"The question I have for other operators: if you have a group of customers that 
subscribe to a 100Mb service, and all of them suddenly switched to a 1Gb 
service, would you expect an increase in overall bandwidth usage? " 


As someone offering up to gigabit, I wouldn't. They don't use what they have 
now, so why would they use more? 


I'm sure it's more than a 0 difference, but it isn't statistically relevant. 


That's, however, assuming you've spent the money to overbuild the 
infrastructure in that area to support something not needed. 




----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

Midwest-IX 
http://www.midwest-ix.com 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Kord Martin" <k...@firstnationscable.com> 
To: nanog@nanog.org 
Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2022 3:10:06 PM 
Subject: Re: FCC proposes higher speed goals (100/20 Mbps) for USF providers 




I don’t think game manufacturers expand their games based on available download 
bandwidth. I think that games have gotten richer and the graphics environments 
and capabilities have improved and content more expansive to a point where yes, 
games are several BluRays worth of download now instead of being shipped on 
multiple discs. 



When I was a rural DSL customer, my problem wasn't necessarily with the size of 
the games, but rather that you'd have to re-download the entire game every 
week. It would take almost an entire week to download a game, then by time it's 
finally updated they've updated a tree texture and you need to download the 
whole game again. I understand why this happens but customers who didn't have 
access to broadband just got the shaft. 
I still have a lot of friends who don't have access to broadband and simply 
can't play modern games because of the always-online requirement and constant, 
huge updates. 
<blockquote>

If the target is a non-fiber service, then 100/20 might make sense. If Fiber is 
being installed, then it’s hard to find a rationale for 1Gbps being more 
expensive than any lower capacity. 
</blockquote>

The question I have for other operators: if you have a group of customers that 
subscribe to a 100Mb service, and all of them suddenly switched to a 1Gb 
service, would you expect an increase in overall bandwidth usage? 

I've been looking around for some other comments on bandwidth trends but I 
don't know how much of that would/should be confidential based on privacy or 
trade secret. 

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