It's http://www.speedtest.net/de/ where Franfurt a. M. only denotes the server location which is being measured against. Frankfurt a. M. (there are two such city names) is actually known as Germany's central Internet hot spot with several data centers located there.I'm suspicious. That map doesn't look like any state I've seen, and a lot of those words look made-up.
Yeah, we have third-world amounts of guns to go with our third-world internet!Don't you know that taunting those of us who live in the broadband third world is not a good idea?
Most people here don't have 10GbE, much less any hope of seeing 10Gb Internet for quite a while.Don't you know that taunting those of us who live in the broadband third world is not a good idea?
Most people here don't have 10GbE, much less any hope of seeing 10Gb Internet for quite a while.
Though at least I get 20% more bandwidth than advertised, instead of the 20% less that seems to be associated with Gigabit connections.
That's either insanely good DSL or a relatively crappy cell connection.Anyone that is above 16 mbit/s is not a real person.![]()
Yeah, judging by the setup, they're just using plain ol' 1000Base-EX or -ZX. Most fiber ISPs use GPON, which allows for neat things and is good enough for your typical connection. I think it's good for 1.25Gb/s bidirectional, plus RF overlay at 1550nm.I suspect that's largely a function of provisioning; an ISP provisioning a 50Mbps connection can easily configure the cap at 55Mbps or 60Mbps in order to "give them full speed".