Author Topic: Internet bandwith  (Read 2141 times)

Andrew

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #15 on: June 24, 2010, 10:15:40 am »
I think that since Afrihost started the bandwidth battle, a number of these ISPs landed up with more customers than they had counted on, and all of them determined to test the so-called 'uncapped' claim, which led to a fair number of problems. I saw this when iBurst went with that uncapped after midnight offering - I think sokme people saw it as a challenge to see how much bandwidth they could gobble. Some were even using two modems to double their usage.

Ollie

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #16 on: June 24, 2010, 06:18:32 pm »
No issues with MWEB on their 4Mbps Uncapped account.  Downloaded about 650GB, uploaded about 250GB, no signs of excessive shaping - 20GB moved today alone.

Andrew

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #17 on: June 25, 2010, 09:02:02 am »
I was considering moving to MWEB when my iBurst contract expired, but when one adds in the Telkom 'hiring' charge for the connection, it becomes too expensive for my needs, which are pretty basic. But I've heard mostly good stuff about their products.

Enigma_2k4

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #18 on: July 01, 2010, 02:44:39 pm »
Wow Ollie, that's some dam serious data! Phew!

I must admit I am still an avid supporter of Afrihost, I've always had brilliant supprot from them, especially after hours (I've never ever home during office hours). I moved over to their uncapped offering about 2 weeks ago and have no had any issues, noticed no change in latency in skype calls, but am yet to test gaming pings. I don't have much data coming down as I only have a 384k line, but I am considering changing this soon.

Mweb are doing well, very well, and there are alot less complaints on the forum about them. My take is that Afrihost did come in cheaper then Mweb and that's the kind of clientel that they are getting on their uncapped service, the cheapskates who want everything for nothing. Then spend their whole lives complaining about shaping and throttling while they are choking the networks. If you want to download 24/7 pay the money and get an uncapped and un-shaped account.

For simple basic needs, your afrihost or mweb ADSL services are excellent. Either uncapped or not. If you are seriously bandwidth hungry then you might want to consider some other options.

Ollie

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #19 on: July 04, 2010, 09:01:18 am »
Wow Ollie, that's some dam serious data! Phew!
Just checked - 477GB down for June.  This is 4Mbps uncapped, shaped @ R539pm.  No complaints.

MorneDJ

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #20 on: July 04, 2010, 09:34:55 am »
Hi. Just want to make sure about that. Is that R539 for an uncapped, shaped 4 MB ADSL internet account. I am currently with TelkomInternet, and have 3 5GB accounts with them. That barely last me till the end of each month, but I thought that uncapped accounts were rather expensive ?
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Andrew

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #21 on: July 04, 2010, 05:15:14 pm »
Hi. Just want to make sure about that. Is that R539 for an uncapped, shaped 4 MB ADSL internet account. I am currently with TelkomInternet, and have 3 5GB accounts with them. That barely last me till the end of each month, but I thought that uncapped accounts were rather expensive ?

Seriously...unless these are business accounts, what on earth do you guys 'spend' your bandwidth on?!

mafioso

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #22 on: July 09, 2010, 10:19:41 pm »
Hi

Just got this from my SP today: "We'd like to take this opportunity to inform all clients that due to the poor service and constant instability of the Seacom cable, we will no longer be offering IS Basic Uncapped Adsl. In it's (sic) place we will be offering a 5 GIG Capped account at R245 pm and 10 GIG Capped account at R490 pm. For any clients that would like to change over, we would suggest that the switch over take place at the beginning of the month."


What do you think about the quoted prices?

Cheers

mafioso
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Stefan

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #23 on: July 10, 2010, 06:37:27 am »
Doesn't look like a bargain! 5GB @R245 = R50/GB which is the same as any other service provider/package (give or take R10).  
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dotVIBE

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #24 on: July 10, 2010, 02:49:45 pm »
Not a bargain, not horrifically overpriced. I pay the R520 a month for uncapped. That is a bargain, but every time seacom goes down, so does my international link.

I have set up my parents on Web Africa, which has been solid as a rock through all the seacom problems because they use SAIX. Web Africa is R290 for 6GB and R490 for 11GB. So what's your internet stability worth to you?

I use enough internet to have 2 accounts. I have a 1GB account with WebAfrica @ R59/month and my R520/m uncapped. whenever seacom goes down i switch to webafrica for normal browsing & email. When they go back up I switch back to Mweb and resume downloads & youtube & whatever. I'll keep it like this until seacom shows a bit more reliability.
Town of the Cape

ODUODU

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #25 on: July 10, 2010, 08:41:20 pm »
If you want info on seacom go to http://www.hellkom.co.za/newsviewer/local/7710/ & http://www.hellkom.co.za/newsviewer/local/7704/

seacom has been doing something about the situation.

check it out

ockie
« Last Edit: July 10, 2010, 08:46:46 pm by ODUODU »
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Vaughan

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #26 on: July 10, 2010, 11:38:07 pm »
I'm on the 384kb uncapped account, paying R349 including line rental. So far it's been a relatively painless experience from Cybersmart, except they've sent me incorrect invoices on a handful of occasions. Otherwise it's fine. I'm seriously thinking of changing to a 4mb line though.

