xty wrote:nuzbim wrote:Data Communications ( 10^x )
bits 1540000 b
kilobits 1540 Kb
megabits 1.54 Mb
gigabits 0.00154 Gb
terabits 0.00000154 Tb
Coming from software background, I never knew this 1540 calc.
I thought 1 Byte = 8 bits and 1 Kbits = 1024 bits. And assume the ISP Internet connection package follow this calc. If it follow yours, then it becomes worse, far less than 50-80%.
Bits and Bytes - slight difference.
There are 8 bits to a byte and so on, but to make it easy:
http://web.forret.com/tools/bandwidth.a ... &unit=Mbps
The theoretical maximum on a 1 Mbps connection is 125 Kilobytes Per Second.
With respect to Du, the bandwidth is limited at the router using a throttling mechanism, which is why occasionally it bursts over 125 because in order for the throttling to occur, it must exceed the set limit (too much overhead to inspect traffic continuously, hence only traffic exceeding the definied limits gets throttled) - but of course it has already exceeded when throttled which is why you get spikes.
I've downloaded small files at 200+ Kilobytes per second because they came and went before the throttling had a chance.
This differs from ADSL which when handshaking agrees on a maximum with the modem and D-SLAM, and hardware limits the bandwidth to this.