Ideal Intranet Speed...
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Phew.. after inspecting few branch of my company (in not-so-remote-area), i came out with single conclusion : our intranet bandwitdh is too slow (only 2KB/s!!) :mad: do you know how much the ideal intranet speed ? since they need only to access few web application and one web application with ActiveX inside. Comments are welcome. :):)
"Courage choose who will follow, Fate choose who will lead" - Lord Gunner, Septerra Core "Press any key to continue, where's the ANY key ?" - Homer Simpsons
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Phew.. after inspecting few branch of my company (in not-so-remote-area), i came out with single conclusion : our intranet bandwitdh is too slow (only 2KB/s!!) :mad: do you know how much the ideal intranet speed ? since they need only to access few web application and one web application with ActiveX inside. Comments are welcome. :):)
"Courage choose who will follow, Fate choose who will lead" - Lord Gunner, Septerra Core "Press any key to continue, where's the ANY key ?" - Homer Simpsons
Aryo Handono. wrote:
do you know how much the ideal intranet speed ?
The point at which no-one ever complains that it's too slow, I guess...
Christian Graus - C++ MVP
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Phew.. after inspecting few branch of my company (in not-so-remote-area), i came out with single conclusion : our intranet bandwitdh is too slow (only 2KB/s!!) :mad: do you know how much the ideal intranet speed ? since they need only to access few web application and one web application with ActiveX inside. Comments are welcome. :):)
"Courage choose who will follow, Fate choose who will lead" - Lord Gunner, Septerra Core "Press any key to continue, where's the ANY key ?" - Homer Simpsons
Aryo Handono. wrote:
do you know how much the ideal intranet speed ?
Yet to find it.. but I can say that the maximum is depends on the medium you use. The minimum would be the UTP (There is a another slower than this but these days no one uses it), which is 100 Mb per second Maximum is I guess Gb eithernet or firewire or fibre optic.. if you can afford to go for it. -- modified at 23:16 Monday 20th November, 2006
L.W.C. Nirosh, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
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Phew.. after inspecting few branch of my company (in not-so-remote-area), i came out with single conclusion : our intranet bandwitdh is too slow (only 2KB/s!!) :mad: do you know how much the ideal intranet speed ? since they need only to access few web application and one web application with ActiveX inside. Comments are welcome. :):)
"Courage choose who will follow, Fate choose who will lead" - Lord Gunner, Septerra Core "Press any key to continue, where's the ANY key ?" - Homer Simpsons
Aryo Handono. wrote:
do you know how much the ideal intranet speed
Well given OC-3072 (160 Gbit/s) isn't availible yet, yea will have to settle for OC-192 9953.28 Mbit/s (9621.504 Mbit/s). Optical Carrier - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[^] Seriously, lots of companies either use DSL or dedicated T1's
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
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Phew.. after inspecting few branch of my company (in not-so-remote-area), i came out with single conclusion : our intranet bandwitdh is too slow (only 2KB/s!!) :mad: do you know how much the ideal intranet speed ? since they need only to access few web application and one web application with ActiveX inside. Comments are welcome. :):)
"Courage choose who will follow, Fate choose who will lead" - Lord Gunner, Septerra Core "Press any key to continue, where's the ANY key ?" - Homer Simpsons
2Kb:omg::wtf:
Artificial Intelligence is no match for Natural Stupidity
No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness. ~Sheik Abd-al-Kadir
I can't always be wrong ... or can I? -
Aryo Handono. wrote:
do you know how much the ideal intranet speed
Well given OC-3072 (160 Gbit/s) isn't availible yet, yea will have to settle for OC-192 9953.28 Mbit/s (9621.504 Mbit/s). Optical Carrier - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[^] Seriously, lots of companies either use DSL or dedicated T1's
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
We have the pleasure of two ISDN lines, the second only line on demand since it is used for faxes, too. It's like running a business in Siberia, only there you would use Mosquitos instead of ISDN. (with due apologies to Siberia) Intranet is 100MB/s, and unlikely to be the bottle neck.
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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
Linkify!|Fold With Us! -
Phew.. after inspecting few branch of my company (in not-so-remote-area), i came out with single conclusion : our intranet bandwitdh is too slow (only 2KB/s!!) :mad: do you know how much the ideal intranet speed ? since they need only to access few web application and one web application with ActiveX inside. Comments are welcome. :):)
"Courage choose who will follow, Fate choose who will lead" - Lord Gunner, Septerra Core "Press any key to continue, where's the ANY key ?" - Homer Simpsons
Aryo Handono. wrote:
(only 2KB/s!!)
