> There are ways around this...entirely legal and technically within the > letter of your EULA, but Cox would probably be upset if they figure it > out. > > Step1 - Capture one of the "optimal" configurations pushed by Cox via TFTP > Step2 - www.tcniso.net > Step3 - Monitor your modem. Whenever Cox pushes a "lesser" config, > simply re-push the optimal config. > > I have seen provisioned daytime limits as low as 256kbps up / 1Mbit > down...and I pay for 1Mbit up / 15Mbit down. I would understand > occasional network saturation etc....but they actively limit user > bandwidth (provisioning) during peak hours. This is to guarantee > availability to business users I'm guessing. Rather than add capacity > appropriate to what has been promised via their service agreements, > they rob from Peter to pay Paul. In order to keep yourself from being > Peter, simply use the process outlined above. (Austin: since you are > experiencing this at night your local segment may be saturated, in > which case you're S.O.L.) The terms of service I've seen for the residential users state UP TO X speed. They don't guarantee you'll always get X speed. --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss