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Marc Clifton wrote:
In less than 2 seconds, Lothberg can download a full-length movie on her home computer The battle between the user's bandwidth capability and the content provider begins.
They should have said theoretically less than 2 seconds. In reality no server on the public internet serves up content at that speed.
Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
Think inside the box! ProActive Secure Systems
I'm on-line therefore I am. JimmyRopes"BitTorrent Lindsey Lohan"
We are a big screwed up dysfunctional psychotic happy family - some more screwed up, others more happy, but everybody's psychotic joint venture definition of CP
My first real C# project | Linkify!|FoldWithUs! | sighist -
Swedish woman gets superfast Internet[^] :omg: and she just reads web-based newspapers with it! :wtf:
A guide to posting questions on CodeProject[^]
Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP Visual Developer - Visual Basic
2006, 2007Get yourself a copy of www.bullshitfilter.org and you'll be doing fine :)
"It was the day before today.... I remember it like it was yesterday." -Moleman
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John M. Drescher wrote:
I wonder if they also outfitted her with a computer that can handle 4GBytes / s data rate.
I wondered about that myself. Computer would have to be a pretty recent set of hardware not to bog the connection down.
"Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus
I never thought I would see the day when the home computer, not the network, becomes the bottleneck when accessing the Internet. :~
Ðavid Wulff What kind of music should programmers listen to?
Join the Code Project Last.fm group | dwulff
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I never thought I would see the day when the home computer, not the network, becomes the bottleneck when accessing the Internet. :~
Ðavid Wulff What kind of music should programmers listen to?
Join the Code Project Last.fm group | dwulff
I'm so gangsta I eat cereal without the milkFrom the network's viewpoint it would be bottlenecking, but from the user's viewpoint, they wouldn't see the bottleneck, unless they were downloading so much at once that the bottleneck then becomes apparent.
"Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus
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Marc Clifton wrote:
2 seconds,
Moving a movie from a folder to another in my machine takes minutes.:sigh:
VuNic wrote:
Moving a movie from a folder to another in my machine takes minutes.
heck, takes longer than 2 seconds to select the file.
regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa
Shog9 wrote:
And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute, furry animals flocking around the grassy hillside where he sat coding Ruby on his Mac...
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dan neely wrote:
which is probably why they picked her as a guinea pig
No kidding. You don't need serious uplink speed to read online news. Us developers on the other hand, would be the ones to benefit more from it. There must be some untold gotcha about the connection, me thinks.
"Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus
Paul Conrad wrote:
There must be some untold gotcha about the connection, me thinks.
Yeah, the very first link outside of her special network. The second that connects to an ISP or server it will drop all the way back down to what we all pretty much have. Even if all the network hardware of the internet was "upgraded" to match her speeds the server hard-drives and memory wouldn't get close.
regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa
Shog9 wrote:
And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute, furry animals flocking around the grassy hillside where he sat coding Ruby on his Mac...
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Marc Clifton wrote:
In less than 2 seconds, Lothberg can download a full-length movie on her home computer The battle between the user's bandwidth capability and the content provider begins.
They should have said theoretically less than 2 seconds. In reality no server on the public internet serves up content at that speed.
Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
Think inside the box! ProActive Secure Systems
I'm on-line therefore I am. JimmyRopesWhat! Didn't you see Doctor Who and the Last Dalek. That baby downloaded the whole of the internet and drained all the power for half the US in under a minute! :laugh: Rich
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Swedish woman gets superfast Internet[^] :omg: and she just reads web-based newspapers with it! :wtf:
A guide to posting questions on CodeProject[^]
Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP Visual Developer - Visual Basic
2006, 2007Now where did I put my quantum laptop?
When prediction serves as polemic, it nearly always fails. Our prefrontal lobes can probe the future only when they aren’t leashed by dogma. The worst enemy of agile anticipation is our human propensity for comfy self-delusion. David Brin Buddha Dave
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Swedish woman gets superfast Internet[^] :omg: and she just reads web-based newspapers with it! :wtf:
A guide to posting questions on CodeProject[^]
Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP Visual Developer - Visual Basic
2006, 2007"40 gigabits-per-second" .. "in less than 2 seconds, Lothberg can download a full-length movie on her home computer" Well a pretty fast computer, ram and harddisk would be needed. A cd sized movie of 700 MB would take 0.28 seconds to store in RAM and to store to hard disk a futher of at least 2.33 seconds when using a pretty fast hard disk. So no matter what she downloads, she is literary only acquiring speeds up to her hard disk limitations, like 2.4 gigabits-per-second. So urm, could we have the remaining 37.6 gbps shared some over here? Then again granny is probably making money as a warez release dump :P
me, myself and my blog - loadx.org ericos g.
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Marc Clifton wrote:
In less than 2 seconds, Lothberg can download a full-length movie on her home computer The battle between the user's bandwidth capability and the content provider begins.
They should have said theoretically less than 2 seconds. In reality no server on the public internet serves up content at that speed.
Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
Think inside the box! ProActive Secure Systems
I'm on-line therefore I am. JimmyRopesJimmyRopes wrote:
Marc Clifton wrote: In less than 2 seconds, Lothberg can download a full-length movie on her home computer The battle between the user's bandwidth capability and the content provider begins. They should have said theoretically less than 2 seconds. In reality no server on the public internet serves up content at that speed.
I have a 5MB downstream cable-modem. I've found that over 1MB/sec (even 512KB/sec), I can tell little difference in my browsing experience. All the speed in the world doesn't matter if the hardware at either end can't handle it. I'm not, though, saying the ultra-high bandwidth is useless. The more bandwidth that you have, the more sites you can be interacting with simultaneously. Extra bandwidth seems to be most noticeable when downloading software, especially Microsofts 100+ megabyte service packs and multi-gigabyte betas.
Andrew C. Eisenberg Nashville, TN, USA (a.k.a. Music City USA) (Yes Virginia, there are rock and roll stations in Nashville! :laugh:)
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Minosknight wrote:
I got T3 which can get up to around 45mbps
Lucky you :) I think the problem is that Verzion doesn't see rural areas as being very marketable :sigh:
"Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus
If they ever get the internet over power lines working that's been experimental for 10-15 years now working then you'd be in luck. I also live in an area where the phone company doesn't offer DSL and I'm only 30 miles out of Nashville! My only high speed choices are cable-modem or the ultra-high price and high-latency satellite internet.
Andrew C. Eisenberg Nashville, TN, USA (a.k.a. Music City USA) (Yes Virginia, there are rock and roll stations in Nashville! :laugh:)
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If they ever get the internet over power lines working that's been experimental for 10-15 years now working then you'd be in luck. I also live in an area where the phone company doesn't offer DSL and I'm only 30 miles out of Nashville! My only high speed choices are cable-modem or the ultra-high price and high-latency satellite internet.
Andrew C. Eisenberg Nashville, TN, USA (a.k.a. Music City USA) (Yes Virginia, there are rock and roll stations in Nashville! :laugh:)
I actually count myself lucky to be getting 1.5mbps downstream and about 380kbps up. The people at Verizon try to tell me I am only qualified for 768k. The billing/support people are not on the same page as the CO field techs around here. Go with what he field techs says, they are the ones working the hardware around here.
"The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer
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VuNic wrote:
Moving a movie from a folder to another in my machine takes minutes.
heck, takes longer than 2 seconds to select the file.
regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa
Shog9 wrote:
And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute, furry animals flocking around the grassy hillside where he sat coding Ruby on his Mac...