:wtf:
Aryo Handono. wrote:
how much the ideal intranet speed
It varies. Generally for a simple office system 100mbit/s is more then enough. However if you run servers (which you don't seem to) or file servers Fibre or Cat-6 is an option (Cat-6 being cheaper)
Brad Australian "The Probability of you doing that makes 0 look like a big number" - My Mate Oxley
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We have the pleasure of two ISDN lines, the second only line on demand since it is used for faxes, too. It's like running a business in Siberia, only there you would use Mosquitos instead of ISDN. (with due apologies to Siberia) Intranet is 100MB/s, and unlikely to be the bottle neck.
Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Velopers, Develprs, Developers!
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
Linkify!|Fold With Us!peterchen wrote:
two ISDN lines
I honestly had to look up the speed of an ISDN line as I had completely forgotten. :-O 64k or 128k :omg: I know our (work) computers are capped at 10meg (LAN), I can easily down load stuff from MS at speeds of 1.5 Meg. I checked with the NCC (Network Control) folks each building has different needs and different connections to the corporate network. Some buildings have redundant Fiber lines for example. At home I have a 1.5 Meg DSL connection, which for my needs is usually fast enough.
peterchen wrote:
It's like running a business in Siberia
I hear Siberia has about the same climate as parts of Minnesota and just as many mosquitos. :rolleyes:
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
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peterchen wrote:
two ISDN lines
I honestly had to look up the speed of an ISDN line as I had completely forgotten. :-O 64k or 128k :omg: I know our (work) computers are capped at 10meg (LAN), I can easily down load stuff from MS at speeds of 1.5 Meg. I checked with the NCC (Network Control) folks each building has different needs and different connections to the corporate network. Some buildings have redundant Fiber lines for example. At home I have a 1.5 Meg DSL connection, which for my needs is usually fast enough.
peterchen wrote:
It's like running a business in Siberia
I hear Siberia has about the same climate as parts of Minnesota and just as many mosquitos. :rolleyes:
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
After reunion, Telekom replaced the old copper phone lines with modern high end optical fiber, so we are ready for the future. :doh: Cable companies don't get their act together, Internet over Powerline works until the lady in the next apartment starts vacuum, via Sattelite dish doesn't give us upload, everything wireless works only when the sun shines - and this ain't California. My DSL line at home (10 minutes by bicycle away) currently does 3.3 MBit. :jig: Besides Internet, the office is great.
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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
Linkify!|Fold With Us! -
After reunion, Telekom replaced the old copper phone lines with modern high end optical fiber, so we are ready for the future. :doh: Cable companies don't get their act together, Internet over Powerline works until the lady in the next apartment starts vacuum, via Sattelite dish doesn't give us upload, everything wireless works only when the sun shines - and this ain't California. My DSL line at home (10 minutes by bicycle away) currently does 3.3 MBit. :jig: Besides Internet, the office is great.
Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Velopers, Develprs, Developers!
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
Linkify!|Fold With Us!peterchen wrote:
Internet over Powerline works until the lady in the next apartment starts vacuum
Have you used this type of service? The only thing I have seen / heard was its still in the experimental stages. I'm not sure how many people, my self include would be very tolerant of outages caused by the neighbors vacuum cleaner, not to mention potential security issues.
peterchen wrote:
My DSL line at home (10 minutes by bicycle away) currently does 3.3 MBit.
That's not bad; I hear that cable companies around here are now offering 10 Meg lines, at something like 60 bucks a month. I just doubled checked, it would seem Qwest is now offering a 3-5 Meg DSL line, which isn’t bad (didn’t look for pricing for it).
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
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peterchen wrote:
Internet over Powerline works until the lady in the next apartment starts vacuum
Have you used this type of service? The only thing I have seen / heard was its still in the experimental stages. I'm not sure how many people, my self include would be very tolerant of outages caused by the neighbors vacuum cleaner, not to mention potential security issues.
peterchen wrote:
My DSL line at home (10 minutes by bicycle away) currently does 3.3 MBit.
