Home » Multimedia » Recent Articles:

Senator Rockefeller Lights Fire Under FCC Chairman to Protect the Internet for Consumers

Phillip Dampier April 15, 2010 Net Neutrality, Public Policy & Gov't, Video 3 Comments

[flv width=”640″ height=”500″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/Rockefeller Urges Genachowski to Regain Broadband Authority 4-14-10.flv[/flv]

At the Senate Commerce hearing on April 14, Sen. John Rockefeller (D-WV) told FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski that the agencies authority to protect an open Internet and connect more people to broadband is at risk because of the Comcast case.  Rockefeller pledged to support the chairman in reestablishing the agency’s authority to stop the Internet from falling under the control of companies like AT&T, Comcast and Verizon.  (3 minutes)

Uh Oh – More Americans Would Rather Give Up Their TV’s Than the Internet

A survey released this week by Arbitron Inc. and Edison Media Research found, for the first time, that Americans are more willing to give up TV than the Internet.

Asked to choose the ”most essential” medium, 42 percent of the survey’s 1,753 respondents picked the Internet, 37 percent picked TV, 14 percent said radio and 5 percent said those dead-tree format newspapers.

That represents more evidence that major telecommunications companies will need to lasso control of the Internet before the cable television profit train derails.  That’s because the Internet delivers the prospect of a two-for-one deal.  Enjoy your online web surfing -and- stream your favorite television shows online at the same time — no more ever-increasing cable-TV bill for channels you never asked for and don’t watch.

Even more worrying for big cable — young people are increasingly never bothering to sign up for cable television in the first place.  In the 18-24 age group, 74 percent said they would quit TV before surrendering the Web, and many never bothered with subscription television to begin with.

The last time Arbitron and Edison posed this question in a survey was in 2001, back when dial-up access still predominated.  Back then, 72 percent of respondents said they could do without Internet and 26 percent said they’d give up TV.

“The shift over these nine years has been steady and profound,” said Edison Research president Larry Rosin.

Some consumers don’t want to watch television over their computers and would prefer to be entertained in a comfortable chair in the living room.  But Internet video innovation is increasingly solving that problem by coupling your television or DVD player to the web.  Several providers like Netflix even deliver their streaming video service through video game consoles.

How do cable companies stop the herd mentality to broadband video, leaving those big cable TV bills behind?  Stick a meter on broadband service, and charge consumers for every TV show they watch or simply put a limit on their broadband service.  The broadband usage cap or meter can, indeed, kill the online video star.

[flv width=”512″ height=”308″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WJW Cleveland The Download Internet More Important Than TV 4-9-10.flv[/flv]

WJW-TV in Cleveland reports that more people are ready to ditch their televisions than being willing to part with their Internet connection.  (3 minutes)

AT&T Giving Nashville Customers Bill Shock – Hundreds of Dollars of Overcharging… Month After Month

Phillip Dampier April 12, 2010 AT&T, Consumer News, Video 2 Comments

How would you like to open your AT&T bill and discover you were overcharged more than $1,000?

An AT&T-admitted “computer glitch” is routinely overbilling customers in Tennessee several hundred dollars a month for charges that are supposed to be included in their service plan at no additional cost.

One Clarksville woman has been getting bills nearing $1,000 a month every month since January, and AT&T is well aware of its mistake, crediting her bill each times she calls.

But Belinda Horton wonders what happens to other customers, especially the poor and elderly, who may not be up to scrutinizing their phone bills every month and aggressively pursuing credits from the phone company.

“This is crazy. This keeps happening over and over,” Horton told WSMV-TV in Nashville. “When I got the next bill, it was $921.”

Now she’s fed up.

“At this point, they can correct my bill, and then they can just keep AT&T,” said Horton. “Everyone needs to check their bills.”

[flv width=”480″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WSMV Nashville Customer’s Phone Bill Severely Overcharged 4-12-10.flv[/flv]

WSMV-TV in Nashville tells the story of Belinda Horton, a resident of Clarksville who is routinely overbilled by AT&T up to $1,000 every month since January.  She isn’t alone.  (3 minutes)

News & Notes: Bright House Networks

Some odds and ends regarding Bright House Networks you may have missed over the past several weeks:

Hernando County, Florida Ticked Off About Bright House Rate Hikes

Hernando County commissioners were united in their opposition to a recent $3 rate increase from Bright House Networks that spiked bills for standard service to $55.49 a month.  They voted unanimously for a resolution condemning the rate increase, noting it comes as a result of insufficient cable competition.

The commissioners want local consumers to shop around for alternative providers, but outside of satellite, Bright House is the only cable television provider for local residents.  Despite tough economic times, the rate increases just keep on coming.

“This, for lack of better words, really frosts me,” County Commissioner Dave Russell told Hernando Today. “As a retailer and a business owner in Hernando County, we’ve done what we can to keep our prices down.”
Bright House, he said, should do the same and “suck it up just like the rest of us have,” he said.

Additional rate increases of $2 per month for HBO and $1 a month each for digital phone, voicemail, and DVR service are also now in effect.

