Blu-Ray disks came as a gift and necessitated adding a Blu-Ray player.
They're inexpensive. A simple LG BD630 Blu-Ray player from Amazon runs about $80. This device has built-in Netflix service. Activate the unit with Netflix's magic device code and it happily streams video.
The interface is far simpler and more restricted than the browser-based version. Big, squishy icons and a presumption that the only input device is the player's remote. No way to enter text except through a pick-a-letter matrix. Responsiveness is sluggish, about 300 msec between click and action.
Most maddening: hovering over a title to get additional info causes the system to hang while it waits for Netflix's servers to fulfill the request. Eventually (3-10 secs), the movie's details fill in. No matter; really, when "Watch Now" works great via computer.
The major point of contention, however, is that the entertainment system has been rewired again, which was deemed Confusing by She Who Must Be Obeyed:
Even though it's simpler, it necessitated adding another fix:
2011-06-26
2011-05-02
Tools to Track AT&T Gateway Usage
Janko Roettgers has a survey article on GigaOm today that asks AT&T customers whether they can see their usage using an AT&T website. About 45% (n=37) of those surveyed answered they are unable to see usage stats.
AT&T U-verse users can view their usage in their own Residential Gateway. The usage statistics page is at http://192.168.1.254./xslt?PAGE=C_1_0 - scroll down to the "Traffic Statistics" section.
The administrative control page (login required) permits resetting the stats. Reset the stats monthly, on the billing cycle day, to make it easy to track usage against AT&T billing.
Note these capabilities are found on a 2WIRE 3800-series gateway. Other AT&T routers, especially DSL boxes, have different equipment which may or may not have a statistics page.
For those who wish to monitor their stats on their RG, at this link are RG Statistics Logging Scripts and instructions to set up monitoring using a cron job. The zip file contains installation instructions (Ubuntu/Debian Linux). A small SQL script, also included, produces a usage report.
A sample report for data gathered since March 14 is below.
AT&T U-verse users can view their usage in their own Residential Gateway. The usage statistics page is at http://192.168.1.254./xslt?PAGE=C_1_0 - scroll down to the "Traffic Statistics" section.
The administrative control page (login required) permits resetting the stats. Reset the stats monthly, on the billing cycle day, to make it easy to track usage against AT&T billing.
Note these capabilities are found on a 2WIRE 3800-series gateway. Other AT&T routers, especially DSL boxes, have different equipment which may or may not have a statistics page.
For those who wish to monitor their stats on their RG, at this link are RG Statistics Logging Scripts and instructions to set up monitoring using a cron job. The zip file contains installation instructions (Ubuntu/Debian Linux). A small SQL script, also included, produces a usage report.
A sample report for data gathered since March 14 is below.
+------------+------------+-------------+---------+----------+--------+
| Day | Sent/Recvd | Bytes | GB | Packets | Errors |
+------------+------------+-------------+---------+----------+--------+
| 2011-04-14 | Receive | 471170071 | 0.4712 | 1248297 | 0 |
| 2011-04-14 | Transmit | 261420116 | 0.2614 | 564405 | 0 |
| 2011-04-14 | Total | 732590187 | 0.7326 | 1812702 | 0 |
| 2011-04-15 | Receive | 770363944 | 0.7704 | 1006855 | 0 |
| 2011-04-15 | Transmit | 71026822 | 0.0710 | 520748 | 0 |
| 2011-04-15 | Total | 841390766 | 0.8414 | 1527603 | 0 |
| 2011-04-16 | Receive | 609502238 | 0.6095 | 722370 | 1 |
| 2011-04-16 | Transmit | 57294972 | 0.0573 | 361775 | 0 |
| 2011-04-16 | Total | 666797210 | 0.6668 | 1084145 | 1 |
| 2011-04-17 | Receive | 318645844 | 0.3186 | 291616 | 2 |
| 2011-04-17 | Transmit | 39332970 | 0.0393 | 175203 | 0 |
| 2011-04-17 | Total | 357978814 | 0.3580 | 466819 | 2 |
| 2011-04-18 | Receive | 299281224 | 0.2993 | 666078 | 0 |
| 2011-04-18 | Transmit | 58786871 | 0.0588 | 353637 | 0 |
| 2011-04-18 | Total | 358068095 | 0.3581 | 1019715 | 0 |
| 2011-04-19 | Receive | 886435986 | 0.8864 | 1560230 | 0 |
| 2011-04-19 | Transmit | 711104440 | 0.7111 | 994422 | 0 |
| 2011-04-19 | Total | 1597540426 | 1.5975 | 2554652 | 0 |
| 2011-04-20 | Receive | 699685659 | 0.6997 | 637560 | 0 |
| 2011-04-20 | Transmit | 56879398 | 0.0569 | 337293 | 0 |
| 2011-04-20 | Total | 756565057 | 0.7566 | 974853 | 0 |
| 2011-04-21 | Receive | 455349013 | 0.4553 | 602567 | 1 |
| 2011-04-21 | Transmit | 86789917 | 0.0868 | 324296 | 0 |
| 2011-04-21 | Total | 542138930 | 0.5421 | 926863 | 1 |
| 2011-04-22 | Receive | 440903082 | 0.4409 | 770886 | 0 |
| 2011-04-22 | Transmit | 61319206 | 0.0613 | 396483 | 0 |
| 2011-04-22 | Total | 502222288 | 0.5022 | 1167369 | 0 |
| 2011-04-23 | Receive | 128387865 | 0.1284 | 202243 | 0 |
| 2011-04-23 | Transmit | 32450548 | 0.0325 | 115669 | 0 |
| 2011-04-23 | Total | 160838413 | 0.1608 | 317912 | 0 |
| 2011-04-24 | Receive | 357397478 | 0.3574 | 391484 | 0 |
| 2011-04-24 | Transmit | 45117822 | 0.0451 | 224438 | 0 |
| 2011-04-24 | Total | 402515300 | 0.4025 | 615922 | 0 |
| 2011-04-25 | Receive | 460476990 | 0.4605 | 508043 | 0 |
| 2011-04-25 | Transmit | 64078588 | 0.0641 | 302462 | 0 |
| 2011-04-25 | Total | 524555578 | 0.5246 | 810505 | 0 |
| 2011-04-26 | Receive | 868455813 | 0.8685 | 910591 | 0 |
| 2011-04-26 | Transmit | 74527520 | 0.0745 | 460094 | 0 |
| 2011-04-26 | Total | 942983333 | 0.9430 | 1370685 | 0 |
| 2011-04-27 | Receive | 286835580 | 0.2868 | 348551 | 0 |
| 2011-04-27 | Transmit | 48691431 | 0.0487 | 206843 | 0 |
| 2011-04-27 | Total | 335527011 | 0.3355 | 555394 | 0 |
| 2011-04-28 | Receive | 759490405 | 0.7595 | 771587 | 0 |
| 2011-04-28 | Transmit | 64131207 | 0.0641 | 390037 | 0 |
| 2011-04-28 | Total | 823621612 | 0.8236 | 1161624 | 0 |
| 2011-04-29 | Receive | 1855420924 | 1.8554 | 2576866 | 1 |
| 2011-04-29 | Transmit | 417368072 | 0.4174 | 1150840 | 0 |
| 2011-04-29 | Total | 2272788996 | 2.2728 | 3727706 | 1 |
| 2011-04-30 | Receive | 2854764859 | 2.8548 | 2329114 | 0 |
| 2011-04-30 | Transmit | 140898052 | 0.1409 | 1331942 | 0 |
| 2011-04-30 | Total | 2995662911 | 2.9957 | 3661056 | 0 |
| 2011-05-01 | Receive | 583554982 | 0.5836 | 646801 | 0 |
| 2011-05-01 | Transmit | 47077335 | 0.0471 | 293666 | 0 |
| 2011-05-01 | Total | 630632317 | 0.6306 | 940467 | 0 |
| 2011-05-02 | Receive | 1536599 | 0.0015 | 733 | 0 |
| 2011-05-02 | Transmit | 920571 | 0.0009 | 755 | 0 |
| 2011-05-02 | Total | 2457170 | 0.0025 | 1488 | 0 |
| NULL | Total | 15446874414 | 15.4469 | 24697480 | 5 |
+------------+------------+-------------+---------+----------+--------+
For the last few months, usage on this RG has ranged between 85 and 150 GB/month. Usage reflects heavy net surfing. Netflix / Amazon / YouTube video consumption is about 1 to 2 hours daily.
2011-03-27
AT&T Overestimates Usage %4700
Karl Bode at DSL Reports writes that AT&T's billing rates are wildy inaccurate -- to the tune of 4700%. That is, AT&T has overestimate U-verse and DSL usage 47-fold.