That's not bad; I hear that cable companies around here are now offering 10 Meg lines, at something like 60 bucks a month. I just doubled checked, it would seem Qwest is now offering a 3-5 Meg DSL line, which isn’t bad (didn’t look for pricing for it).
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
S Douglas wrote:
I hear that cable companies around here are now offering 10 Meg lines, at something like 60 bucks a month.
My ISP provides up to 24Meg via ADSL, at around AU$40 a month, but the actual speed you achieve is dependent on your distance from the exchange. I get around 4Meg, because I'm right on the outer limit of the ADSL range :(. I know of guys who get around 20Meg because they're a lot closer.
Ryan
"Punctuality is only a virtue for those who aren't smart enough to think of good excuses for being late" John Nichol "Point Of Impact"
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peterchen wrote:
Internet over Powerline works until the lady in the next apartment starts vacuum
Have you used this type of service? The only thing I have seen / heard was its still in the experimental stages. I'm not sure how many people, my self include would be very tolerant of outages caused by the neighbors vacuum cleaner, not to mention potential security issues.
peterchen wrote:
My DSL line at home (10 minutes by bicycle away) currently does 3.3 MBit.
That's not bad; I hear that cable companies around here are now offering 10 Meg lines, at something like 60 bucks a month. I just doubled checked, it would seem Qwest is now offering a 3-5 Meg DSL line, which isn’t bad (didn’t look for pricing for it).
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
Yes, we've tried that at work, and friend tried it at home. basically, if it works, it works well, but the "if" strongly depends on the quality of the pwoer lines and how many disturbances you get in / get through.In germany this stuff usually has to comply to high standards, and still.. We gave up on it.
S Douglas wrote:
That's not bad;
:) Had a friend with Mac Notebook + Modem come over to update his machine. When he saw the download speed he just said quietly: "That's not just normal DSL, is it?"
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S Douglas wrote:
I hear that cable companies around here are now offering 10 Meg lines, at something like 60 bucks a month.
My ISP provides up to 24Meg via ADSL, at around AU$40 a month, but the actual speed you achieve is dependent on your distance from the exchange. I get around 4Meg, because I'm right on the outer limit of the ADSL range :(. I know of guys who get around 20Meg because they're a lot closer.
Ryan
"Punctuality is only a virtue for those who aren't smart enough to think of good excuses for being late" John Nichol "Point Of Impact"
Ryan Binns wrote:
My ISP provides up to 24Meg via ADSL, at around AU$40 a month
Nice. :cool:
Ryan Binns wrote:
I get around 4Meg, because I'm right on the outer limit of the ADSL range
Thats still pretty decent, alot better than Dial up.
Ryan Binns wrote:
I know of guys who get around 20Meg because they're a lot closer.
Now you’re just bragging. :)
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
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Yes, we've tried that at work, and friend tried it at home. basically, if it works, it works well, but the "if" strongly depends on the quality of the pwoer lines and how many disturbances you get in / get through.In germany this stuff usually has to comply to high standards, and still.. We gave up on it.
S Douglas wrote:
That's not bad;
:) Had a friend with Mac Notebook + Modem come over to update his machine. When he saw the download speed he just said quietly: "That's not just normal DSL, is it?"
Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Velopers, Develprs, Developers!
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
Linkify!|Fold With Us!peterchen wrote:
Yes, we've tried that at work, and friend tried it at home. basically, if it works, it works well, but the "if" strongly depends on the quality of the pwoer lines and how many disturbances you get in / get through
To bad it’s so susceptible to interference, those living in rural areas I’m sure would love the option of high speed internet access.
peterchen wrote:
Had a friend with Mac Notebook + Modem
Why did he bring a modem? Or did you mean network card?
peterchen wrote:
"That's not just normal DSL, is it?"
I would have been tempted to say “No, its enterprisey DSL” :rolleyes:
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
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peterchen wrote:
Yes, we've tried that at work, and friend tried it at home. basically, if it works, it works well, but the "if" strongly depends on the quality of the pwoer lines and how many disturbances you get in / get through
To bad it’s so susceptible to interference, those living in rural areas I’m sure would love the option of high speed internet access.
peterchen wrote:
Had a friend with Mac Notebook + Modem
Why did he bring a modem? Or did you mean network card?
peterchen wrote:
"That's not just normal DSL, is it?"
I would have been tempted to say “No, its enterprisey DSL” :rolleyes:
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
S Douglas wrote:
Why did he bring a modem?