ODUODU

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #27 on: July 11, 2010, 09:37:13 pm »
from hellkom.co.za:

http://www.hellkom.co.za/newsviewer/local/7708/

Seacom's current cable break that has all but left the undersea cable operator inoperable for a week, has raised market speculation that it may soon formalise alliances, if not an outright merger, with similar companies.

This week, Seacom's vulnerability as a single line operator was highlighted when a segment of its East African cable broke, leading to downtime of six to eight days.

Rumours that Seacom was looking at either forming a merger or formal alliance with Main One, the Nigerian-based private equity company whose cable stretching from Lagos to Portugal became operational last week, have been circulating for some time.

“This incident and the recent Telkom power outages show that there is still a need for more undersea cables,” says Arthur Goldstuck, MD of research company World Wide Worx. “Initially, there was a lot of resistance to Seacom from the other telecommunications operators, because Seacom is a private equity company and not a telco. However, Seacom now seems to have been accepted.”

Goldstuck says Seacom recently signed a redundancy agreement with Telkom and will probably do so with other operators, as is international practice. But it is hard to make a call yet on any kind of merger or takeover in the undersea cable sector.

In May, Main One announced it had signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Seacom that the two would look at connecting their networks near Cape Town, effectively meaning that Africa was ringed by fibre-optic cable.

Main One's cable stretching from Lagos to Portugal has just become operational.

This is similar to a vision that was originally touted by US telecommunications operator AT&T in the late 1990s and then more recently by the SA Department of Communications in the form of a project called Uhurunet. Both projects have come to nought.

Ironic comment

However, Seacom CEO Brian Herlihy told ITWeb at the Fortune Global Forum conference, on 29 June, that apart from signing the MOU with Main One, both companies were still focused on getting their networks fully operational.

That was the day Telkom's South African Far East cable experienced a power failure, causing a panic among international broadcasters over the 2010 Soccer World Cup. Telkom has secured the rights to transmit the World Cup broadcasts overseas as it is one of the main tournament sponsors.

“We are looking at our options, but there is still a lot of work to do for Seacom and Main One,” Herlihy said.

Suveer Ramdhani, Seacom's head of product strategy, says the company is one part of an African Internet build-up and, as other cable systems come on line, there will be more redundancy between the systems.

“Seacom is already in talks with other cables due to land. As more cables reach eastern and southern Africa, the problem of redundancy will be easier to manage as more options become available to reroute capacity during an outage. It is common practice in the industry around the world for cable networks to provide redundancy capacity to one another,” he says.

Deep update

Ramdhani says Seacom is also working on a number of projects that should be in place within months, including the installation of routers with IP MPLS capability on to the landing points of the cable. This would make a switchover to other capacity a lot simpler.

“In addition, the finalisation of Seacom's own link between India and Europe would provide further redundancy options,” he says.

Seacom's latest update says its technical team has identified the exact location of the fault and the repair process has been fully mobilised. The faulty section of the cable is at one of the deepest points along its route, 4 700m below sea level, and may require the use of underwater robots to locate and retrieve the cable for repairs.

The update also says Seacom has successfully sourced and activated restoration capacity on other cable networks servicing eastern and southern Africa, and will continue to work closely with all parties to ensure restoration capacity is made available to additional clients requiring it.
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ODUODU

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Re: Internet bandwith
« Reply #28 on: July 15, 2010, 09:44:22 pm »
from: dated 14 July 2010

http://mybroadband.co.za/news/telecoms/13762-Mbps-ADSL-upgrades-continue.html

10 Mbps ADSL upgrades to continue
Staff Writer MyBroadband | 14 July, 2010 Rate this article
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Telkom’s network freeze comes to an end tomorrow which means that network upgrades will start again

Over the last four weeks football fever gripped the South African nation, but the impact on the local telecommunications sector was more than merely hungover employees or worker absenteeism during important daytime games.

Telkom had to adhere to a FIFA imposed network freeze period from 05 May 2010 until 16 July 2010 during which no planned maintenance or upgrades could be done on Telkom’s core network.

According to Bashier Sallie, Telkom's Senior Managing Executive for Wholesale and Networks, this network freeze was needed to ensure that the 2010 FIFA World Cup was delivered across a network architecture that is secure, stable and resilient.

Telkom did however conduct some work on the network where it was unlikely to have an impact on services related to the World Cup.  “Work requests on the network were assessed as per the prescribed process on a case by case basis and in many instances have continued even during the ‘Freeze’, where the risk was either non-existent or minimal in respect to disruption to FIFA World Cup 2010 facilities and services,” the company said.

Network freeze to end tomorrow

Good news is that the network freeze is on track to be lifted tomorrow after which it will be ‘business as usual’ for Telkom.

“All normal Telecommunications Network Construction and Service Configuration work will now continue – with ‘business as usual’. In instances where work was held up due to the ‘freeze’ – this work will be prioritised and accelerated,” Telkom said.

These upgrades include IPC capacity upgrades and the upgrade of exchanges which may offer 10 Mbps ADSL in future.  Telkom however pointed out that as far as ADSL backhaul is concerned, work has continued in exchanges that were not affected by the FIFA World Cup 2010 network freeze.
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