which is odd because we are all residential but anyway.Your IP address has been temporarily blocked due to a large number of HTTP requests. I am trying to stick it out to see if they can find the problem, but looks like we are capped at the 18/24 that they sell to businesses. Multiple people just went back to BrightHouse. And it's our entire neighboor across every subdivision I have tested in. When they are at my home, we disconnect from the router, connect to our phones and boom 3-5MB (megabytes) a second, but can't even break 1MB a second with my 1gig wired solution from ATT (Fiber). Their hardware, my hardware, doesn't matter. They literally just came out and installed a new fiber line INTO my house and attached a fiber transceiver in my home, so its a couple of feet away from their router. Now it takes me 20 minutes to download 100meg file (if it completes at all), directly connected to their router. I have BrightHouse before with zero issues. I have been dealing with this for over a month. My internet download speeds with my new ATT fiber have never been higher than 400KB (0.04) megabytes for the over month I have had them. To drop now into the teens and single digits is just crazy. Much slower than the capability of the hard drive, and much slower than they used to be.įor people who were consistently pusing 800 Mb/s, that's a fairly high 100 MB/s speed. Now, with the drastic reduction in speed, speed tests which show 40 Mb/s are actually only downloading/writing at a rate of 5 MB/s. In my case, for example, on my maxed-out speed test of 180 Mb/s I was typically seeing the same speeds in my downloads, which only translates into 22.5 MB/s (and I'm on external USB 3.0 drives, so I'm not suffering from any Xbox-related hardware limitations.) So, the comparison between speed tests and actual functional download speeds holds true. To maintain the more realistic real-world speeds of 150 MB/s would require 1,200 Mb/s of download speed. Translating that into the traditional SATA interface speeds, to maintain a theoretical write speed of 300 MB/s would actually require 2,400 Mb/s of download speed. As I'm sure you know, it takes 8 megabits to equal 1 megabyte. I know that is a terrible deal for ATT.ĪT&T, this is going to cost you guys alot if you don't sort it I understand the point you were making, the original complaint and observation still holds true. The write speed of hard drives is measured in megabytes, whereas download speeds are in megabits.
#Xbox one download speed slow install#
Until that is done, they will pay the price of 5 tech visits per install, countless hours on troubleshooting with level 2 technicians who then want to send out more install techs until the client finally cancels the service before the 30 day period is up. It will be up to AT&T to contact Microsoft or XBOX Live and hash it out. As another post said, it happens on VPN and more than just XBOX's. I would rather have 120 down all the time than 800 down for 10 seconds and then 912kbps down the next. We can't choose another XBOX Live and the other ISP's don't have this issue so we will just cancel AT&T and go back to Comcast. The bottom line here is that people like us who run speed tests, etc are going to cancel with ATT whether it is an ATT or XBox server issue. Being able to put them into bridge mode would be great, I agree - but that is not causing the erradic speed drops unfortunatley. I had one of the techs bring in a 599 modem and it did the exact same thing.