Working backwards from the new 250 GB/month cap which goes into affect 2 May 2011, AT&T would start billing overages when users had consumed only 5.3 GB in a month.
See the full article here.
Time to start keeping track in order to dispute usage come billing time.
Working backwards from the new 250 GB/month cap which goes into affect 2 May 2011, AT&T would start billing overages when users had consumed only 5.3 GB in a month.
See the full article here.
Time to start keeping track in order to dispute usage come billing time.
2011-03-14
Well, That Was Fun While It Lasted
AT&T has decided to cap usage. Usage caps deploy May 2nd, 2011.
Engadget reports in "AT&T will cap DSL and U-Verse internet, impose overage fees", that DSL and U-verse usage caps are 150 GB/month and 250 GB/month, respectively. Each additional 50 GB/month costs $10.
AT&T has yet to notify customers, which supposedly happens this week. No notice appears on the U-verse page or in AT&T email.
Total usage has been 87,468,308,057 bytes since the Residential Gateway modem last had its logs reset. Since today (14 March - Pi Day!) is the start of a new billing cycle, time to reset and see how much actually passes through.
Usage caps bring up an additional point: does "usage" discount advertising? Simple tests with AdBlock Plus show that 20-25% of a commercially-supported web page comprises ad data. Likewise the streaming ads injected in movies and television programs, although streaming ads are proportionately smaller.
Getting charged for ads seems like a double-tap.
(Update 3/16)
After a mid-day Monday March 14 reset of the Residential Gateway's transmission statistics, measured traffic (sent + received bytes) for ordinary 'Net usage appears to be about 2.25 GB/day. "Ordinary" usage includes watching streaming video from Netflix, YouTube, Amazon, Skype/Google voice phone calls, DropBox, and quotidian web surfing and emailing for three users on seven computers.
Extrapolating, that's about 70GB/month, or 28% of the 250GB cap AT&T plans to set.
Engadget reports in "AT&T will cap DSL and U-Verse internet, impose overage fees", that DSL and U-verse usage caps are 150 GB/month and 250 GB/month, respectively. Each additional 50 GB/month costs $10.
AT&T has yet to notify customers, which supposedly happens this week. No notice appears on the U-verse page or in AT&T email.
Total usage has been 87,468,308,057 bytes since the Residential Gateway modem last had its logs reset. Since today (14 March - Pi Day!) is the start of a new billing cycle, time to reset and see how much actually passes through.

Getting charged for ads seems like a double-tap.
(Update 3/16)
After a mid-day Monday March 14 reset of the Residential Gateway's transmission statistics, measured traffic (sent + received bytes) for ordinary 'Net usage appears to be about 2.25 GB/day. "Ordinary" usage includes watching streaming video from Netflix, YouTube, Amazon, Skype/Google voice phone calls, DropBox, and quotidian web surfing and emailing for three users on seven computers.
Extrapolating, that's about 70GB/month, or 28% of the 250GB cap AT&T plans to set.
2011-02-22
Amazons on Amazon
Amazon has begun offering a limited catalog of streaming movies as a premium to Amazon Prime subscribers. Chose the Amazon Instant Video -- it's the top entry on the search pull-down -- and select "Prime Eligible".
Naturally the stuff in the "free" catalog is uneven. The brilliant "Bronson" plays opposite the unwatchably inane "Hudson Hawk".
Quality of transfers appears good for recent films ("Helvetica") and dreadful B-movie transfers have charmingly preserved all their dust and scratches ("War Goddess", originally "Le guerriere dal seno nudo"). Transmission was clear and jitter-free, with few "jaggies" or other compression artifacts. Quality, even for junk, appears better than the crummy viewing delivered through Netflix's Starz Play.
One huge bonus: since Amazon owns IMDB, movie details and background info are far better than Netflix.
So, what's out there? Amazon's streaming service holds about 35,000+ movies and 6,200+ television programs. "Prime Eligible" winnows that down to 1,700+ films and 480+ shows. The Prime catalog is great is you want to see

Choices abound, cable cutters. Go forth and graze. To reiterate Joe Queenan's Sandra Bullock rule, if it's under $2, we'll take a look.
Naturally the stuff in the "free" catalog is uneven. The brilliant "Bronson" plays opposite the unwatchably inane "Hudson Hawk".
