• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.
  • The forums have been upgraded with support for dark mode. By default it will follow the setting on your system/browser. You may override it by scrolling to the end of the page and clicking the gears icon.

Post your Speedtest.net Speeds!

Is that some sort of dedicated business line? The speeds are waaaaaaaaaay to fast for a residential line. I have easily seen residential with speeds at 300+Mbps, but not with an upload to match it.
I posted a few pages ago. But fiber is hitting residential areas and so far I'm loving it!
After years of living in the country suffering with 3g then spotty 4g and data caps for my internet......fiber has arrived!

 
capture.jpg


I can't complain. A year back it was tipping the scale at around 45Mbps for download and 4Mbps for upload. Centrylink came into my area offering similar speeds for around $45. I was (and still am) only paying $41.95 a month for cable....Comcast/Xfinity came around about the same time and said they increased the speeds to 60Mbps/5Mbps. Speeds have been pretty solid around 80Mbps/6Mbps since the increased speed.
 
6245908400.png

Pretty decent for a wifi.
Still happy.
 
Wow! Some of you guys have really fast internet connection.

I have a decent internet speed. Almost two years ago I signed a two year contract for around 27€ a month for internet and phone package. Naturally, I negotiated lower price with my ISP, otherwise it would be around 35€. :D

net_speed.png
 
The best speed I ever got was last year. And here where I live this kind of speed costs less than 10 dollars per month :D

Best_Internet_Speed_With_Cable.png
 
The gateway server has been decommissioned and I'm just using the E4200 now. I actually feel like pages responded more quickly with the gateway server but, that was probably just because of the local DNS caching speeding up name look-ups but, I almost never see 170Mbit any more though but, that could just be a coincidence.
6288851355.png
 
We are getting another 10Gbps lag from GPW hopefully first of the week. I am gonna see if I can break over iDre4mZ's speeds if I can find a node that will go over 1Gbps to test too.
 


Wifi 3 rooms between router and pc
 
Got a nice little upgrade today

6468148636.png
 
People can harp on comcast all they want, but I pay for 150mb
(this is at home)


Work:
 
Akamai also calculates the average peak connection speed. In this ranking Singapore comes out on top (98.5Mbits/s), followed by Hong Kong (92.6Mbits/s), South Korea (79Mbits/s), Kuwait (76.5Mbits/s) and Romania (71.6Mbits/s).
 
I almost belong here now

capture488.jpg
 
I almost belong here now

capture488.jpg
I hate to guess what that costs down under. I've been toying with the thought of going to 100Mb cable. It's my only alternative to 15Mb DSL where I currently live, because the complex I live in doesn't have FO.

It comes down to weighing the price between Cable TV and 15Mb DSL, or 100Mb cable internet and a streaming TV service. Streaming has it's disadvantages, but so does cable TV.

What really cheeses me is if I want unlimited downloads, the cable price is $90, and that's if I buy my own modem and router. Plus cable can drop to as much as half it's speed at peak usage hours.
 
this is $90pm, 100Mb DSL

As you can tell, achieving that 100Mb is no small feat - i'm three houses away from the node, and still get abysmal speeds vs the actual plan speed
 
this is $90pm, 100Mb DSL

As you can tell, achieving that 100Mb is no small feat - i'm three houses away from the node, and still get abysmal speeds vs the actual plan speed

Unfortunately that's the major downside of xDSL technology. If the wires from your home to the exchange/node aren't good quality, then no matter how close you are, you're going to get major speed reductions. The faster the connection, the more obvious it gets.

Your upload speed is quite good for xDSL though.
 
Back
Top