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fAcEtIOUs
Premium
join:2002-03-03
kudos:4

reply to Matt

Re: Anyone notice two data points?

said by Matt:

Did anyone notice that they not only track upload speed, but latency as well? I find it sad that the global average upload speed is 1.3Mbps, but Time Warner only provides 384Kbps or 512Kbps in my area. How pathetic.
You must live in wrong state.




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Matt
All noise, no signal.
Premium
join:2003-07-20
Jamestown, NC
kudos:12

1 edit


Me
I have 15Mbps/2Mbps from my local ILEC, delivered via GPON fiber. See that Jamestown result in #10 for North Carolina? That's my connection skewing the result.


PapaMidnight

join:2009-01-13
Baltimore, MD

reply to fAcEtIOUs
Rhode Island, on paper, looks like the place to be. But beware of those Speedtest averages. PowerBoost inflates upload speeds on paper. In real world environments, they can be 2/5 the speed, or, in my case, as much as 1/5 (I've been powerboosted to 10mbits up... )..



Matt
All noise, no signal.
Premium
join:2003-07-20
Jamestown, NC
kudos:12

It also looks like they accept business and educational connections, which makes the ranking of 15th even more pathetic, because residential connections on average will be MUCH lower.
--
"What is conservatism? Is it not adherence to the old and tried, against the new and untried?" - Abraham Lincoln



fAcEtIOUs
Premium
join:2002-03-03
kudos:4

2 edits

said by Matt:

It also looks like they accept business and educational connections, which makes the ranking of 15th even more pathetic, because residential connections on average will be MUCH lower.
That data can be easily excluded because the tests clearly identify when a test is from a company or school. Did the universities that did the study exclude that data? Who knows, without pouring thru their whole report. But the key would be were they consistent across all the countries.
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WhatNow
Premium
join:2009-05-06
Charlotte, NC

Pembroke the town is not much bigger then the University and if you are not in one of the apartments that border it your speeds are hit and miss due to where RTs sit and the equipment installed in them. It goes from town to large farm fields within 1/2 mile of the downtown / University area. If Walmart and a very big hardware store that caters to farm supplies meets your shopping needs then you would be very happy to move there. But it would pay you to check what the highest speed internet you can get at that address. It may be dialup or just 3meg dsl.

South Korea
38,622 sq. miles
48,379,392 population
1,274/sq mile pop density
vs
Pennsylvania
46,055 sq. miles
12,448,279 population
274.02/sq. miles

10th in population of US states

I bet if Pennsylvania added 1k of pop/sq. miles the ISPs could up their speed. It costs a lot of money per foot of any kind of cable copper or fiber. If you have a high density your costs per customer is a lot less and your ROI goes way up. If you just took the internet speeds

I would love to see FTTP to everybody that is on the power grid but unless the ISPs start charging a lot more from the existing customers to pay for for the fiber don't look for it. I predict the customers that already get a decent speed will get it before the semi-rural areas outside Pembroke, NC does.


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