wolivier69
New Member
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2010
- Messages
- 3
- Reaction score
- 1
I've got a question. Up to now for the really heavy downloader one of the best options was Axxess at R1000 for a 4 Meg line with the limitation that if you download more than the rolling window you will get throttled between 8 am and 8 pm. But a couple of crazy buggers can move around 700 gigs in a month and axxess is fine with that. Axxess even shows the top download stats on their site. This whole setup runs over SAT3 I think????
Now we have Seacom landing and every-one and their grandma is offering so-called 'uncapped' but with service issues so severe we have 44 pages on this thead alone (and me typing about it while I could be doing something way more interesting - ok ,maybe not?????). Now we were promised WAY more bandwidth at reduced prices, and this seems to be true since I'm involved with a few universities sitting on Seacom and for the same money a year they have vastly more bandwidth.
My question is why aren't we seeing an axxess like deal with similar rules for a cheaper price now. How come Seacom is giving us lower prices but with really really bad throttling, shaping, limitations etc etc aka inferior service from ISP's.
I'm obviously simplifying the Seacom situation way too much, so can someone in the know please enlighten us?
Thanks
Werner
Now we have Seacom landing and every-one and their grandma is offering so-called 'uncapped' but with service issues so severe we have 44 pages on this thead alone (and me typing about it while I could be doing something way more interesting - ok ,maybe not?????). Now we were promised WAY more bandwidth at reduced prices, and this seems to be true since I'm involved with a few universities sitting on Seacom and for the same money a year they have vastly more bandwidth.
My question is why aren't we seeing an axxess like deal with similar rules for a cheaper price now. How come Seacom is giving us lower prices but with really really bad throttling, shaping, limitations etc etc aka inferior service from ISP's.
I'm obviously simplifying the Seacom situation way too much, so can someone in the know please enlighten us?
Thanks
Werner