What Type Of Internet Connect Do You Have

Discussion in 'General Car Audio Discussions' started by The_Ancient, Oct 31, 2003.

What type of internet connect do you have

  1. 100.0%
  1. The_Ancient

    The_Ancient Full Member

    Just Because you guys all Try and One Up me

    I turned off all my Other apps (file Sharing) and did a TRUE test for you

    2003-11-22 23:21:46 EST: 2447 / 124
    Your download speed : 2447799 bps, or 2447 kbps.
    A 298.8 KB/sec transfer rate.
    Your upload speed : 124610 bps, or 124 kbps.
    Seems like broadband .. above the 1mbit barrier!
     
  2. Steven Kephart

    Steven Kephart Full Member

    Oh, it is showing you "bps" rather than kbps.

    I thought I was REALLY slow when your number looked over 1000 times bigger. I just wasn't reading the fine print.
     
  3. The_Ancient

    The_Ancient Full Member

    that shows you all three bps(bits per second), kpbs(kilo bits per second), and KBps (kiloBYTES per second)
     
  4. The_Ancient

    The_Ancient Full Member

    Ohh and here is the Speed Ratings for Various Line Types

    T1 -- 1.5Mbit

    DS3 (formerly known as T3) -- 45Mbit

    OC3 -- 155MBit

    OC12 -- 633MBit

    Ethernet -- 1 to 1000 MBit

    the World Record for Speed over the internet across Contry is 2.4Gbps or 2400Mbit
     
  5. delvryboy

    delvryboy Full Member

    2003-11-23 00:25:55 EST: 1746 / 216
    Your download speed : 1746788 bps, or 1746 kbps.
    A 213.2 KB/sec transfer rate.
    Your upload speed : 216684 bps, or 216 kbps.
    Seems like broadband .. above the 1mbit barrier!


    hmm...mine went down a little
     
  6. The_Ancient

    The_Ancient Full Member

    2003-11-23 00:25:55 EST: 1746 / 216
    Your download speed : 1746788 bps, or 1746 kbps.
    A 213.2 KB/sec transfer rate.
    Your upload speed : 216684 bps, or 216 kbps.
    Seems like broadband .. above the 1mbit barrier!


    hmm...mine went down a little [/b][/quote]
    You have encountered one of the fundamental problems with cable modems. Each cable modem is part of a loop that begins at the cable company's central office, goes through a certain neighborhood or group of neighborhoods, and comes back to the central office.
    When a cable company offers Internet access over the cable, Internet information can use the same cables because the cable modem system puts information on separate channels:

    Downstream data -- data sent from the Internet to an individual computer -- into a 6 MHz channel. On the cable, the data looks just like a TV channel. So Internet downstream data takes up the same amount of cable space as any single channel of programming.
    Upstream data -- information sent from an individual back to the Internet -- requires even less of the cable's bandwidth, just 2 MHz, since the assumption is that most people download far more information than they upload.

    Putting both upstream and downstream data on the cable television system requires two types of equipment: a cable modem on the customer end and a Cable-Modem Termination System (CMTS) at the cable provider's end. Between these two types of equipment, all the computer networking, security and management of Internet access over cable television is put into place.

    A CMTS enables as many as 1,000 users to connect to the Internet through a single 6 MHz channel. Since a single channel is capable of 30 to 40 megabits per second of total throughput, this means that users may see far better performance than is available with standard dial-up modems. The single channel aspect, though, can also lead to the performance variance some users experience with cable modems.

    If you are one of the first users to connect to the Internet through a particular cable channel, then you may have nearly the entire bandwidth of the channel available for your use. As new users, especially heavy-access users, are connected to the channel, you will have to share that bandwidth, and may see your performance degrade as a result. It is possible that, in times of heavy usage with many connected users, performance will be far below the theoretical maximums.

    As more people in your neighborhood subscribe to the cable modem, the amount of bandwidth available per user decreases. This means that if you and a lot of your neighbors all get online at the same time, then you will notice a significant performance hit. The good news is that this particular performance issue can be resolved by the cable company adding a new channel and splitting the base of users. Most cable companies monitor performance regularly and add another channel when the bandwidth per user hits a certain point.

    As a user, you can observe when the speed of your connection is sluggish and try to avoid that particular time of day. Often, just by changing the time you are online, you can gain substantial improvement in speed. For example, my cable modem connection averages about 500 Kbps between 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. eastern time, but is more than 2.4 Mbps from 5 a.m. to 12 p.m.!
     
