I…wait, what is this I hear?

No more of this, hopefully.

Can it be? According to this article over on Ars Technica, it appears Cox Communications is going to be rolling out Gigabit service capabilities to all it’s residential customers! Fiber speeds, people.

HOWEVER, there are some serious caveats. First of all, it’s likely to be very expensive, at least in the beginning; some commenters suggesting around $300 a month, although I have no idea one way or the other.

This is from a Google fiber speed test, and it fills me with envy-based hate, but hopefully we’ll be closer.

The other thing is, and this is less of an issue, we’re not talking multi-gigabit speeds, only gigabit speeds. Still, that’s fiber-level, and it’s all we can have anyway since the DOCSIS specifications – protocols (remember those?) for sending data over pre-existing coaxial (remember that?) cable infrastructure – don’t allow for multi-gigabit data transmission with current consumer-level cable hardware such as cable modems. That type of hardware is only compatible with DOCSIS 3.0 which allows for gigabit speed, but it would need to support DOCSIS 3.1 to support multi-gigabit speed. But we don’t need that now anyway. Let’s not get greedy!

This is what I expect now, only without the tie.

Still, the fact they anticipate it will be available to all their customers in all their markets by the end of the year is an incredible start; I wasn’t aware of this plan and it seemed to come out of nowhere. I fully support it and hope that the full rollout will eventually drive the cost down and the availability of compatible hardware up.