Vandals cut fiber optics on Bright House Networks in Birmingham area

Vandalism can result in major service disruptions for cable customers, especially when a fiber optic link is cut.  The Birmingham, Alabama area suffered a major outage in late February when vandals sliced an important fiber link.  Service was knocked out on the west side of Birmingham, including Five Points West, Ensley, and part of Ross Bridge for almost a day.

Customers generally have to call and request service credit for outages — most cable companies don’t automatically credit accounts.

Make Room for More HD Channels

Bright House Networks has been aggressively adding new HD channels to its lineups across the country.  In central Indiana, Bright House customers can spend even more time channel surfing through these additions:

  • BBC America HD – Channel 847 on December 14
  • Fuse HD – Channel 840 on December 16
  • G4 HD – Channel 810 on December 16
  • HLN HD – Channel 726 on December 14
  • IFC HD – Channel 794 on December 11
  • Investigation Discovery HD – Channel 804 on December 18
  • MAV TV HD – Channel 753 on December 18
  • NBA TV HD – Channel 862 on December 18
  • NHL Network HD – Channel 863 on December 11
  • Outdoor Channel HD – Channel 865 on December 11
  • Style HD – Channel 860 on December 14
  • Tennis Channel HD – Channel 864 on December 11
  • TV One HD – Channel 866 on December 16
  • BET HD – Channel 736
  • Cinemax HD – Ch. 228
  • CMT HD – Ch. 743
  • Comedy Central HD – Ch. 725
  • Crime & Investigation Network HD – Ch. 852
  • Game HD – Ch. 904
  • Hallmark  Channel  HD – Ch. 757
  • HD Pay Per View Events – Ch. 304
  • History International HD – Ch. 817
  • MTV HD – Ch. 775
  • Nickelodeon HD – Ch. 744
  • Spike TV HD – Ch. 724
  • Team HD – Ch. 886
  • The Movie Channel HD – Ch. 262
  • VH1 HD – Ch. 741

Wayde Klein, vice president of marketing and customer operations for Bright House Networks Indiana, said “In October, we announced that Bright House Networks had a goal of offering more than 100 high-definition channels in early 2010. We started by launching 17 HD channels in 17 consecutive days in November and then launched 13 new HD channels in December. Our launch of 15 HD channels this week is one step closer to our goal.”

In Orlando, Bright House added these networks in March:

  • Hallmark Channel HD at channel 1315
  • Nickelodeon HD at channel 1333
  • Comedy Central HD at channel 1366
  • Spike HD at channel 1368
  • BET HD at channel 1367
  • CMT HD at channel 1371
  • VH1 HD at channel 1372
  • MTV HD at channel 1374

Questions Answered from Bright House Customers

The St. Petersburg Times tackled this one from a Bright House customer:

Why doesn’t Bright House tell their customers that they have to pay for faster connection?

-Stephen, St. Petersburg

Like Big Mama always said, “you can’t get something for nothing.”

Bright House says customers are informed that the faster connections cost more. The higher speed Internet connections are not automatically given to customers.

“You have to request it,” says Joe Durkin, a spokesman for Bright House Networks.

Standard roadrunner Internet service is about $48. Then you can get Roadrunner turbo for $15 more or the fastest, Roadrunner lightning, for $30 above the standard.

The additional charges are listed, even online.

Bright House serves a large part of central Florida.  Comcast Cable serves territories further south.

[flv width=”576″ height=”409″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/Bright House Ad Campaign Spring 2010.mp4[/flv]

Bright House launched a new ad campaign this spring emphasizing bright colors and product bundles.

Comcast vs. Verizon FiOS: New Ads Slam Xfinity; Increased Comcast Broadband Speeds Rumored

Verizon FiOS has upped the ad war against Comcast, one of its competitors in several northeastern cities.  In a new series of ads, Verizon is taking on Comcast’s “name change” to Xfinity, implying it’s the same old Comcast just using a new name.

Comcast may be fighting back, but not with a response ad.  Today, Broadband Reports hears word from a Comcast insider the company is planning on boosting broadband speeds later this year.

According to the source, the new Comcast tiers will be 12/2 Mbps, 20/4 Mbps, 50/10 Mbps, and 100/25 Mbps. Current 22/5 customers will be grandfathered, according to the source, and Comcast apparently hopes to get that 100 Mbps tier into about 20% of their footprint this year.

Comcast’s current speeds differ depending on whether you’re in a DOCSIS 3.0 upgraded market or not. Non DOCSIS 3.0 market customers currently have the choice of three tiers: 6/1 Mbps, 8/2 Mbps, and 16/2 Mbps. DOCSIS 3.0 upgraded markets have their choice of 12/2 Mbps, 16/2 Mbps, 22/5 Mbps, or 50/10 Mbps.  Much later this year it looks like Comcast users will also start seeing some faster upstream speeds.

Verizon FiOS has the capability to beat Comcast’s broadband speeds over its entirely-fiber-based network, but not everyone can sign up for FiOS.  Comcast may not want to give away the broadband speed store in areas where the now indefinitely-grounded FiOS service will never go.

[flv width=”640″ height=”500″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/FiOS Takes On Xfinitiy.flv[/flv]

Comcast’s new Xfinity brand is the target of a new round of advertising from Verizon FiOS.  (2 minutes)

Search This Site:

Contributions:

Recent Comments:

Your Account:

Stop the Cap!