![]() But it's up clearly (from) pre-COVID-19."Ĭomcast has done its share to keep customers entertained. "We've been in this environment for about six to seven weeks," Gumbs said. "From March 15 and beyond, we haven't seen any significant acceleration in usage from that time. That can be attributed to Comcast making its various WiFi hotspots free around the nation to all, including non-Xfinity subscribers, through June 30.Īs the numbers began rising in March, Gumbs said data traffic has plateaued from an initial spike, which he attributes to more people settling into working from home as opposed to transitioning to it a month ago. instead of 9 p.m.Ĭomcast also said there's been a 40% increase in mobile data over WiFi and a 20% decline in LTE data on its phones. ![]() ![]() ![]() For downstream traffic, peak traffic is between 7-8 p.m. prior to March 1 but since the middle of March, it's now between 8 a.m-6 p.m. Peak upstream traffic used to occur around 9 p.m. "What we've seen is that peak traffic looks different than it did prior to the (pandemic)," "I don't think it surprised us," Gumbs said.
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