On Fri, 2009-08-14 at 08:29 -0700, Daniel B. Thurman wrote: > I have been testing my residential ISP/DSL-Landline > connections and wanted to make sure that I was getting > what I am paying for. Supposedly, one can use the various > website based "speed test" tools to determine their upload > and download speeds. > > Are these "speed test" tools credible and can they > be trusted? > > Of the several sites I have tried, they all more or less > seemed to be in close agreement with one another in > terms of the bandwidth speeds, i.e. my connection > speed is quoted at 768KB/s up and 3MB/s down, > and the farther away from central, the more reduced > is the speeds are. > > The average speed tools says that I have measured > speeds of 720-30 KB/s up and 2.0-5MB/s down. > > Why is it however, that when downloading software > from the various Linux/M$ and other downloads sites > I am seeing on average, speeds of 200-320(max) KB/s > and never see anything much faster than that? Yes. 3 megaBITs per second is just over 300 kiloBYTEs per second. There are 8 bits per byte, plus there's packet and protocol overhead, so a 10:1 ratio between the numbers is normal. > So, does that mean I am wasting money by going from > 768KB/s Up / 768KB/s Down to 768KB/s Up / 3MB/s > Down since I will never obtain download speeds faster > than the Upload limit of 768KB/s ??? No, if you downgraded to 768 kilobit/sec service you would expect a maximum download speed of around 75-80 kilobytes per second. -Chris -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines