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story category Exclusive Screens Of Comcast's New Bandwidth Meter
New meter to launch in January for all users
10:01AM Wednesday Dec 03 2008 by Karl Bode
tags: business · cable · caps · Comcast
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Yesterday a Comcast insider informed us that Comcast, who implemented a 250GB monthly cap in October, will be offering users an online bandwidth usage tracking tool starting January 5. According to the source, the tool will retain up to three months of usage and track multiple MAC addresses, though not in real time (3 hour delay).

We've subsequently obtained screenshots showing where (in your web user menu) the meter link will be located, and a shot of the meter in action. Currently, the Comcast FAQ tells users to do a web search for bandwidth meters or use the meter included in the McAfee Security Suite the company gives out free to subscribers.

We'll note we're happy to see Comcast measuring usage in actually gigabytes instead of e-mails sent. You do start to wonder if those with their own bandwidth monitoring tools will create a lot of extra work for Comcast support when/if they believe that there's a discrepancy between Comcast's tool and their own.

Related:
  1. Washington Post On Comcast Caps
  2. NY Attorney General Investigating Comcast
  3. Comcast Expands New Throttling Tests
  4. Comcast Successfully Delays Philly FiOS
  5. Virgin Launches 50Mbps Service
  6. Cash Crunch? Cancel TV Service
  7. Comcast Mum On New Bandwidth Tracker
  8. New Comcast Throttling System 100% Online
Forums » Exclusive Screens Of Comcast's New Bandwidth Meter
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RLH_115

join:2008-10-23
Baytown, TX

Finally

They should have put this out before issueing the CAPs

NOZIREV

join:2008-07-10
New Bedford, MA
·Comcast

Re: Finally

Its not like they didnt have something for you to use while this was being developed, "Currently, the Comcast FAQ tells users to do a web search for bandwidth meters or use the meter included in the McAfee Security Suite the company gives out free to subscribers." please stop the crying...

c0wzg0m00
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Re: Finally

said by NOZIREV See Profile :

Its not like they didnt have something for you to use while this was being developed, "Currently, the Comcast FAQ tells users to do a web search for bandwidth meters or use the meter included in the McAfee Security Suite the company gives out free to subscribers." please stop the crying...
you are aware that this does not tell you about thirdparty devices that are using the internet. devices like xbox360's, wii, ps3, streaming music players, etc.
JSRoman
Premium
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Callahan, FL

edit:
December 3rd, @10:40AM

Re: Finally

Where does it say that?

knightmb
Everybody Lies

join:2003-12-01
Franklin, TN
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Re: Finally

Looks like Business customers are in the clear, all the wording is aimed towards residential users everywhere that I read.

At least I'll hope since I top many TB a month.
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duck9191 See Profile

I doubt it explicitly says it anywhere (I didn't read it), but if it's software running on a computer there's no way it's going to know about all the other traffic passing through a router. That's why the BEST solution for a home user is to get a router that's compatible with a custom firmware that provides traffic monitoring: I use and recommend DD-WRT v24 firmware on a Linksys WRT54GL router, which is targeted at enthusiasts who actually want to install third party firmware. The firmware lets me view my bandwidth usage month-by-month or, if you hover your mouse over each bar, even day-by-day as the attached screenshot shows.
jacour

join:2001-12-11
Ypsilanti, MI
·Comcast

Re: Finally

The Comcast cap inspired me to install DD-WRT at long lost, mainly due to concerns about bricking my router (which didn't happen). The graph is a very handy tool and the DD-WRT software is much nicer than the LinkSys supplied firmware. I can strongly recommend it.

ptrowski
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Re: Finally

said by jacour See Profile :

The Comcast cap inspired me to install DD-WRT at long lost, mainly due to concerns about bricking my router (which didn't happen). The graph is a very handy tool and the DD-WRT software is much nicer than the LinkSys supplied firmware. I can strongly recommend it.
said by jacour See Profile :

The Comcast cap inspired me to install DD-WRT at long lost, mainly due to concerns about bricking my router (which didn't happen). The graph is a very handy tool and the DD-WRT software is much nicer than the LinkSys supplied firmware. I can strongly recommend it.
I use Tomato and it also has the bandwidth meter. Very handy indeed as it catches all traffic.
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said by c0wzg0m00 See Profile :

said by NOZIREV See Profile :

Its not like they didnt have something for you to use while this was being developed, "Currently, the Comcast FAQ tells users to do a web search for bandwidth meters or use the meter included in the McAfee Security Suite the company gives out free to subscribers." please stop the crying...
you are aware that this does not tell you about thirdparty devices that are using the internet. devices like xbox360's, wii, ps3, streaming music players, etc.
As I understand it, this counts all traffic delivered to your IP address. Basically anything that passes through your cable modem will register, regardless of whether its your PC or Xbox. You are thinking of the applications like DL Meter (I think thats what its called) that only track the data used by the PC its installed on.
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iansltx

join:2007-02-19
Fredericksburg, TX

Re: Finally

McAfee can only track the data used by the PC it's installed in. How would it measure full network usage? You have to be at the router, modem or ISP level to do that.

wifi4milez
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Re: Finally

said by iansltx See Profile :

McAfee can only track the data used by the PC it's installed in. How would it measure full network usage? You have to be at the router, modem or ISP level to do that.
Correct, however the ISP provided service being discussed here is not the McAfee software. This thread is referring to a new bandwidth meter that is in the process of being released. The new bandwidth meter is going to track at the cable modem level, or perhaps the MAC address of the router attached to it. In either case, all traffic will be tracked regardless of which device is using it.
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iansltx

join:2007-02-19
Fredericksburg, TX

Re: Finally

Correct. I was referencing a post that talked about how Comcast is currently offering McAFee.

It'll be interesting to see how router-based traffic loggers (DD-WRT, Tomato) compare to Comcast's ISP-based logger...

funchords
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said by wifi4milez See Profile :

Basically anything that passes through your cable modem will register,
I hope not, or I hope typical network broadcasts get subtracted out.

I've never measured this on Comcast, but one Roadrunner user showed 60 Kbps of sustained traffic of what sounds like ARP or DHCP broadcasts that -- if it continued -- would total 20 GB/mo.
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wifi4milez
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Re: Finally

said by funchords See Profile :

said by wifi4milez See Profile :

Basically anything that passes through your cable modem will register,
I hope not, or I hope typical network broadcasts get subtracted out.

I've never measured this on Comcast, but one Roadrunner user showed 60 Kbps of sustained traffic of what sounds like ARP or DHCP broadcasts that -- if it continued -- would total 20 GB/mo.
I suspect they will omit that traffic then. If I am not mistaken, TWC has a 20G cap in some of their Texas markets. If they were to include that data then every sub would be over their limit before even using the service. That would certainly cause many customer complaints, and would be a huge headache for TWC to deal with.
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anon123456

@comcast.net

ARP or DHCP broadcasts would stop at the router and not be forwarded onto the cable modem. So unless you are directly connected to the cable modem with your PC or a switch you would not need to worry about it. And if your router is making the DHCP requests to your cable modem you would not be sending any traffic from your PC's etc at all.

Qumahlin
Never Enough Time
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join:2001-10-05
West Chester, PA

Re: Finally

said by anon123456 :

ARP or DHCP broadcasts would stop at the router and not be forwarded onto the cable modem.
Um, the modem receives the traffic BEFORE the router. The modem is the gateway device..not the router. The traffic would not be forwarded on to your PC's but it is still hitting the modem and your router as well.

No this traffic most likely won't be counted, but the one post about 60Kbps sec in arps is something that is a fluke and typically a "storm" of that size would be killed by other management software in place at the CMTS level if it continued for more than a few minutes.

Notice the user said it caused his overall speeds to crash when it was happening, it's not a normal occurence

funchords
Robb Topolski
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Re: Finally

said by Qumahlin See Profile :

Um, the modem receives the traffic BEFORE the router. The modem is the gateway device..not the router. The traffic would not be forwarded on to your PC's but it is still hitting the modem and your router as well.
Right.

said by Qumahlin See Profile :

No this traffic most likely won't be counted, but the one post about 60Kbps sec in arps is something that is a fluke and typically a "storm" of that size would be killed by other management software in place at the CMTS level if it continued for more than a few minutes.
Who knows? We're just guessing here. It will be interesting to see how close they get. The screen shots from the news article showed the summer months -- so I've got to wonder whether all this time spent now on something apparently there for a while is about looking at and fixing the accuracy of an existing system.

said by Qumahlin See Profile :

Notice the user said it caused his overall speeds to crash when it was happening, it's not a normal occurence
IIRC, his area was coming back up from some kind of problem. I'm really not worried about ARP alone, or DHCP broadcasts, or munged packets, or any single thing. The combination of problems of monitoring "delivery" in a best-effort system like the Internet may cause some different results in different environments -- a one-size-fits-all system is unlikely to get it right, we'll be talking about this a lot.

Continuing to focus on perfecting metered Internet, we are continuing to underline the fact that broadband with Comcast sometimes involves a choice between expensive, bursty, boosty, laggy, lossy, limited cable ISP service and a cheaper, unlimited, "fast-enough" alternative (with its "we suck even harder" customer service in my Verizon DSL area).

If Comcast's anti-congestion plan that it's rolling out is truly effective, why do we need caps? Why not go back to unlimited?
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anothercomment

@anonymouse.org

Re: Finally

said by funchords See Profile :

If Comcast's anti-congestion plan that it's rolling out is truly effective, why do we need caps? Why not go back to unlimited?
Not sure I am the fish you are looking for, but I do have some ISP experience and will bite on that baited question...

Because congestion management is to manage unexpected congestion in a fair way. Upgrades on the network still happen as per the business plan in an organized way around expected growth. Otherwise you would have to run congested all the time.

Usage management is to manage the situation where this now becomes expected requiring unexpected upgrades to the network outside the business plan. Since the business plan justifies upgrades, new speeds and price points, you want to ensure you distribute the costs in a "fair" way across a user base.

Since studies show that top "unlimited expecting" users will consume all available bandwidth they are given, their cost of carry exceed their revenue provided. Summary: 1 manages unexpected congestion (to keep networks fair) and one managed unexpected growth (to keep costs fair).

The idea is either to find a "good" cap and grow with it, or charge to offset the cost of usage as is done under commercial terms. You don't have to like it, you can continue to argue against it, but there is plenty of Internet history showing this method and it is reality.

funchords
Robb Topolski
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Re: Finally

Thanks for the kind and thoughtful reply
said by anothercomment :

Because congestion management is to manage unexpected congestion in a fair way. Upgrades on the network still happen as per the business plan in an organized way around expected growth. Otherwise you would have to run congested all the time.

Usage management is to manage the situation where this now becomes expected requiring unexpected upgrades to the network outside the business plan. Since the business plan justifies upgrades, new speeds and price points, you want to ensure you distribute the costs in a "fair" way across a user base.
It appears that the business plan is to grow available bandwidth slower than typical Internet growth trends. Assuming 250 GB was the right amount for October 2008, we should have a cap of 275 GB now.

But who cares if I use 500 GB if I use them when nobody else is competing for them? If I am successful and avoid transmitting my massive data spew during signs of congestion, then my use of 500 GB is -- by definition -- not only within the business plan but within the existing system.

And if I'm unsuccessful, then Comcast's "sloppy-seconds" bandwidth management takes hold and I can't harm normal users anyway -- under that plan, I am not entitled to any bandwidth and any that I do get is bonus.

As a result, one way or the other, we don't need a cap.

Since studies show that top "unlimited expecting" users will consume all available bandwidth they are given,
Study or not, the notion is wrong on its face. Most users only use 3 GB (we are repeatedly told), despite having much more at their disposal and having the service that was not sold with limits.

(We've never seen such a study. ISPs have quoted this amount without explanation or qualification. My guess is that my idle computers probably consume 3GB/mo.)

their cost of carry exceed their revenue provided.
It's silly to look at this in any level other than the aggregate, otherwise you create the situation where the owner of an all-you-can-eat buffet is running a secret per-plate tally and kicking out customers when they exceed his hidden business plan. (That's not a shot at Comcast -- as they have now disclosed that they have done something like this for years. That's not about fairness, that's about fairer dealing.)

Summary: 1 manages unexpected congestion (to keep networks fair) and one managed unexpected growth (to keep costs fair).
I hold that the "15+15 and out" plan really does both. Aggregators (Aggregaters?) don't pay by consumption, they pay by the width of the pipe which Comcast controls. Those costs are, by definition, fixed. As the heavy users force it toward full, Comcast deprioritizes their traffic which allows others to remain unimpacted.

There's zero need for a cap.

The idea is either to find a "good" cap and grow with it,
A cap that grows at some guaranteed minimum rate with adjustments to match actual Internet growth trends would be very good for users and innovators. Right now, we probably have VC's sitting on the sidelines because who wants to invest in projects that might hit the cap?

or charge to offset the cost of usage as is done under commercial terms.
That's another angle. But let's not stop there. What about families of 5 users or more -- why can't they buy a second allocation of 250 GB or 70%-70%-out for their home? (AT&T's and RoadRunner's trials of 150GB/mo and 40GB/mo are actually the best examples of this problem. 250 GB is still a lot of bandwidth.)

You don't have to like it, you can continue to argue against it, but there is plenty of Internet history showing this method and it is reality.
This is the first we've brought up history. If you'd like, we can go there. We did struggle with this in the past and how we handled it is very illuminating and useful.

Nice reply, thanks!
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u235Sentinel

@xmission.com
And if the numbers don't match the bandwidth consumed is there a resolution short of terminating more Concast customers?

I only ask because I'm sure a Concast shill as yourself would have the answer.
faaip05

join:2007-09-03
Bangor, PA
One would think, but this is Comcast we are dealing with.

knightmb
Everybody Lies

join:2003-12-01
Franklin, TN
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Re: Finally

Found something interesting in their FAQ
quote:
How does Comcast help customers who have been identified as excessive users?

Comcast's experience shows that some customers identified as excessive users were not aware of the activity that caused the excessive use. For example, after being notified by Comcast some customers identify another person in their household, such as a child or roommate, who uses the service in ways that generate excessive use. In other cases, a customer's personal computer may be compromised by a virus or spyware that uses the computer to send large amounts of spam or perform repeated bulk transfers of large files. Still other customers may have an unsecured wireless router or be using our residential Comcast High-Speed Internet service for a commercial or business purpose and not the intended residential purpose. In each of these situations, and many others, Comcast is able to help the customer identify and address the cause of the excessive use made with his or her account. In fact, most customers identified as excessive users change their usage patterns or make other adjustments and continue to use the service. Only a small fraction of the tiny number of users who are identified as excessive users ever have their service terminated for one year because of continued excessive use.

Ok, so they pull out the "only 1% of Comcast customers are excessive users" and then further go on that it's actually even less because those that were excessive tend to be virus/spam/open wi-fi abuse. So actually, what they are saying is that instead of helping to fix grandmom's virus/trojan infected machine, we will blame the problem on the 1% of the 1% of the 1% that actually use more than 250GB a month of bandwidth instead which out of the many thousands of customers they have, would probably be about 2 or 3 people per state who aren't virus/trojan/open wi-fi users?

Talk about reading between the lines.
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jlivingood
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Re: Finally

said by knightmb See Profile :

Ok, so they pull out the "only 1% of Comcast customers are excessive users" and then further go on that it's actually even less because those that were excessive tend to be virus/spam/open wi-fi abuse. So actually, what they are saying is that instead of helping to fix grandmom's virus/trojan infected machine, we will blame the problem on the 1% of the 1% of the 1% that actually use more than 250GB a month of bandwidth instead which out of the many thousands of customers they have, would probably be about 2 or 3 people per state who aren't virus/trojan/open wi-fi users?
That's not what is intended at all. In fact, its the job of our CSA team to work with customers like that and help them try to remove malware and properly secure their networks, etc.

