I am also surprised.  However, we have had a total of 5 complaints about 
network speed over a 3 year period.  

One possible reason is that because they own the infrastructure collectively 
and pay for the bandwidth directly (I just manage everything for them), they 
are prepared to put up with the odd slowdown to avoid the expense of an 
upgrade. 

Our original plan was to start with the 100M circuit so that they could make 
sure that everything would work, that we had reliable wifi delivery (about 95% 
of users only use a wifi connection to their computers/iDevices/whatever), and 
then to upgrade to 1G as soon as the dust started settling.  They have 
postponed the upgrade for 3 years now, with no complaints.

I guess that if they will be directly impacted by higher bandwidth costs, some 
people can make do with slower service (or something).

        paul 

> On Apr 3, 2019, at 8:41 AM, Darin Steffl <darin.ste...@mnwifi.com> wrote:
> 
> Paul,
> 
> I have hard time seeing how you aren't maxing out that circuit. We see about 
> 2.3 mbps average per customer at peak with a primarily residential user base. 
> That would about 575 mbps average at peak for 250 users on our network so how 
> do we use 575 but you say your users don't even top 100 mbps at peak? It 
> doesn't make sense that our customers use 6 times as much bandwidth at peak 
> than yours do. 
> 
> We're a rural and small town mix in Minnesota, no urban areas in our 
> coverage. 90% of our customers are on a plan 22 mbps or less and the other 
> 10% are on a 100 mbps plan but their average usage isn't really much higher.
> 
> 
> Enterprise environments can easily handle many more users on a 100 meg 
> circuit because they aren't typically streaming video like they would be at 
> home. Residential will always be much higher usage per person than most 
> enterprise users. 
> 
> On Wed, Apr 3, 2019, 2:46 AM Valdis Klētnieks <valdis.kletni...@vt.edu> wrote:
> On Tue, 02 Apr 2019 23:53:06 -0700, Ben Cannon said:
> > A 100/100 enterprise connection can easily support hundreds of desktop 
> > users 
> > if not more.  It’s a lot of bandwidth even today.
> 
> And what happens when a significant fraction of those users fire up Netflix 
> with
> an HD stream?
> 
> We're discussing residential not corporate connections, I thought....
> 

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