I am in India and I pay $7 a month for 300mbps up and down, it's fiber optic technology afaik so ping is really good compared to the copper we had before.
The current governments economic incentives has really lit the BroadBand industry atleast where I live.
And where do I live? I live very close to Himalayas, it's nothing sort of a wonder considering fast speed internet is often limited to metros but man I love working remotely from nature and not feeling jailed in polluted Indian metros
I am waiting for EVs to pickup pace in India so that I can finally go back the apartment the I left in a metro city.
This product is designed as a fixed broadband solution delivered wirelessly. It’s available to about 30 million households in the United States.
What makes this interesting is that it is designed to replace existing cable data solutions - which typically have an order of magnitude more data transfer than mobile. The price point is hyper competitive - and usually cheaper than cable (I pay $75/mo for Charter/Spectrum and they give me 100mbit down/12mbit up). In other words, for 30 million households, they now have options other than their cable company or DSL.
Even at my home, my phone often gets more than 100mbit over LTE (I just used Speedtest and got 147/52), but that traffic may get throttled when I go over 75gb/mo and tethering almost certainly will.
The total amount downloaded or uploaded really isn’t the right thing to care about. They just need to manage capacity on their network on a per cell basis and then wherever they aggregate to. I think if every user in a given region was completley saturating their 100Mbit/s link all at the same time, yes they would melt. Fortunatly as they onboard new users they can monitor capacity and daily activity and make sure they cap the number of users in an area before they have capacity issues. As usage patterns change over time (and WFH becomes more prevalent due to covid) they will also have to keep up with the demands for more bandwidth.
SpaceX is similarly doing this with Starlink providing a 100MBit/s+ home internet link.
I do realize that. I’m honestly wondering if a carrier in the US or overseas is okay with users consistently using 1-3TB a month on one normal cellular/wireless line.
The current governments economic incentives has really lit the BroadBand industry atleast where I live.
And where do I live? I live very close to Himalayas, it's nothing sort of a wonder considering fast speed internet is often limited to metros but man I love working remotely from nature and not feeling jailed in polluted Indian metros
I am waiting for EVs to pickup pace in India so that I can finally go back the apartment the I left in a metro city.