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On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 1:36 AM, Greg Rundlett (freephile) <greg-SfI3QVg0eaJl57MIdRCFDg at public.gmane.org> wrote: [snip] > I'm generally dis-satisfied with the speed of my Comcast "High Speed" > Internet connection. ?It's touted on the tele as being some > ambiguously huge amount faster than light travels in a vacuum. [snip] > Speed tests like http://www.dslreports.com/speedtest?flash=1 report my > performance as... > 4,909 Kb/s Download > 3,055 Kb/s Upload > > But, in my experience downloading files, I rarely get anything like > that. ? In fact, while the DSL Reports Speed Test is checking my > system, I'm watching the "Network History" graph on the "Resources" > tab of System Monitor (v2.26.0.1) aka gnome-system-monitor and it's > not breaking 800Kbps. ?I then used wget to download MySQL Workbench > and it reports 33,373,104 downloaded in ~42 seconds at a rate of 783 > KB/s Ah, thanks to those who pointed out that 783KBs = 6.26Mbps (or ~2.82GB/hr.) Sorry, I was misreading Comcast service as being measured in megaBytes (big B) while it's actually stated in megabits (little b). Comcast didn't catch the simple arithmetic / language mistake I was making -- which put me onto the trail of a non-existant problem. Thanks all for pointing out that I'm actually getting "standard" bandwidth. The upshot is that I know more about how various network devices (e.g. wireless routers) and standards (e.g. DOCSISv2 and DOCSISv3) affect the capacity of your network. Plus I found this neat online calculator http://web.forret.com/tools/bandwidth.asp?speed=783&unit=KB%2Fs The downside is that now I know I can't "fix" something and get faster speeds. Faster speeds are dependent on spending more money.
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