Glad to be of service.Charles L. Cotton wrote:Thanks, you just saved me some time looking for "something else."NcongruNt wrote:Chas,
A T1 by definition is limited to 1.5Mbx1.5Mb. That's 1536Kb x 1536Kb (minus some overhead). The reason it is so expensive is that upload and the fact that it's a commercial line, which means much better support. Your upload is far and above everyone else's here (aside from KB5AKO, but he didn't post the details of his connection). From what you posted, it looks like very little of your line was being used during that test, and what is being used is easily explained by phone traffic and very light usage.
John
For the record, I'd sooner have a T1 line like yours than a 5Mbx512Kb which seems to be pretty common in everyone else's posts. A T1 is more reliable, consistent, and has dedicated bandwidth, and appropriate for many more services than a residential DSL or cable line. In fact, I've had T1 lines running into my home in the past, I just can't afford that anymore (and you can't normally get one in an apartment anyway).
Chas.
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- Wed Dec 31, 2008 4:43 pm
- Forum: Off-Topic
- Topic: Broadband or Dial-Up
- Replies: 53
- Views: 5730
Re: Broadband or Dial-Up
- Wed Dec 31, 2008 4:41 pm
- Forum: Off-Topic
- Topic: Broadband or Dial-Up
- Replies: 53
- Views: 5730
Re: Broadband or Dial-Up
2000ms latency is about right. From the geostationary orbit heights required by satellite internet services, it takes almost a second for the data to get up there, and almost another second to get back down. Without a breakthrough in physics (such as sub-space communication ), that's going to be the best latency you're ever going to achieve on a satellite connection. It's physically impossible to get otherwise.TexasComputerDude wrote:something like 200kbpsNcongruNt wrote:How's your upload? Being a sysadmin, I could never go for the satellite setup, due to the 1sec+ lag on interactive sessions on a satellite link (such as ssh or remote desktop).TexasComputerDude wrote:I've got satellite, I've got 1.5Mbps for almost 400 MB then about 1/2 the speed of dialup for the next 24 hour period.
I pay 120$ a month :-(
I've done some VNC stuff from it and its not THAT bad lag wise. Its usable.
I have noticed problems logging into certain websites like myspace.
Games on the other hand, lol, I think I've set the latency record in battlefield 2142. I logged in just for fun and had something like a 2000 ping.
I would be fine with it if they offered an unlimited download package, 400MB in 24 hours means I can't even update windows. (except from like 3am to 5am)
VNC sessions have some tricks like caching that make it appear less latent than it really is. An interactive command-line session such as ssh will have that two-second lag no matter what.
- Wed Dec 31, 2008 4:24 pm
- Forum: Off-Topic
- Topic: Broadband or Dial-Up
- Replies: 53
- Views: 5730
Re: Broadband or Dial-Up
Chas,
A T1 by definition is limited to 1.5Mbx1.5Mb. That's 1536Kb x 1536Kb (minus some overhead). The reason it is so expensive is that upload and the fact that it's a commercial line, which means much better support. Your upload is far and above everyone else's here (aside from KB5AKO, but he didn't post the details of his connection). From what you posted, it looks like very little of your line was being used during that test, and what is being used is easily explained by phone traffic and very light usage.
John
For the record, I'd sooner have a T1 line like yours than a 5Mbx512Kb which seems to be pretty common in everyone else's posts. A T1 is more reliable, consistent, and has dedicated bandwidth, and appropriate for many more services than a residential DSL or cable line. In fact, I've had T1 lines running into my home in the past, I just can't afford that anymore (and you can't normally get one in an apartment anyway).
- Wed Dec 31, 2008 4:20 pm
- Forum: Off-Topic
- Topic: Broadband or Dial-Up
- Replies: 53
- Views: 5730
Re: Broadband or Dial-Up
How's your upload? Being a sysadmin, I could never go for the satellite setup, due to the 1sec+ lag on interactive sessions on a satellite link (such as ssh or remote desktop).TexasComputerDude wrote:I've got satellite, I've got 1.5Mbps for almost 400 MB then about 1/2 the speed of dialup for the next 24 hour period.
I pay 120$ a month :-(