He didn't bring, he normally I meant he only has a 56kBit phone moden connection (after that failed Powerline episode..) - so it takes a few overnighters to download what he did here in half an hour.
Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Velopers, Develprs, Developers!
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
Linkify!|Fold With Us! -
S Douglas wrote:
Why did he bring a modem?
He didn't bring, he normally I meant he only has a 56kBit phone moden connection (after that failed Powerline episode..) - so it takes a few overnighters to download what he did here in half an hour.
Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Developers, Velopers, Develprs, Developers!
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
Linkify!|Fold With Us! -
Phew.. after inspecting few branch of my company (in not-so-remote-area), i came out with single conclusion : our intranet bandwitdh is too slow (only 2KB/s!!) :mad: do you know how much the ideal intranet speed ? since they need only to access few web application and one web application with ActiveX inside. Comments are welcome. :):)
"Courage choose who will follow, Fate choose who will lead" - Lord Gunner, Septerra Core "Press any key to continue, where's the ANY key ?" - Homer Simpsons
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Aryo Handono. wrote:
our intranet bandwitdh is too slow (only 2KB/s!!)
2KB per Sec! Is someone running the 1's and 0's back and forth between the locations on foot? The very first modems operated at 300 kpbs how are these locations connected?
I think you might be confusing bytes per second with bits per second. Usually, data transfer speed is measured in bits per second, individual 1's and 0's. This is helpful because it doesn't matter whether or not you are running on a 16-bit, 32-bit, or 64-bit system. It can be tough to distinguish the difference, but if you pay attention to the capitalization, it can be done. 2KB/s is 2 kilobytes or 2,000 bytes. A byte (for example) is 32 bits so 2KB/s is 64,000 bits per second. Early modems were 300 baud or 300 bits (bits, not byes) per second. 300 bits is the same as approx. 9 bytes (in a 32-bit system). The speed comparison in KB/s is 2KB/s vs. 0.009 KB/s The speed comparison in bps is 64,000 bits/s vs. 300 bits/s With regard to the original post, I recommend checking out AuBeta Networks (www.aubeta.com). I do not work for them and gain nothing for a referral. I have used them in the past to connect multiple offices together and they were great to work with. I highly recommend them! -E
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Ryan Binns wrote:
My ISP provides up to 24Meg via ADSL, at around AU$40 a month
Nice. :cool:
Ryan Binns wrote:
I get around 4Meg, because I'm right on the outer limit of the ADSL range
Thats still pretty decent, alot better than Dial up.
Ryan Binns wrote:
I know of guys who get around 20Meg because they're a lot closer.
Now you’re just bragging. :)
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
Yup, my ADSL2+ is currently connected at 18Mb/s downlink with a 1MB/s uplink. And I thought Australia had poor broadband speeds compared to other industrialised nations! Incidentally, my ISP has just launched their ADSL2+M service, which allows you to sacrifice some downlink speed for greater uplink bandwidth. Might be useful if I need to host something temporarily.
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I think you might be confusing bytes per second with bits per second. Usually, data transfer speed is measured in bits per second, individual 1's and 0's. This is helpful because it doesn't matter whether or not you are running on a 16-bit, 32-bit, or 64-bit system. It can be tough to distinguish the difference, but if you pay attention to the capitalization, it can be done. 2KB/s is 2 kilobytes or 2,000 bytes. A byte (for example) is 32 bits so 2KB/s is 64,000 bits per second. Early modems were 300 baud or 300 bits (bits, not byes) per second. 300 bits is the same as approx. 9 bytes (in a 32-bit system). The speed comparison in KB/s is 2KB/s vs. 0.009 KB/s The speed comparison in bps is 64,000 bits/s vs. 300 bits/s With regard to the original post, I recommend checking out AuBeta Networks (www.aubeta.com). I do not work for them and gain nothing for a referral. I have used them in the past to connect multiple offices together and they were great to work with. I highly recommend them! -E
Elroy Skimms wrote:
A byte (for example) is 32 bits
Let’s assume that a byte is actually 8 bits, since that is what a byte has been defined as for the past two decades. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte[^] 2KBytes == 16Kbits 2KBytes != 64Kbits To stay on topic though... If you want to diagnose your current issues check out some of the suff over at http://www.dslreports.com/tools[^]. Don’t bother signing up at the site, the tools you need are available anyway. Tron