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Comcast's New 100Mbps Cable Service Edges Us Closer to Japan-Level Broadband, Sort Of
Comcast just launched a new high-speed 100Mbps cable service in Minneapolis and St. Paul, making it the second provider to offer next-level speeds to a small market for a crazy price. More »Supreme Court OKs DVR-In-The-Cloud Concept
Google on How to Change the Internet: You Should Own Your Broadband Pipes
Google policy analyst Derek Slater—who's so obviously related to Christian Slater—explains how to reshape broadband in the US. Step one: Own the actual pipes that run to your house. More »Verizon: 'We Could Offer 400Mbps, We Just Don't Feel Like It'
Verizon decided to respond to Cablevision's new limited 101Mbps service, and, well, it's a bit contradictory. More »Suck It, Fiber: America's Fastest Internet 101Mbps Delivered by Cablevision
Holy. I knew the fruits of cable's fiber-fast DOCSIS 3.0 standard would be delicious, but this is incredible: Cablevision's going to sell the fastest internet in the US next month: 101 blazing megabits per second. More »Cablevision Scamming People Into Getting Converter Box With Basic Service
A Consumerist reader looking to hook up basic service to a cable-ready TV was told by Cablevision that a converter box would be needed "no matter what." He was also accused of being "disrespectful." More »FCC Fines Big Cable for Ditching TiVo Owners
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Cablevision Launching Wireless Broadband Network
CableLabs Responds to CableCard Screwjob Allegation
CableCard Users Are Getting Screwed Out of HD Channels
Our friend Gary Merson, the HD Guru, has uncovered an issue that may soon piss you off. Cable customers who use the current CableCard to decode signal directly in their TV, a TiVo or Windows Media Center PC may soon start losing HD channels because of a change in technology. To conserve bandwidth, cable carriers are moving from a direct stream of video to "switched digital video," which use two-way digital cable boxes to see what customers need then send it to them. CableCards are only one-way, so they can't make use of any SDV coming down the pipes. What does this mean? Merson says that as of April 15, Cablevision has cut off CableCard access to 15 Voom HD channels, and Time Warner will apparently make similar cuts. More »Cablevision's Crazy New VOD Scheme: Send You the DVD Too