neo1980 Posted January 28, 2002 Share Posted January 28, 2002 someone who is in toronto and using rogers internet and has over 1300 Down and more than 100 Up, can you send me your Internet settings like RWIN window settings and MTU settings? thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FnArFy Posted January 28, 2002 Share Posted January 28, 2002 Originally posted by TaGer I don't know you at all so I don't know if you're being sarcastic or not. :ponder: Really, I do hope some of ya'll know the difference between a kilobyte (KB) and kilobit (Kb) ;) I'm on Rogers @Home (though I wonder why they still have the @Home tag, any fellow Canucks know?) and at noon, I am getting a miserable 398 Kb/s... bah... but then with edonkey and morpheus open... :D Savard Software makes a great converter, not only for data transfer conversions but for mass, weight, anything you can think of. Clearly, if you read my last post, i do understand :) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FnArFy Posted January 28, 2002 Share Posted January 28, 2002 Originally posted by wd40 muhahahahahhahahah Beat this! Damn it! I'm downloading something so I'm getting this now. Clearly all you did was refresh a whole bunch of times, a person on 56k could get that speed with the help of a good cache system/program and clicking refresh almost a hundred times, although it would be much easier on broadband to do that, u would only have to click refresh about twice, see this: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joel Posted January 28, 2002 Share Posted January 28, 2002 ADSL Montreal Your raw speed was 1355994.53 bits per second. There are 3 meaningful ways we can interpret this number: Communications 1.4 megabits per second How communication devices are rated. Kilo means 1,000 and mega means 1,000,000. Examples include 56k modem and 10Mbit Ethernet Storage 165.5 kilobytes per second The way data is measured on your hard drive and how FTP programs measure transfer speeds. Kilo is 1,024 and mega is 1,048,576. 1MB file download 6.2 seconds The time it would take you to download a 1 megabyte file at this speed. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MulletRobZ Posted January 31, 2002 Share Posted January 31, 2002 Holy dying! 98 Mbps, and they say that you have to reload your browser cache? :D Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OrangesOfCourse Posted February 5, 2002 Share Posted February 5, 2002 Your raw speed was 1816407.98 bits per second. There are 3 meaningful ways we can interpret this number: Communications 1.8 megabits per second How communication devices are rated. Kilo means 1,000 and mega means 1,000,000. Examples include 56k modem and 10Mbit Ethernet Storage 221.7 kilobytes per second The way data is measured on your hard drive and how FTP programs measure transfer speeds. Kilo is 1,024 and mega is 1,048,576. 1MB file download 4.6 seconds The time it would take you to download a 1 megabyte file at this speed. this is while i have a fserver up and i am downloading couple of zips.. about 100 mbs each.. :evil: laterz ;) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MulletRobZ Posted February 6, 2002 Share Posted February 6, 2002 Here's something strange! I tested the Vibe connection on some of the computers and they could only get 660 kbps! And yet, I can get 1.1 Mbps, even with with my cache cleared up! :D Man the Internet's strange! :D Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cq_ Posted February 6, 2002 Share Posted February 6, 2002 Thats at work... T3 with an apple G3 sever... we just got a DP 1GHZ server... Im sure my bandwith will double! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bud1979 Posted February 12, 2002 Share Posted February 12, 2002 why would your bandwith double with a new server. a faster server does not affect your bandwith. that is all before the server. now if your server switched to gigabit ethernet and hooks on to an oc3 them maybe the server might help but doubt. that is why a you can use a 166 linux box as a router becuse it does not matter the speed of the computer Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hills420 Posted February 13, 2002 Share Posted February 13, 2002 Text Block Size 5000 KB Download Time 6600 ms Receive Buffer Default Transmission Speed 6061 Kb/s Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
harleydog Posted February 14, 2002 Share Posted February 14, 2002 Your raw speed was 1089984.61 bits per second. There are 3 meaningful ways we can interpret this number: HD Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TechSys1 Posted February 14, 2002 Share Posted February 14, 2002 600.1 Kbps at 10:38pm EST. This is with a full ftp server, each person on the server is getting around 40kbps (5 users) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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