
clang_jangle writes with this excerpt from The Inquirer outlining Comcast's new traffic-throttling scheme, based on information from Comcast's latest FCC filing. "Its network throttling implements a two-tier packet queueing system at the routers, driven by two trigger conditions. Comcast's first traffic throttling trigger is tripped by using more than 70 per cent of your maximum downstream or upstream bandwidth for more than 15 minutes. Its second traffic throttling trigger is tripped when the Cable Modem Termination System you're hooked-up to – along with up to 15,000 other Comcast subscribers – gets congested, and your traffic is somehow identified as being responsible. Tripping either of Comcast's high bandwidth usage rate triggers results in throttling for at least 15 minutes, or until your average bandwidth utilisation rate drops below 50 per cent for 15 minutes."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Tagi: bandwidth usage, high bandwidth, cable modem, clang, jangle, slashdot, comcast, inquirer, fcc, routers, 15 minutes, excerpt from, subscribers, alg, traffic
Filed in
bandwidth usage,
high bandwidth,
cable modem,
clang,
jangle,
slashdot,
comcast,
inquirer,
fcc,
routers,
15 minutes,
excerpt from,
subscribers,
alg,
traffic with

Sure,
we already told you what Hulu Plus looked like on iPhone, iPad and a Samsung TV, and not much has changed since that juncture, but we expect a number of you care quite a bit about how it will operate
on PlayStation 3, especially considering you'll (
presently) have to cough up an
additional $50 annually for the privilege. The good news is it's absolutely nothing like the PS3's
disc-based Netflix solution -- here, you're looking at a responsive experience through and through, and the interface is about as simple and full-featured as we'd hoped.
After a 28MB download, we were invited to either log in with an email/password combination or link our console at Hulu's website, both of which launched the program nigh instantly from the hard drive. The interface afterwards is a dead-ringer for
the Samsung TV version, except optimized for console control, with the analog stick and shoulder buttons smartly seeking through programs at high speed, or tapped to jump ahead in fifteen-second increments. You can similarly
adjust video quality (and thus, bandwidth usage) with a press of the R1 button, watch picture-in-picture programs while you browse, and the search function admirably narrows down Hulu's content
as quickly as you can type the letters in. It does have its bugs, like when we tried to watch
High Fidelity and were asked if we wanted to
subscribe to the show, and there was the time we got caught in an unending advertising loop for body wash, but that time we think the app was just trying to tell us something. Yeah, we'd better run out to the store, but don't go away -- hit the gallery below for a brief tour.
Update: Our friends at Joystiq have a video walkthrough; check it after the break!
Continue reading Hulu Plus on PS3, hands-on (update: video)
Hulu Plus on PS3, hands-on (update: video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Jul 2010 19:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | |
Email this |
Comments Tagi: dead ringer, samsung tv, high fidelity, bandwidth usage, ipad, secd, netflix, body wash, video quality, juncture, increments, ps3, butts, privilege, hard drive, butt, bugs, samsung, high speed, email
Filed in
dead ringer,
samsung tv,
high fidelity,
bandwidth usage,
ipad,
secd,
netflix,
body wash,
video quality,
juncture,
increments,
ps3,
butts,
privilege,
hard drive,
butt,
bugs,
samsung,
high speed,
email with