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Pigeon Beats ISP in 60-Mile Data Delivery Race

Last week, in an epic showdown between nature and technology, science barely edged out Mother Earth to claim global supremacy. And, reportedly, it only took a lonely carrier pigeon in South Africa two hours to even the odds.

According to BBC reports, an exasperated employee for Durban's Unlimited IT spurred the pigeon to action after the man frustratingly mentioned that data transmission "would be faster by carrier pigeon" than with Internet provider Telkom's DSL service. The Unlimited team drafted Winston the pigeon to test the statement, so they dispatched him, with a 4 GB memory stick, on a 60-mile race against technology.

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Computers

Verizon Bans Libshitz Family From Using Last Name in E-Mail Address

Verizon DSL Customer Service Doesn't Care About the LibshitzsWhat's in a name? For most, it's just a jumble of letters. Some people have a word or two mixed in, and a rare few have words in their names that can't be said in polite conversation. That's the problem faced by Dr. Herman I. Libshitz, a retired Chestertown, Maryland radiologist who recently was given quite the run-around by Verizon when trying to upgrade his aging dial-up connection to something a little faster.

There's a certain word contained within the good doctor's last name (Can you find it?) that Verizon doesn't permit in its e-mail addresses. So, when Herman was told he would need to pick another name to set up the account, he told them to shove their DSL where the sun don't shine and went back to dial-up.

Ultimately, Verizon customer service managers gave the Libshitz family an exemption to use its name in its address, but it took a call from a reporter to get everything pushed through. Kudos to Verizon for finally being a little flexible, but why does the media always have to get involved to get anything done? [Source: philly.com]

Computers

American Internet Access Destined for Meltdown?

American Internet Access Set to Get SlowerInternet users have become accustomed to the idea of things getting faster as time goes on, but a warning from analyst firm Nemertes Research Group is raising fears that within three to five years, Internet access in the Americas could actually get slower.

Much, much slower.

The reason for the fears, which some are calling a 'meltdown,' is simply the popularity of the Internet. As anyone who hasn't been living under a rock knows, the Internet has become nearly ubiquitous in American households over those last ten years. The global network connections that bridge access between countries, called backbones, are said to have plenty of bandwidth to support the expected growth. However, the infrastructure that fills in those gaps -- actually bringing connectivity into your home -- is said to be woefully lacking to maintain this growth in Internet popularity.

Add in the increasing demand many are placing on their Internet providers by using bandwidth hungry apps like peer-to-peer file sharing, and you have a problem. It's this sort of pressure that has led providers like Comcast to attempt to throttle the bandwidth usage by some of its customers, leading to irate customers, lawsuits, and plenty of bad PR.

Expect more providers to start implementing these sorts of changes as they struggle to cope with increasing demand, and expect higher prices from those who don't resort to those restrictions.

From NewsVine

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Computers, iPhone

AT&T Gives Free Wi-Fi to Subscribers

AT&T Offers Free Wi-Fi to Broadband Subscribers
AT&T has opened up its Wi-Fi hotspots to broadband subscribers for free. If you're a Pro, Elite, or Fast Access subscriber on AT&T's DSL service you can now enjoy free access at its hotspots that can be found in airports, coffee shops, McDonald's and Barns and Noble's. Those with lesser subscriptions can add unlimited access for $1.99 a month, and those who have no AT&T broadband access are saddled with the same $7.99 a day access fee.

This is a great move by AT&T to endear itself to customers, though we would like to see them extend the same offer to its wireless subscribers. It might make that iPhone purchase seem a little less foolish.

From USA Today

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Computers

Internet Speed Record Broken (Twice)

Making the switch from dial-up to broadband feels like a huge increase in speed -- and it is. The fastest you could ever hope to get over a modem is somewhere around 56kbps, or 56,000 bits of data per second. Your average DSL line offers connection speeds somewhere around 200kbps, around four times faster, while cable modem speeds are often upwards of 5,000kbps, which is 90 times faster than dial-up. That's speedy, but not fast enough for some. Are you ready for 9gbps, or 9,000,000 kbps? Researchers at the University of Tokyo are, having reached an astronomical 9.08 gbps transmission rate over a 20,000-mile distance.

To put that into perspective, a DVD movie usually takes up about 4.7 gigabytes of data on the disc, or 5,046,586,572.8 bytes (a byte is 8 bits). Over a 56kbps modem that would take about eight days to download. Over a cable modem you could download the same movie in two hours. At 9gbps, that same movie would download in under 10 seconds. That's some serious speed.

This is all theoretical at this point, as the researchers used customized protocols and hardware to make the transmission. The fastest usable networks today are 1gbps, so it'll be at least another few years before anything close to this is possible at home. By then we'll all be watching High Definition movies anyway, which will be upwards of 50 gigabytes to download.

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From USA Today

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