News -> INDReporter TUE, SEP 21 9:26AM by Nathan Stubbs

LUS now offering 100 Mbps residential Internet

LUS Fiber has an even faster Internet offering for residential customers. The municipal telecom provider will begin taking orders for Internet service at symmetrical upload and download speeds of 100 megabites per second starting today. It will be sold at a price of $199.95 a month.

Until now, LUS Fiber's 100 Mbps service has only been offered to commercial customers, at the same $199.95 a month rate. LUS' residential customers' speeds have been maxed at 50 Mbps, although they could reach speeds up to 100 Mbps through a peer to peer connection (communication between two local LUS customers). LUS Director Terry Huval says the company has received "a number of requests" to expand the 100 Mbps service to residential customers. He adds LUS Fiber continues to be pleasantly surprised by the higher levels of service being sought by the average residential and commercial customers. "The level of service [being sold] is higher than we expected," he says, "which is very positive."



Comments (10)add
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written by ragin_cajun , September 21, 2010 - 11:32 am
I think it's important to include in any description of LUS services the monthly cap on downloaded data. 8 terrabits per month for 100 Mbps Internet business service. Is that the same for the residential service?
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written by Terry Huval , September 21, 2010 - 12:34 pm
The conditions of use of our 100 Mbps service includes a monthly bit cap of 8 terrabits. Of the business customers currently using this service, none of them are anywhere close to reaching this bit cap.
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written by Bean There , September 21, 2010 - 12:42 pm
Yes, it is important to waste time faster.
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written by roan blackburn , September 21, 2010 - 02:34 pm
where oh where is this long over due service available?
(currently paying $300 a month for 30 gigs :(
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written by ragin_cajun , September 21, 2010 - 03:48 pm
Doesn't seem like enough for a business customer that wants to replicate data between two sites over the link. If asked, would LUS waive this for a business customer?

I've seen hosting companies that offer a 5 Mbps Internet connection that allows up to 50 GigaBytes per day transfer. 50 Gigabytes X 8 bit per byte = 400 Gigabits per day. If one Terabit is 1000 Gigabits, then 8 Terabits is 8,000 Gigabits, so in 20 days that limit would be reached on an LUS link that is 20 times "faster".

What if somebody wanted to buy a new storage array, or a new backup appliance, and tried to just copy over a bunch of data instead of having to put it all on tape, driving it over, and copying it off of tape to the new array. They'd exceed this limit. Eventually, somebody's gonna want to do this. Somebody's gonna want to do offsite backup over LUS fiber--I would if I had servers in town.

8 terabits of data is 1 terabyte--it only sounds like alot until somebody connects a SAN to it.
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written by ITPro , September 22, 2010 - 10:13 am
If you are doing storage replication you don't copy the entire contents of your array every day, you only replicate the new/changed data to the remote array. If you have SAN replication set up between two sites and you have more than 8Tb per month of replication traffic then a $199.99 a month plan and the service level agreement you get with it probably isn't the right solution for you.
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written by ragin_cajun , September 22, 2010 - 02:53 pm
I've seen people interconnect SAN's across the Internet. As I said earlier, "I've seen hosting companies that offer a 5 Mbps Internet connection that allows up to 50 GigaBytes per day transfer. " That is marketed for the purpose of interconnecting SAN's. I've seen MANY companies in Baton Rouge use "MetroE" connections from Cox to interconnect data centers across town, and they routinely transfer more than 1 TB of data across the link in a month.

I thought that LUS Fiber was intended from the start to be that same type of service. Maybe it is not. That is my original point. I think the most efficient way of saying that is to include in the description of the service the monthly bit limit on it.
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written by Terry Huval , September 22, 2010 - 03:02 pm
If a customer needs to transfer more than 8 Terrabits in a month, this connection can proivde that service. Just let us know what you are looking for and we can get you a proposal.
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written by ragin_cajun , September 22, 2010 - 03:59 pm
" Just let us know what you are looking for and we can get you a proposal. "

There we go. That's what we need to hear.

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written by The Original Northsidian , September 22, 2010 - 07:56 pm
Hurry up, do something. If it fails my utility bill will really go up!! But, that is what you get when da gum-ment gets involved in private enterprise. Go figure!!
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