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2011-01-16
, 18:56
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Posts: 458 |
Thanked: 274 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
@ Finland
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#2
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2011-01-17
, 21:33
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Posts: 1,258 |
Thanked: 672 times |
Joined on Mar 2009
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#3
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2011-01-17
, 21:55
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Posts: 5 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Oct 2010
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#4
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2011-01-17
, 21:57
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Posts: 1,042 |
Thanked: 430 times |
Joined on May 2010
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#5
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2011-01-18
, 05:52
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Posts: 1,258 |
Thanked: 672 times |
Joined on Mar 2009
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#6
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2011-01-18
, 06:25
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Posts: 208 |
Thanked: 91 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
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#7
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2011-01-18
, 07:14
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Posts: 32 |
Thanked: 12 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Finland
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#8
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I have a question about 3G broadband speeds, and whether speed actually matters if we always have the bottleneck of latency or ping. Let me explain:
In Finland, we have truly unlimited data plans,so the biggest difference between operators is the promised theoretical maximum speed that can be achieved in the network. Some promise 3Mbps, some up to 15Mbps.
My question is this: does the promised maximum speed of the 3G network really matter, as 3G broadband always suffers from relatively high latency (if compared to ADSL for example)? Can we ever truly enjoy the promised speed of the 3G network in browsing web pages, if we always have the initial latency to deal with before the page begins to load?
Here's my speedtest.net pic on my N900:
This was taken at a particularly congested time and spot in the network, as at best I can get up to 6Mbps speeds with a ping of around 150ms.
Here's my cable connection speestest.net pic:
It's a bit optimistic on the speed, I really only have a 40Mbps line.
Even if the speeds in these two pictures were reversed, would I really feel it on my phone if I still had to deal with that horrendous ping of 500ms?
BTW: I would also be interested if people from different countries would post their speedtest.net (or similar) results and state what is the speed promised by their internet provider!
--
Find me on Twitter: @creip
Please read my blog: "PeakMobility", which deals with MeeGo/Maemo, Windows Phone and mobile technology in general from a hedonistic user point-of-view: http://peakmob.blogspot.com/