Quality of transfers appears good for recent films ("Helvetica") and dreadful B-movie transfers have charmingly preserved all their dust and scratches ("War Goddess", originally "Le guerriere dal seno nudo"). Transmission was clear and jitter-free, with few "jaggies" or other compression artifacts. Quality, even for junk, appears better than the crummy viewing delivered through Netflix's Starz Play.
One huge bonus: since Amazon owns IMDB, movie details and background info are far better than Netflix.
So, what's out there? Amazon's streaming service holds about 35,000+ movies and 6,200+ television programs. "Prime Eligible" winnows that down to 1,700+ films and 480+ shows. The Prime catalog is great is you want to see

- Dr. Who,
- Classic oaters starring Tex Ritter, Roy Rogers, et al,
- WW II action flix,
- Mr. Rodgers (nattily raising one sweater-clad limb in a stiff-arm salute), and
- apparently every cheesy "Hercules" movie ever made starring Richard Harrison, Gordon Mitchell and Yes! Ahhhnold Schwarzenegger in "Hercules in New York".
Choices abound, cable cutters. Go forth and graze. To reiterate Joe Queenan's Sandra Bullock rule, if it's under $2, we'll take a look.
2011-01-15
The U-verse Boys
Two more lads from AT&T dropped by today. Nice lads, dressed like grunge Mormons: black slacks; pressed long-sleeve shirts with AT&T badges; white athletic shoes (they were walking the neighborhood); no ties.
A new sales pitch. They were unaware the premises was already running U-verse. The lady of the house had answered the door and required rescue.
Sorry, we have U-verse. We love the Internet but we're not interested in TV.
Blue-shirt sales guy: Have you heard about the new shows and channel line-up, U420 it's got ...
Not interested. Just converted to watching shows purely over the Internet. Line-up is duplicative. AT&T charges more for U200 Latino, but it's clear why. There's a blog about this; you should read it.
Yellow-shirt sales guy: Have you heard about the fiber service to your house ...
No, U-verse is fiber to the node, not the the home, like Verizon. (Blue shirt sales guy agrees.) Look, just last week brought a new HD-capable micro PC in order to watch TV. Read all about it at [this] blog.
Yellow-shirt: Really? What's the address. Blue-shirt writes it down.
Discussion about bit rates and how easy it was to upgrade speeds. Discussion of Verizon's astounding high-speed bit rates.
Blue shirt: We have a higher speed than , we can get you 25 Mb/s ...
Nope. Residential Gateway says the max rate here is about 20 Mb/s. House is at the end of the run from the node. It took the installers all day to get the rate up to that. When it's working faster it will get looked at.
Oh.
More chit-chat, good-byes, and they move on the next house.
Good luck guys.
A new sales pitch. They were unaware the premises was already running U-verse. The lady of the house had answered the door and required rescue.
Sorry, we have U-verse. We love the Internet but we're not interested in TV.
Blue-shirt sales guy: Have you heard about the new shows and channel line-up, U420 it's got ...
Not interested. Just converted to watching shows purely over the Internet. Line-up is duplicative. AT&T charges more for U200 Latino, but it's clear why. There's a blog about this; you should read it.
Yellow-shirt sales guy: Have you heard about the fiber service to your house ...
No, U-verse is fiber to the node, not the the home, like Verizon. (Blue shirt sales guy agrees.) Look, just last week brought a new HD-capable micro PC in order to watch TV. Read all about it at [this] blog.
Yellow-shirt: Really? What's the address. Blue-shirt writes it down.
Discussion about bit rates and how easy it was to upgrade speeds. Discussion of Verizon's astounding high-speed bit rates.
Blue shirt: We have a higher speed than , we can get you 25 Mb/s ...
Nope. Residential Gateway says the max rate here is about 20 Mb/s. House is at the end of the run from the node. It took the installers all day to get the rate up to that. When it's working faster it will get looked at.
Oh.
More chit-chat, good-byes, and they move on the next house.
Good luck guys.
2011-01-09
New Hardware
Video fidelity on the ancient (Anno Domini 2003) Dell 2400 has been somewhat ... janky. A little hardware upgrade is in order.
First, the replacement device must be a full computer. Roku boxen or other purpose-built devices have limited lifespans and lead no afterlives as re-purposed devices (the Dell 2400's fate: add disks, become file server). Forget a TV with the logic built in; that's just a really expensive laptop.
Second, the box must be cheap. Apple Mac Mini for $700? Seriously? No. Apple TV for $99, tethered to the iTunes mothership and $3/video? No. Hell no.