Jason
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knightmb
Everybody Lies

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Re: Finally

said by jlivingood See Profile :

That's not what is intended at all. In fact, its the job of our CSA team to work with customers like that and help them try to remove malware and properly secure their networks, etc.

Jason
Fair enough, my opinion is that those that are upset by the cap will point to this as another reason why they are against it. I think maybe it should be worded a little different so that it doesn't seem to blend in the excessive users and those users that are excessive but didn't know any better because they had a virus/trojan/wi-fi, etc. That's what I took from it when I read it.
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BF69

join:2004-07-28
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said by jlivingood See Profile :

That's not what is intended at all. In fact, its the job of our CSA team to work with customers like that and help them try to remove malware and properly secure their networks, etc.

Jason
No see once watching movies and TV on the internet becomes more common place and higher bitrates are used it's your job to let customers know that if they only got their content from Comcast they wouldn't go over thier cap which in the end is the REAL reason for the cap. Because honestly a straight cap is a VERY VERY retarded way of managing bandwidth. Anyone with even 1/4 of a brain knows that.

Jeremy

@swbell.net

Re: Finally

TRUTH. I'm a great example of big ISP's worst nightmare. I pay out $150/mo to Comcast. I'm now going to drop TV service and go with internet service only. I have a Xbox 360, PS3 and 2 PC's. I have plenty of viewing options on those machines through a combination of pay (Netflix) and free (Hulu) services. Comcast no longer has value to me. In fact, I'm probably going to go over to uverse, drop TV and get either the 10 or 18mbps program for LESS money than a 8mbps pipe @ Comcast. That is ofcourse unless AT&T releases the BS caps they're testing nationwide.

Either way... they see the writing on the wall. Their business model is falling apart in the long run. As it should. People shouldn't have to pay $X for 300 channels when they only watch 4-5 of them on a regular basis.

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Agreed...
bugabuga

join:2004-06-10
Austin, TX

I wonder how the count the traffic

I wonder if they will be counting all inbound traffic that gets delivered, or just passes their border router.
I.e. if you turn the modem off while someone keeps sending packets to "your" address, will that still have counter spinning or if the modem needs to be on, and if router manufacturers will start offering a power port to bring the cable modem up/down on demand
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Re: I wonder how the count the traffic

said by bugabuga See Profile :

I wonder if they will be counting all inbound traffic that gets delivered, or just passes their border router.
I.e. if you turn the modem off while someone keeps sending packets to "your" address, will that still have counter spinning or if the modem needs to be on, and if router manufacturers will start offering a power port to bring the cable modem up/down on demand
If you turn your modem off, you no longer have an address. It's assigned to the device behind the modem, not the modem itself.
bugabuga

join:2004-06-10
Austin, TX

Re: I wonder how the count the traffic

That's not necessarily true. Routing doesn't change. IP address linked to modem's MAC address doesn't change. Traffic may still come down to the node etc
Unlike dial-up, cable modems have quite consistent IP addresses

Matt
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Re: I wonder how the count the traffic

said by bugabuga See Profile :

That's not necessarily true. Routing doesn't change. IP address linked to modem's MAC address doesn't change. Traffic may still come down to the node etc
Unlike dial-up, cable modems have quite consistent IP addresses
If you power your cable modem off, the CMTS will know there is not a link any longer and release the IP.

en102
Canadian, eh?

join:2001-01-26
Valencia, CA

Re: I wonder how the count the traffic

I would expect it to be tied into the MAC address of your cable modem.