  7. stacy532

    stacy532 Full Member

    I have aohell and I had too cause I no longer have a credit card of any type.... :oops: they allow you to have it charged to your phone bill.... :)
     
  8. nismo

    nismo Full Member

    ive had cable, because it was the only broadband option...i have dsl currently. im pretty hard on my connections, yet i cant tell a difference. dsl has gone out on me 3x this past 12 months, only because EVERYTHING was out locally.

    i say go for whatevers cheaper (and obviously available). i dont care one way or the other...well, other than i have a nice cable modem in my closet collecting dust, and it stacks on my wireless router much better than the dsl modem (the cable modem and the wireless router are linksys).

    oh, and i bought wireless when the router was about 250, no cards or anything...just the router. now we sell em for 60 bux at best buy :bag: oh well, i HAD to have it, cuz i wasnt allowed to (and wasnt willing to) run a really long cable through my house.

    eric
     
  9. delvryboy

    delvryboy Full Member

    ooo...it get's worse

    AOL / 56K
    2003-11-25 11:21:57 EST: 42 / 23
    Your download speed : 42192 bps, or 42 kbps.
    A 5.1 KB/sec transfer rate.
    Your upload speed : 23188 bps, or 23 kbps.
    Your connection hardly qualified as broadband, at least in that test


    how do you people do it...this is crazy slow!
     
  10. delvryboy

    delvryboy Full Member

    read 'em and weep :lmfao:

    2004-02-10 17:20:24 EST: 3179 / 222
    Your download speed : 3179418 bps, or 3179 kbps.
    A 388.1 KB/sec transfer rate.
    Your upload speed : 222593 bps, or 222 kbps.
    Seems like broadband .. above the 1mbit barrier
     
  11. Gveto

    Gveto New Member

    2004-02-10 17:34:15 EST: 8947 / 10714
    Your download speed : 8947773 bps, or 8947 kbps.
    A 1092.2 KB/sec transfer rate.
    Your upload speed : 10714285 bps, or 10714 kbps.
    Seems like broadband .. above the 1mbit barrier!


    :D
     
  12. Civic96

    Civic96 Full Member

    People still use 56k?!?
     
  13. The_Ancient

    The_Ancient Full Member

    holy hell, how is your unload higher than you download

    What provider do you have, most brandband has upload caps at 128kpbs
     
  14. delvryboy

    delvryboy Full Member

    holy hell, how is your unload higher than you download

    What provider do you have, most brandband has upload caps at 128kpbs [/b][/quote]
    wow :blink: ...i was thinking the same

    we are at 22?....but it is supposed to be upped next month

    we got the 3600kbps download upgrade last month...haven't reached it yet, but i haven't tried at an off-peak time
     
  15. geolemon

    geolemon Full Member

    More than 70% of the connections to the internet are dialup-based...
    I'm on dialup myself. ;)

    Broadband connections are hardly inexpensive...

    Around $55/month for a cable connection here...
    DSL I could get an introductory rate of under $40/month, but they tell me I'm too far (which is baloney, I'm all of 1/2 mile from a CO that the map claims is a DSL carrier, in the middle of suburbia :rolleyes: I'll have to actually call them I suppose)...
    Broadband over my DirecTV connection is $99/month...

    I pay under $10/month for the premium NetZero connection, and I connect consistently at 53.6K... flawlessly, every day (all day, lately :lol: ).

    Most people don't have a use for high-speed.
    If you aren't transferring big files... it's not really a benefit.

    But there are some ignorant webmasters out there...
    I won't name any names (they've been named! :p), but some people publish websites that take significant time to load even if you are on broadband... which isolates their visitors to only a population of about 30% of the potential visitors they could have...
    :oops:
     
  16. The_Ancient

    The_Ancient Full Member

    sorry Geo, Worldwide Broadband usage surpasssed 50% a while Back


    USA is still 70%, but that is because there are still limits to rural area, Europe, and even China, are vastly Broadband with something like over 70% used broadband of some form
     
  17. geolemon

    geolemon Full Member

    well, USA is all I know. ;)

    I don't care what the Koreans or Japanese are connecting with...
    they aren't coming to MY website, that's for sure. :p
     
  18. The_Ancient

    The_Ancient Full Member

    actually you should care, abd be appulled that we are not ahead of the rest of the world in brondband rollout,

    even in communistic china, where the people have NOTHING< they have broadband ;)
     
  19. delvryboy

    delvryboy Full Member

    hmm...ok

    it was a 3mbit download upgrade...so far i have surpassed this on every test

    256k upload upgrade...i have yet to reach this

    there it is...i had to reset the modem

    2004-02-12 14:28:20 EST: 3030 / 250
    Your download speed : 3430815 bps, or 3430 kbps.
    A 369.9 KB/sec transfer rate.
    Your upload speed : 250000 bps, or 250 kbps
     
  20. stacy532

    stacy532 Full Member

    I have dsl now and never top the 100kbs download speed even with accelerators...?....lol :blush: