Loading...
CED July 2010: Strategies for IP Video

Loading...


Loading...
Free eNewsletter Subscription
 

The Cable Show 2010 - Video Showcase

CED Home
E-newsletters
CED Broadband Direct Archive
Product Showcase Archive
Subscribe to CED

Tools
Webinars
Events Calendar
LiveFrom Cable-Tec EXPO 09
Show Daily Archive
Broadband White Papers
Job Search
Digital Library
CED Wallcharts

Loading...
White Papers

Topics
Broadband Business
Cable Telephony
Digital Future
Fiber Optics
HFC Architecture
Internet Services

Magazine
Current Issue
CED Wallcharts
WEB EXTRA
New Products
Archives
Digital Edition Sample
Subscribe to Print

Editorial
Contact CED
Contact the Editor
Editorial Staff
News Release Policy
Reprints
Submit Event for Online Calendar
Submit News Release

Advertising
Sales Contacts
2010 Editorial Calendar
2010 Media Kit
BPA Statement June 2009
List Rental
Ad Specifications

Our Partner Sites
ECN
Product Design & Development
Wireless Week

Quick Links
2010 Media Kit

Loading...

Loading...

Loading...




Comcast’s D3 rolls into central Calif., Santa Barbara
By Mike Robuck
CedMagazine.com - October 28, 2009
Loading...

Comcast’s DOCSIS 3.0 wideband service is launching in several areas of California, including Fresno, Merced, Modesto, Stockton, Tracy, Tulare and Visalia, as well as Santa Barbara County.

With the launch, Comcast has started its rollout of the wideband service, with a top speed of 50 Mbps on the downstream, in central California and north Santa Barbara. Comcast previously deployed wideband in the San Francisco Bay Area and in the Monterey-Salinas area earlier this year.

Comcast’s DOCSIS 3.0 tiers are Extreme 50 and Ultra . Extreme features download speeds of up to 50 Mbps and upstream speeds of 10 Mbps for $99.95 per month with a subscription to Comcast’s video or voice services. Ultra has a downstream speed of 22 Mbps down and 5 Mbps up at a cost of $62.95 per month when paired with the company’s video or voice offerings.

Business customers will also have access to the new wideband services. Customers can sign up for the Deluxe 50 Mbps/10 Mbps tier for $189.95 per month, while the Premium tier has speeds of 22 Mbps/5 Mbps for $99.95.

Like it has done in other markets, Comcast increased the speeds for its existing Performance tier residential customers, who will now benefit from doubled downstream and upstream speeds offering up to 12 Mbps and 2 Mbps, respectively.

“Wideband utilizes our existing fiber-optic network in neighborhoods across our footprint. With this next generation of service, our customers’ online experience is dramatically enhanced,” said Steve White, senior vice president of Comcast’s California Region. “And this is just the beginning. Wideband, combined with our fiber-optic network, gives us the capability of meeting the needs of our customers for many years to come by offering even faster speeds in the future.”

Starting tomorrow, Comcast’s new services will be available to residential homes – businesses will get the faster tiers Nov. 5 – in the following cities and areas: Acampo, Altaville, Angels Camp, Armona, Arnold, Atwater, Avery, Ballard, Big Trees, Buellton, Camp Connell, Chowchilla, Clovis, Corcoran, Crows Landing, Del Rey, Dinuba, Dorrington, Dos Palos, Douglas Flat, Firebaugh, Fowler, French Camp, Fresno, Friant, Goshen, Grangeville, Grayson, Gustine, Hanford, Hardwick, Hathaway Pines, Jackson, Kerman, Kingsburg, Lathrop, Laton, Lemoore, Lemoore NAS, Linden, Lockeford, Lodi, Lompoc, Los Baňos, Los Olivos, Madera, Manteca, Mendota, Merced, Modesto, Mokelumne Hill, Mountain House, Murphys, Newman, Oakdale, Orcutt, Parlier, Patterson, Pinedale, Planada, Plymouth, Rancho Calaveras, Reedley, Riverdale, San Andreas, San Joaquin, Santa Maria, Santa Ynez, Sanger, Selma, Solvang, Stockton, Stratford, Sutter Creek, Tracy, Tulare, Vallecito, Valley Springs, Victor, Visalia, Wallace, Winton and Woodbridge.

Comcast increased the speeds for its existing Performance tier residential customers, who will now benefit from doubled downstream and upstream speeds offering up to 12 Mbps and 2 Mbps, respectively.

Comcast plans to have its DOCSIS 3.0 wideband service in 80 percent of its footprint by year’s end, which was up from the 65 percent the company previously targeted. In an August earnings call, Comcast said it had DOCSIS 3.0 in 50 percent of its markets, and the operator has increased the speeds of its other data tiers in those markets, as well.

Comcast’s DOCSIS 3.0 speeds have already started launching in 11 major markets, including the Twin Cities (where it recently deployed a 100 Mbps service for businesses); the Boston metropolitan region and parts of southern New Hampshire; the Philadelphia metropolitan area; parts of New Jersey; Atlanta; Baltimore; Chicago; Ft. Wayne, Ind.; Portland, Ore.; and Seattle. Comcast said it would launch in additional markets in the weeks and months ahead.

Comcast used pre-DOCSIS 3.0 wideband modems from Cisco in its first launch of wideband services in the Twin Cities last year. Comcast is also working with Arris, Motorola and other DOCSIS 3.0 vendors.

More Broadband Direct 10/28/09:
•  Expo session: Keys to extending current network architectures
•  Seems like old times
•  Comcast's D3 rolls into central Calif., Santa Barbara
•  Pace serves up multi-room DVR for cable operators
•  RGB intros hub version of VMG
•  Aurora, Sigma integrate on DOCSIS provisioning
•  Trilithic intros analyzers galore
•  PCT International bows next-gen coaxial cable
•  Bowick heads to LiquidxStream board
•  Former Comcast exec Craddock named EVP, CTO of PCT
•  Latens debuts new CA product
•  ATX Networks launches MDU offerings
•  VeEx debuts all-in-one D3 tester
•  PPC intros filters, connector, cable
•  IBBS tackles bandwidth management
•  Broadband Briefs for 10/28/09

 


Related Content
Comcast’s D3 service speeds into Indy; Project Cavalry hits N.H.
Comcast adds 3.0 speeds in Delaware
Comcast clocks in with 100 Mbps D3 service

Loading...

 



Sponsors
Loading...


Loading...

 


 


 


 

 

 




Loading...


Loading...


Loading...
Advantage Business Media
Use of this web site is subject to its Terms and Conditions of Use.
Copyright 2010 Advantage Business Media. View our Privacy Policy.