After spec'ing costs for fully silent, i.e. fanless, hardware, it turns out the low cost and quiet operation of micro-formfactor machines wins. Separate PC components cannot compete with prices of these all-in-one, bare-bones units, and slightly back-level-but-still-capable is always cheaper. Best part of commodity parts: they're easy to replace and they get cheaper over time.
Device of choice: a Zotac ZBOX HD. The naked processor+graphics unit requires memory, disk, keyboard, mouse, and OS, but these commodities are cheap or free. A recycled copy of Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit helps lower costs, too. Microsoft Windows™ is alas necessary as CBS refuses to stream to Linux platforms and watching The Big Bang Theory is really, really important.
The box is clean and opinion on the 'Net is happy. The device appears to have tidy engineering. Most of the case is empty space awaiting the customer's hard disk and memory stick. The unit has ports a-plenty: 6 USB, one HDMI, one DVI/VGA (with adapter), one external SATA, one wired ethernet, one 802.11 b/g/n wireless net, a card slot, microphone, audio, and an SPDIF plug (who uses this anymore?).
Box set-up was annoying because loading the OS required copying it to a USB stick. For absolutely no good reason, the Windows 7 64-bit tool to build bootable USB sticks, bootsect, won't run under Windows 7 32-bit. After loading the OS, the usual four- to six-hour cycle of applying Windows updates, installing drivers, anti-virus software, Microsoft Office 2007, and updating everything again ensued. The Zotac folks have some recent BIOS updates, too.
Once installed, the unit nestles into very little space in the entertainment cabinet. The supplied stand lets heat escape its top. The box comes with a mount to fit it on the back of the television but then the on/off button would be out of reach.
Video streaming from CBS (for aforementioned reason), FOX ("Glee!") and especially from ESPN (fooootballl - the computer's final parts arrived Saturday late; getting it running Sunday for Oregon/Auburn's BCS championship game Monday was important), while better than the poor, overmatched Dell 2400, remains merely "adequate". Tests show the image jitter is a function of watching streaming video in HD. Internet jankiness, while ignorable when watching on small screens,stil appears on big displays. For $60/month and the freedom from Time Warner, it's worth suffering.
Movies, however, look fine. The streaming engine and most of the transfers for Netflix are good enough to watch just about anything. Even junk. Joe Queenan's point about the Bullock Algorithm is well taken: at $2 or less, we'll watch it. At $3 ... meh, not so much.
First, the replacement device must be a full computer. Roku boxen or other purpose-built devices have limited lifespans and lead no afterlives as re-purposed devices (the Dell 2400's fate: add disks, become file server). Forget a TV with the logic built in; that's just a really expensive laptop.
Second, the box must be cheap. Apple Mac Mini for $700? Seriously? No. Apple TV for $99, tethered to the iTunes mothership and $3/video? No. Hell no.

Device of choice: a Zotac ZBOX HD. The naked processor+graphics unit requires memory, disk, keyboard, mouse, and OS, but these commodities are cheap or free. A recycled copy of Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit helps lower costs, too. Microsoft Windows™ is alas necessary as CBS refuses to stream to Linux platforms and watching The Big Bang Theory is really, really important.
The box is clean and opinion on the 'Net is happy. The device appears to have tidy engineering. Most of the case is empty space awaiting the customer's hard disk and memory stick. The unit has ports a-plenty: 6 USB, one HDMI, one DVI/VGA (with adapter), one external SATA, one wired ethernet, one 802.11 b/g/n wireless net, a card slot, microphone, audio, and an SPDIF plug (who uses this anymore?).

Once installed, the unit nestles into very little space in the entertainment cabinet. The supplied stand lets heat escape its top. The box comes with a mount to fit it on the back of the television but then the on/off button would be out of reach.
Video streaming from CBS (for aforementioned reason), FOX ("Glee!") and especially from ESPN (fooootballl - the computer's final parts arrived Saturday late; getting it running Sunday for Oregon/Auburn's BCS championship game Monday was important), while better than the poor, overmatched Dell 2400, remains merely "adequate". Tests show the image jitter is a function of watching streaming video in HD. Internet jankiness, while ignorable when watching on small screens,stil appears on big displays. For $60/month and the freedom from Time Warner, it's worth suffering.
Movies, however, look fine. The streaming engine and most of the transfers for Netflix are good enough to watch just about anything. Even junk. Joe Queenan's point about the Bullock Algorithm is well taken: at $2 or less, we'll watch it. At $3 ... meh, not so much.
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