Quizzes & Puzzles17 mins ago
Broadband Speed Problems
Big hoo-ha in the news about broadband speeds/www connection failures.
Mine is fine - NW London, Virgin Media. Are we just lucky? What’s your experience?
BillB
Mine is fine - NW London, Virgin Media. Are we just lucky? What’s your experience?
BillB
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Bainbrig....if you are on Virgin, then I presume that you must therefore have cable access, so I am not remotely surprised that you are finding it to be fine.
Most of us access the 'net via a telephone line, that is a wire, not a fibre-optic cable. If people have access to "Fibre to the Cabinet" than they should be getting a reasonable down-load speed. I have a BT line, and access to "Fibre to the Cabinet" and I get about 49 megapixies, which is quite fast enough.
People can use this to measure their current speed :::
http:// www.spe edtest. net/
Most of us access the 'net via a telephone line, that is a wire, not a fibre-optic cable. If people have access to "Fibre to the Cabinet" than they should be getting a reasonable down-load speed. I have a BT line, and access to "Fibre to the Cabinet" and I get about 49 megapixies, which is quite fast enough.
People can use this to measure their current speed :::
http://
I'm also on VM Broadband, so no problems here.
Ignore the advice to use speedtest.net to test your speed - all ISPs configure their networks to give priority to such "tests" and, as such, it's little more than a scam. The funniest thing with it is that, almost without exception, everyone picks their NEAREST speedtest server to test with, because that's what the scam suggests by default. Little surprise that it gives false results! Not every website you connect to will be housed just round the corner from you. The one you're using now, e.g. is located in the States.
The only true way to get anything like an accurate speed test is to download several large files from various sites all over the place until you completely saturate your bandwidth and then add the results together.
Ignore the advice to use speedtest.net to test your speed - all ISPs configure their networks to give priority to such "tests" and, as such, it's little more than a scam. The funniest thing with it is that, almost without exception, everyone picks their NEAREST speedtest server to test with, because that's what the scam suggests by default. Little surprise that it gives false results! Not every website you connect to will be housed just round the corner from you. The one you're using now, e.g. is located in the States.
The only true way to get anything like an accurate speed test is to download several large files from various sites all over the place until you completely saturate your bandwidth and then add the results together.
If you're using any service where the lines are owned by BT (irrespective of who your ISP is), the most accurate speed test available is the one provided by BT Wholesale:
http:// speedte st.btwh olesale .com/
I only get around 10Mbps but that's because I'm happy to stick with an 'ADSL 2+' service. (There's only me in the house so, unlike a house full of teenagers, there aren't lots of people all trying to stream video content simultaneously). I wouldn't really see much difference if I had a far faster download speed available to me.
I experience very few problems but that's possibly because I'm prepared to pay for a 'business' service in order to ensure that I get a favourable contention ratio and, on the rare occasions I might need support, phone calls answered by UK staff on the first ring.
http://
I only get around 10Mbps but that's because I'm happy to stick with an 'ADSL 2+' service. (There's only me in the house so, unlike a house full of teenagers, there aren't lots of people all trying to stream video content simultaneously). I wouldn't really see much difference if I had a far faster download speed available to me.
I experience very few problems but that's possibly because I'm prepared to pay for a 'business' service in order to ensure that I get a favourable contention ratio and, on the rare occasions I might need support, phone calls answered by UK staff on the first ring.