Comcast advertising “10G” in hopes to confuse consumers to accept slower speeds::Comcast says Xfinity offers 10G home internet, but the term “10G” is hazy and potentially misleading—especially because it has no relation to 5G for cell phones.

  • @TheHighRoad
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    31 year ago

    I live a couple hundred yards from a tower and recently returned from a two-week vacation. I had a 4g/LTE icon before I left. Now it says 5G, but my tests show the exact same speeds as before. I think you are correct.

    • Freeman
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      1 year ago

      It can depend on the level of service you have with ATT that I have seen. If you are on pre-paid plans, or any MVNO they will cap your speed at like 2-4 Mbps on “5G” and around 5-7 Mbps on “5G+” which seems like actual 5G. They bury it deep in their details. MVNO’s say similar as well…

      Click “see details” on any of these and it shows in the iframe: https://www.att.com/prepaid/plans/

      Heres an example of an MVNO explaining it: https://www.cricketwireless.com/support/data-and-streaming/network-speeds-and-streaming.html

      Now, if you get a post paid plan, and only on the highest tier, do you not get limitations on speed (aka QoS).

      They are conflating it with “SD Standard-definition streaming” or “4K UHD streaming available”, where the latter is basically with no QoS and will get full speed and priority on the towers. All others are capped at the speeds stated above that I have seen.

      I found the post paid details digging the other day but their website is a hot mess (probably dark patterned intentionally that way).

      TL:DR - I am not a fan of the way any of these companies advertise service.