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New Internet speed record set

NTUsEr   on 20 April 2004 - 19:38 · 16 comments & 3474 views

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Thanks xStainDx

Researchers have set a new data transmission record over the Internet2's high-speed backbone.

The new record, announced Tuesday at the Spring 2004 Internet2 member meeting in Arlington, Va., was for transmitting data over nearly 11,000 kilometers at an average speed of 6.25 gigabits per second. This is nearly 10,000 times faster than a typical home broadband connection. The network link used to set the record reaches from Los Angeles to Geneva, Switzerland. Internet2 is a consortium of more than 200 universities working with industry and government to develop next-generation Internet technology. The Internet2's contest, which began in 2000, is open and ongoing, and it tests researchers' ability to build the highest-bandwidth, end-to-end Internet Protocol network.

The new record used IPv4, the current system for Internet addressing, and was set by members from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and Geneva-based CERN. The same team had previously set a new mark of 4 gigabits per second over the same distance using IPv6, the next generation of Internet protocols. "By pushing the envelope of end-to-end networking," Rich Carlson, chairman of the judging panel, said in a statement, "their efforts demonstrate new possibilities for enabling research, teaching, and learning using advanced Internet technology."

While no one expects the average person to need this type of bandwidth anytime soon, the demonstration is important in the research community, where high-capacity links are needed to transfer large amounts of data. Many groups have already begun developing high-speed grids to connect research institutions and laboratories, so that scientists can more efficiently share large volumes of data.


News source: C|net


apparently already posted (last october) - email sent to those prats @ bastion...

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#1 Trix on 20 Apr 2004 - 19:46
now tell me one thing, will we ever have this sort of speed as home connections? and how many millions will we have to pay monthly for it, if we ever can get it?

O.o
#2 mikey on 20 Apr 2004 - 19:51
You never know what will happen in 2020!
(2 replies) #3 Octol on 20 Apr 2004 - 19:53
QUOTE
While no one expects the average person to need this type of bandwidth anytime soon...


Hey! Speak for yourself!

I want it all, and I want it NOW!
#3.1 longwilli on 20 Apr 2004 - 19:58
lol me to
#3.2 mruocky on 22 Apr 2004 - 18:05
too
#4 sumeet on 20 Apr 2004 - 20:12
Thats Fast!!!! ME WANTS!!!
#5 martinsc on 20 Apr 2004 - 20:20
damn fast...
i wonder what the future has in for us
(1 reply) #6 slackbash on 20 Apr 2004 - 20:29
Here's what I don't get....

6gb per second is great. But it seems to me that the IO bottleneck on a pc will be the prob. The speed of IDE throughput escapes me at the moment, but I know it's nowhere near 6gb per sec.

So that being said, why aren't we focusing on improving IDE technology, and IO in general? Anybody?
#6.1 joker999 on 20 Apr 2004 - 20:32
maybe lag your pc for short time?
(4 replies) #7 karma_police on 20 Apr 2004 - 20:36
Really fast, we have Internet 2 at university and yesterday I downloaded Mandrake Linux 10 from an Internet2 mirror, and wow it was fast almost 3MBytes/s my disk was crazy (its a notebook 4200RPM HD)
#7.1 DodgeViper on 20 Apr 2004 - 21:50
That's not fast, some unis get 100MB that's about 8MBytes/s, well urs is still fast I have to say compared to mine, I get 60-70KBytes a second.
#7.2 JimmyT on 21 Apr 2004 - 02:33
You used a 100mbit connection where the theoretical maximum download speed is 12.5 mb/sec and the maximum speed I've seen is 4.3mb/sec.

Were talking here about 6.25 gigabits/sec... that's 800 mb/sec
I'm sure you would need a fiber optic NIC to get that speed. And again, a fast SATA disk is has a speed of 60 mb/sec, or 120mb/sec for 2 disks on RAID.
#7.3 Soleen on 21 Apr 2004 - 02:36
I get 6Mb/s when i download stuff from microsoft.com
I am at univer, in NH
No other websites give me this speed.
#7.4 mruocky on 22 Apr 2004 - 18:06
yeah okay.
#8 sadatkarim on 20 Apr 2004 - 22:50
One word: Damn.
#9 Xantos on 21 Apr 2004 - 03:12
Seeing as how these test are done at universities and such im sure they are not using IDE or SATA drives and are using either fibre channel or ultra-320 scsi drives in raid to test it either that or a ****load of ram

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