![mweb 4mbps uncapped mweb 4mbps uncapped](https://netstorage-briefly.akamaized.net/images/207b9bb9a76646a4.png)
I at first blamed Telkom, and leveled all my frustration a tthem. In the beginning I was able to pull down about 70% of the totals listed in the article, however things seemed to take a dive about 3 months ago for no apparent reason. I too have been having issues with Axxess over the last few months. There is no excuse: if SA really wants to be a player on the international scene it needs to have an internet service that matches those available in so-called 1st-world countries. That illustrates how far behind SA has been ( and still is) in the ISP industry. They also haven’t heard of a condition whereby one has to by slivers of (overpriced) internet time (essentially the “capped” and “uncapped” concepts SA uses), they have all always been familiar with “always-on”, “uncapped” internet. I have lived and worked in several places around the world and have used fantastic broadband internet that was much faster than most of what SA ISP’s can offer, at lower prices, and have met many people from many different countries and guess what? NONE of them have ever heard of the term “shaped” or “unshaped” or “abuse” regarding internet services. Okay enough of this shit! “Abuse” of one’s connection is an ARTIFICIAL term invented by South African ISP’s to shift blame away from the abysmal services they offer (specifically the concept of shaped and unshaped services). Huh! how can the AUP be in conflict with the agreed as advertised purchase? How come these agreements are always so one-sided.Īxxess used to be a little cheaper at R199 per month with the option of 2 concurrent users. Failure to comply with these rules will result in your service being restricted, suspended or terminated, in our reasonable discretion. You must comply with any bandwidth, data storage and other limitations we may impose, in our reasonable discretion. We reserve the right to establish policies, rules and limitations, from time to time, concerning the use of any service.
![mweb 4mbps uncapped mweb 4mbps uncapped](http://fronttoback.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/mweb-info.jpg)
MWEB do have an “ Acceptable Use Policy” (AUP) that states Since I wrote this article, my mate was banned from MWEB. Apparently by following MWEB’s sales pitch and “Downloading as much as he liked” he was using too much bandwidth on his “Uncapped” account.īefore MWEB or anyone else squeals that I’m not covering the whole story. I have a friend who on their 4MB uncapped ADSL line pulls between 800-900GB a month on his MWEB account. Unfortunately I never captured my account usage. Prior to Axxess I used Afrihost and had similar minor issues as with Axxess. I have previously used Axxess from November 2010 until end Feb 2011 with a peak of 45GB and plenty of times when I was throttled so bad I could hardly use the line.
#Mweb 4mbps uncapped for free#
I’m now upgraded for Free to a 1MB line thanks to Telskum and my bandwidth is also 1MB at R199 monthly. I have been with them since 1st March 2011. I have used a couple of South Africa’s bigger uncapped ADSL suppliers for my bandwidth and of them I have to recommend MWEB’s Uncapped ADSL, I’m was on a 384K line and it used to cost me R219 per month for bandwidth only. To make it clear, in SA there is no such thing as Uncapped, you will get a generous lice of marketing with each “Uncapped” account with some there is a little less bullshit. Finally, a number of measures are proposed to improve the regulatory impact and efficiency, and evolve the South African telecommunications eco-system.Want to know which service provider to use for your uncapped ADSL? Tired of your current “UNCAPPED” which is 1. A political economy methodology is taken, backed up by extensive field work over 20, leading to a web of conjectures providing answers to the first question, based on an extensive analysis of key stakeholders goals, positions and interactions. The paper thus researches first who is actually regulating the telecommunications industry, and identifies next opportunities and bottlenecks whereby a change might happen to reach the expected outcomes. A number of surprising observations have been made on the outcomes, the delays or other process related events linked to regulatory measures. Although the Republic of South Africa telecommunications market is a maturing one with a large customer base to serve, it has been repeatedly been observed over the past few years that many good intentions were formulated in the regulatory sphere with sometimes poor outcomes.