Matt
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Re: I wonder how the count the traffic

said by en102 See Profile :

I would expect it to be tied into the MAC address of your cable modem.
It is tied to the MAC address of the device attached to the cable modem.

en102
Canadian, eh?

join:2001-01-26
Valencia, CA

Re: I wonder how the count the traffic

They could probably use something as simple as SNMP to read the stats going over the Internet side.
MRTG, Cricket, etc. could all do the function fairly easily.
The longest part would be implementing (documenting, NOC, process, etc.)
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Here on Bresnan, each subscriber gets 2 IPs so to speak. One is assigned to the modem directly and is inside of Bresnan's internal network with a private IP in the 10.253.x.x range. The other is assigned to the device behind the modem and is a public IP in the 69.144.x.x range.

If they were to monitor only the 69.144.x.x IP, that should eliminate any local chatter from the modem to the CMTS and vice versa.

Matt
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Re: I wonder how the count the traffic

said by koolkid1563 See Profile :

If they were to monitor only the 69.144.x.x IP, that should eliminate any local chatter from the modem to the CMTS and vice versa.
That is what I was referring to. If a public IP isn't assigned to SOME device attached to the cable modem, you can't send traffic anyway.

DaMaGeINC
The Lan Man
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What about all the broadcast traffic that hits the cable modem? Notice how the recieve light consintly flashes? If you were to count all that traffic, it would add up.

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Re: I wonder how the count the traffic

said by DaMaGeINC See Profile :

What about all the broadcast traffic that hits the cable modem? Notice how the recieve light consintly flashes? If you were to count all that traffic, it would add up.
That is the ARP traffic the other posters are referring to. If they measure your public IP traffic at the egress router, none of that matters.
Ytsejamer1

join:2008-01-18
Somersworth, NH

I worry about Netlfix usage

I worry what this cap is going to do when I really have some time to kill with the holidays and watch a few movies from Netflix' streaming.

I'm glad Comcast has a higher cap than most who have implemented one, but it just seems like they want to limit your choice of viewable tv to their service (newsflash, I know).

But I'm glad there will be a meter available...it'll let me keep an eye on it.

See 11 replies to this post
AVonGauss

join:2007-11-01
Boynton Beach, FL

First Thought...

I think I am reading too many boards, my first thought was is this the result of a leaky faucet at Comcast or is Comcast getting a bit more savvy in dealing with the community?
b10010011
Whats a Posting tag?

join:2004-09-07
Bellingham, WA

The latest DD-WRT has a bandwidth monitor

I looked at it a couple times, seems to work quite well counts everything going through your router in both directions. But of course you need to have a compatible router to use DD-WRT.
raptor1418
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Re: The latest DD-WRT has a bandwidth monitor

Tomato Firmware also has a bandwidth monitor that breaks down to Real-Time, Last 24 hours, Last 7 days and monthly.

The real-time and last 24 hours use a graph chart to show usage. The Last 7 days and monthly just give total up, total down and combined total.

With my setup the router is attached right to the modem so that should be my true inbound/outbound and leaves all the modem to edge router talk out. So if my numbers are a hell of a lot lower than their bandwidth usage numbers I will be bitching.

Comcast has pissed me off over the last 3 months with service problems I feel that they caused and resulted in me having to spend money. And on top of it all I just got a notice that they are jacking my rate up for HSI according to a notice I received last week.

Comcast why don't you true improving your network with some of the profit you already get. Can't wait till some new ISP comes in that has FTTH. I would drop comcast in a millisecond for an ISP with FTTH.
brianiscool

join:2000-08-16
Miami, FL

well

At least this is a good way to know if someone is stealing your internet service. lol

jmn1207
Premium
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Reston, VA
·Verizon FIOS

Re: well

said by brianiscool See Profile :

At least this is a good way to know if someone is stealing your internet service. lol
With these prices, the thief is selling you the internet service.

Trauma

@comcast.net

Re: well

said by jmn1207 See Profile :

said by brianiscool See Profile :

At least this is a good way to know if someone is stealing your internet service. lol
With these prices, the thief is selling you the internet service.
Care to start your own ISP? I'll be the first to sign up for the $9.95 per month all you can eat fiber to the modem deal everyone thinks is so cheap to provide. Some people need to get out and actually run a business before they tell someone else how to run theirs. (And yes, I do run a business so I have some idea of the costs of doing so.)