
Whether it is shared or not is neither here nor there. My point is 1. Safaricom claimed to offer broadband 2. I signed up for the same 3. At no time have i been told not to torrent, either as a signed up, or subsequently (btw, oddly enough, I've torrented only 3 files of about 40MB in total ever) 4. Safaricom can then not go behind my back to deny me some service without making it clear to me. It is entirely my business what I use the pipe for. After all, they promise broadband. And no, I don't really care how many phone calls could have been made as i donwloaded the ISO. It is perfectly reasonable for me to assume if Safaricom offers a service, they have the infrastructure to support it. On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 1:04 PM, David Kiania | Asentric Consulting Ltd < kianiadee@gmail.com> wrote:
Now we are one step away from Uhurupark shouting Haki Yetu!!! what I am saying is that for you to get your ISO image, how many calls could have been made off the same RBS? I actually think that taking up capacity on download you are asserting your 'right to use' for as long as you want and not considering other users, including other data users.
Remember capacity in a base station is shared among concurrent users it's not a dedicated resource to you only.
Kiania