Comcast offers speedier Internet access

2008年 10月 23日 03:37 JST
 

By Robert MacMillan

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Comcast Corp is juicing up its high-speed Internet access in some of its big markets, with plans to offer speedier connections to all of its customers during the next two years.

Comcast plans to offer two access speeds for home users as well as one new speed for business customers, the Philadelphia-based cable television and Internet service provider said on Wednesday.

The new speeds are designed to give Comcast's customers quicker access to the bulkier chunks of information over the Internet, such as videos, games and large software programs, and to compete with phone companies' offerings.

Comcast will offer the services, based on a technology called "Docsis 3.0," in the Boston region and southern New Hampshire and parts of Philadelphia and New Jersey. It has tested one of the services in the Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota area, for several months.

It plans to reach more than 10 big markets and will be made available to about 10 million homes and businesses in the next few months. It wants to make them available to all 50 million homes that it covers by the end of 2010, said Mitch Bowling, senior vice president and general manager of Comcast Online Services.

The "Extreme 50" service will cost $139.95 a month and offer up to 50 megabits per second (Mbps) of "downstream" speed, which refers to the flow of information into the user's computer. Most Comcast customers currently get speeds of 6 or 8 Mbps. Upstream speed for the new service will be as high as 10 Mbps.

"Ultra" service will cost $62.95 per month and offer up to 22 Mbps downstream and up to 5 Mbps upstream, Comcast said.  続く...

 
 
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