Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

In The News

AT&T Upgrades Data Limits For Home Broadband Plans

"The unlimited data plan is likely for the uber-data users that far exceed their data allowance each month", said Parks Associates, in a research note. During the second month, the company will issue warning to customers when they hit 65 percent, 90 percent and 100 percent of their data allowance. With the acquisition of Direct TV and the way that AT&T has been heavily pushing Direct TV and pushing customers away from its IPTV U-Verse TV service, it actually seems like a ideal time to not enforce data caps since customers going with its Direct TV satellite TV would free up a great deal of bandwidth on the VDSL2 wireline network for internet! I will give AT&T some credit for implementing more realistic data caps and bumping everyone up based on speed tiers (something Comcast should adopt if they are set on having caps). Comcast customers pay $10 for every 50 gigabytes above the limit, as do AT&T's customers.

From the article "AT&T Upgrades Data Limits For Home Broadband Plans" by www.cbsport.org

Previously In The News

The State of Media & Entertainment 2024

Amazon’s Prime Video has now overtaken Netflix as the most-subscribed-to streaming service in the United States, according to data from the research firm Parks Associates. From the article, "The St...

Smart home devices may lure insureds to new insurers

A research study by Parks Associates evaluated insurance opportunities in smart homes and found that 33% of U.S. households with internet would switch their homeowners or renters insurance provider to...

Industry Voices: WISP industry 'hot as ever'

Parks Associates recently reported that 66% of subscribers that get fixed wireless from T-Mobile or Verizon consider their prices to be fair or good. “This compares to 51% of fiber subscribers and 35%...

Central Station Monitoring: A Complete Guide

That’s especially important based on Parks Associates research that shows half of security system owners say they deal with too many false alarms, and more than 60% of respondents say their systems tr...