
KaiineTN wrote:Shouldn't bandwidth become cheaper anyways? How does it work? You'd think with how cheap disk space has gotten that other technologies would follow. What would allow bandwidth to be cheaper?
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