Search:  

 
 
   All ForumsHot TopicsGallery






how-to block ads


 
Forums » Windstream: 24Mbps FTTH For $45 » Can't complain.
Search Topic:
Share Topic:
RSS topic:
toggle:
flat / full
normal / watch
Post a:
Post a:
« Windstream FTTH Super Awesome  
AuthorAll Replies


Matt
Take me down to the paradise city
Premium
join:2003-07-20
Jamestown, NC
·North State Commun..

reply to jadebangle
Re: Can't complain.

said by jadebangle See Profile :

said by Eat Me See Profile :

But with 1.5M upload? My cable connection does better. Even OOL Boost does better.
The upload is just as important as download
it isn't anymore useful to have 24/1.5 vs 5/5 for about the same price. Most website won't allow you to download faster then 1.5mbps so its only in rare cases or few place that you can exceed this speed

Too much download speed is useless without decent upload speed to compensate for it...
Your first statement is absolutely false. Put a 10Mbps or higher line next to a 1.5Mbps line and it's night and day. My 15Mbps fiber line has slightly higher letancy to most sites than my 1.5Mbps Road Runner line, but my fiber line destroys my RR line when comparing browsing speeds. It's night and day.

Your last statement is true however. But 1.5Mbps and up is a good upstream number for the vast majority of people. I only have 2Mbps and while 5Mbps upstream is available to me, 2Mbps is great.

iansltx

join:2007-02-19
Golden, CO
·Comcast
·Qwest.net
·magicjack.com
·BeeCreek Communica..
·Sprint Mobile Broa..

Exactly. The "inflection points" on internet these days are 768k (broadband), 1.5 Mbps (more video streaming), 5 Mbps (HD video in some cases) and 15 Mbps (rocking connectivity). If you're moving from one tier to the other it does make a rather big difference. On uploads, 384k, 768k, 1.5-2M and 5M are probably the big ones.


Eat Me

join:2002-09-25
Sussex, NJ
reply to Matt
Have to agree here.

When I went to 30Mbps DOCSIS3 it was night and day. Pages loaded instantly, no lag time or waiting.

patcat88

join:2002-04-05
Jamaica, NY

said by Eat Me See Profile :

Have to agree here.

When I went to 30Mbps DOCSIS3 it was night and day. Pages loaded instantly, no lag time or waiting.
The bandwidth rarely matters anymore in page loading speed, your browser, your CPU, your RAM, number of files comprising the page (CSS, JS, images, AJAX, iframes), and especially the CPU, DB, and HDs on the website your using. If the CPU stalls on the website or there is disk I/O congestion, there is nothing you can do about that lag.


Eat Me

join:2002-09-25
Sussex, NJ
·PenTeleData
·Future Nine Corpor..
·VOIPo
·Vonage

said by patcat88 See Profile :

said by Eat Me See Profile :

Have to agree here.

When I went to 30Mbps DOCSIS3 it was night and day. Pages loaded instantly, no lag time or waiting.
The bandwidth rarely matters anymore in page loading speed, your browser, your CPU, your RAM, number of files comprising the page (CSS, JS, images, AJAX, iframes), and especially the CPU, DB, and HDs on the website your using. If the CPU stalls on the website or there is disk I/O congestion, there is nothing you can do about that lag.
Actually on a lot of sites it does matter. Reason being that a lot of sites are full of rich content such as flash and the like.


aaronwt
Premium
join:2004-11-07
Woodbridge, VA
·Verizon FIOS

reply to iansltx
said by iansltx See Profile :

Exactly. The "inflection points" on internet these days are 768k (broadband), 1.5 Mbps (more video streaming), 5 Mbps (HD video in some cases) and 15 Mbps (rocking connectivity). If you're moving from one tier to the other it does make a rather big difference. On uploads, 384k, 768k, 1.5-2M and 5M are probably the big ones.
I'd say 15mbs is very slow. I have a 50mbs line and I'm ready for it to be faster.

iansltx

join:2007-02-19
Golden, CO
·Comcast
·Qwest.net
·magicjack.com
·BeeCreek Communica..
·Sprint Mobile Broa..

What do you do on said 50 Mbps line? What sites can serve up content at the full 50? Not trying to be antagonistic here; I freaking love the connections I get with the VPSes I have (yay $10 per month for 400GB of transfer on a 100Mbit port...plus a 20GB, 512-1024MB RAM server to run on the connection!). Plus the OC3 that my school is on, when it wasn't so overloaded. Looking forward to the gigabit link we'll be getting *any day now*
-
Forums » Windstream: 24Mbps FTTH For $45« Windstream FTTH Super Awesome  


Saturday, 28-Nov 16:55:04 Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Hosting by www.nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo | feedback | contact
over 10 years online! © 1999-2009 dslreports.com.
page compression OFF
Most commented news this week
· [122] Time Warner Cable Fires Broadside At Broadcasters
· [112] New AT&T Ad Campaign Hits Back At Verizon
· [96] Apple Joins AT&T Verizon Snark Fest
· [87] New Bill Takes Aim At Higher Verizon ETFs
· [80] TiVo Sees Record Customer Losses
· [70] Verizon CEO: Hulu Will Be Dead Soon
· [69] In-Flight Internet Headed For Bumpy Landing?
· [62] Thanksgiving Open Thread
· [62] Weekend Open Thread
· [40] EFF Wages War On Fine Print
Most people now reading
· 3.x Feral Druid - Bear Tanking Guide [World of Warcraft]
· Gizmo5 has added a Google Voice section in its members area. [VOIP Tech Chat]
· Why would I want an e reader? [General Questions]
· [Newsgroups] Newzleech down? [Filesharing Software]
· Windows 7 boot manager editing questions [Microsoft Help]
· Using AirMax to provide triple play services? [Wireless Service Providers]
· ToC 4th boss - Preliminary Strategy for Twin Valkyr [World of Warcraft]
· TPIA review by Electronic Box [Canadian Broadband]
· Unlocking Bell Sympatico 2Wire 2701HG-G Modem [2Wire]
· PS3 Media Server! "Must Have" [Console Tech]