Wednesday, January 29th 2025

Comcast Introduces Nation's First Ultra-Low Lag Xfinity Internet Experience With Meta, NVIDIA, and Valve

Comcast is introducing the first customers in the world to a pioneering new, ultra-low lag connectivity experience when they use interactive applications like gaming, videoconferencing, and virtual reality. With the launch, Xfinity Internet latency will be dramatically reduced to faster than the blink of an eye, currently when using FaceTime on iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, and Apple Vision Pro, apps on Meta's mixed reality headsets that will support this technology, NVIDIA's GeForce NOW, many games on Valve's Steam games platform, and in the future on other applications that choose to leverage this open standard technology.

"Our connectivity is the key to unlocking a world of entertainment, sports, news and information and we're constantly pushing the limits of network innovation to create an experience that exceeds the expanding demands of our customers," said Emily Waldorf, Senior Vice President, Consumer Products, Comcast Connectivity and Platforms. "Modern applications are real-time and interactive and require more than just fast speeds. Xfinity Internet's lower lag times will be a differentiator for Comcast."
With low-lag Internet, Xfinity is once again breaking new ground on technology that will help to ensure its customers can take advantage of everything the Internet has to offer today and into the future. Latency-sensitive applications will experience less delay, and a smoother, more responsive end-to-end online experience compared to other options like 5G home Internet, where the network gets bogged down and the connection deteriorates when a lot of people are online.

Initially, customers will see the benefits of the new technology firsthand when they use FaceTime on iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, and Apple Vision Pro, apps on Meta's mixed reality headsets that will support this technology, NVIDIA's GeForce NOW, or many games on Valve's Steam games platform. Comcast's low-lag experience will expand to any additional content and application providers who choose to leverage the new open standard technology for their own products. When fully deployed it will be available to all Xfinity Internet customers.

Comcast has been testing low latency technology with its user groups for the past year and those tests have met or even exceeded expectations. The initial rollout began and will expand to cities like Atlanta, Chicago, Colorado Springs, Philadelphia, Rockville (Maryland) and San Francisco, deploying in more locations across the country rapidly over the next few months. Low-lag Internet is made possible by Comcast's state-of-the-art network, which has been built to deliver an exceptional Internet experience, ubiquitously, to more than 63 million homes and businesses across the country.
Source: Comcast
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10 Comments on Comcast Introduces Nation's First Ultra-Low Lag Xfinity Internet Experience With Meta, NVIDIA, and Valve

#1
SOAREVERSOR
I told ya all. Gaming is going to the cloud because of PC gaming and PC gaming only. It will force others to follow except Nintendo. PC gaming strikes again!
Posted on Reply
#2
Athlonite
I'd take anything Crappcast has to say with a 50lb bag of rack salt
Posted on Reply
#3
Delaro
I hate to see what they want to charge; they are never clear on what the total cost will be with any plan upfront.
Posted on Reply
#5
R-T-B
God no. Cloud gaming is bad enough over a standard link, but one managed by comcast? Don't walk, run.
Posted on Reply
#6
Endymio
"With the launch, Xfinity Internet latency will be dramatically reduced to faster than the blink of an eye..."

Who writes this stuff? The 'blink of an eye' can be as long as 400 ms. My current latency can be under 20ms already.
Posted on Reply
#7
TheLostSwede
News Editor
The comments section didn't disappoint. :D
Posted on Reply
#8
Endymio
DelaroI hate to see what they want to charge; they are never clear on what the total cost will be with any plan upfront.
Why spread disinformation? When I signed up, they told me right on the phone to the very penny what my monthly service would cost. It's difficult to advertise the exact cost, because due to state and local regulations, the difference in a few feet in home location can change the cost of a plan.
Posted on Reply
#9
bonehead123
Comcrapst...the way consumers are played :D

'nuff said....
Posted on Reply
#10
R-T-B
TheLostSwedeThe comments section didn't disappoint. :D
You are a sick man.
Posted on Reply
Jan 30th, 2025 09:15 EST change timezone

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