Spectrum Launches L4S Internet in 4 U.S. Markets, Targeting 59 Million Homes Nationwide
Updated
Updated · Charter Communications · May 18
Spectrum Launches L4S Internet in 4 U.S. Markets, Targeting 59 Million Homes Nationwide
3 articles · Updated · Charter Communications · May 18
Spectrum made its ultra-low-latency internet service live in Dallas-Fort Worth, Reno, Rochester and St. Louis, adding L4S technology to cut lag for real-time applications.
L4S—low latency, low loss, scalable throughput—aims to improve responsiveness in gaming, video calls and AI tools by reducing delay rather than simply boosting download speed.
No extra charge was attached to the upgrade, and Spectrum said the service already works with L4S-ready products including those from NVIDIA and other compliant developers.
Charter’s Spectrum brand said the rollout will expand nationwide as its network evolution project advances, extending the feature across a footprint that reaches nearly 59 million homes and businesses in 41 states.
Will next-gen low-latency internet primarily benefit urban centers, or will it finally bridge the digital divide for rural America?
If next-gen internet requires app updates, who will convince developers to adopt the new L4S standard for a better experience?
As AI optimizes networks with no user effort, is the complex L4S rollout already a step behind in the race for zero lag?