Quote:
Originally Posted by Sweet Pea
I have a question... I'm not real savvy about this type of thing. Currently we use broadband cable as our internet connection. Since we don't subscribe to the cable TV service, it seems that we are penalized and pay more for just internet service.
I keep getting advertisements in the mail about A T & T internet service. Their "Elite" plan (best) is less than my broadband connection. It states "up to 6.0 Mbps". (Whatever that means.)
Can someone who has used both tell me if the speed is comparable? I have gotten used to having fast service and would hate to lose that just to save a few dollars.
So........... if you have made the switch from broadband to A T & T - are you happy? Thanks so much for any input!

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The "6 Mbps" is a tricky one that they're throwing at you. On most TV cable systems the download is usually around 4 MB per seconds. Notice that the "B" is capitalized.
A megabit (Mb) is a million binary pulses, or 1,000,000 pulses (or "
bits").
A megabyte (MB) is 2 to the 20th power
bytes, or 1,048,576 bytes in decimal notation.
Basically they're measuring two different things but trying to get you to think it's "all the same."
Is AT&T's 6 Mbps faster than Cable's 4 MBps? No. AT&T's 6Mbps really comes out to .75 MBps when you compare apples to apples. So it's less than one fourth the bandwidth you're probably already getting.
Of course, the price difference might make AT&T the better deal over all. It all comes down to a consumer decision. Just look for the capital "B's" verses the lower case "b's". It's an old slight of hand trick.
I have used both DSL and Cable- for most practicle purposes they are indistinguishable - at least to me. I use cable at home right now and DSL like connection at work and I have to be doing some heavy downloading to see any difference. If price is a factor- go with the cheaper DSL.