Ok, I'll admit it. This is a video I can share with my mum or sister and be sure they'd understand till the end. You explain very well the concept without losing some people with the technical complexity.
Wow... Super explained.... You have a really great way for explanation and thus your this video is universal. Absolutely for everyone , be it technical or Non Technical. Thanks. Keep making informative videos
Dude you have a VERY clear and good youtube voice, you shouldve/should continue making video in Anything, seriously you have the voice people will listen. Find something to make videos about and talk.
In New Zealand there is 4G and when I last tested it, it was about 80mbps down and 50mbps up. We have LTE as well but it's only available on Apple iPads and Android Tablets weirdly.
As far as I know the throughput is not the amount of data you send but rather is the amount of bits the receiver gets in a given time. For example, I may have a 1 Mbps link and send 1 Tbps on it. Of course the extra traffic will be dropped or be queued up. It doesn't means the throughput would be 1 Tbps in this case.
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We don't have Broadband we have Radio based internet ground-based internet as in I depend on my internet from a radio antenna on a tower 9 miles from my house 20 megabytes per second Unlimited and 4 megabytes upload speed Unlimited. My radio base internet is affected by the weather if it rains outside my internet suffers
Is it broadband if it is not a sustained, un-throttled bandwidth, of at least 768 Kbps? This use to be the FCC definition, until they removed it from its website. Using DD-WRT on a supported firewall/router you can get your bandwidth in real time, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, every day of the year. With DD-WRT you will learn that 100% of cable companies throttle their bandwidth, especially upstream, to lower than 756Kbps...does not matter what they promise (typically 20 Mbps downstream / 4 Mbps upstream or 20 Mb / 4Mb). You see Speedtests lie, they all do. With DD-WRT you will ONLY see your 'throughput' open up during the speedtest. The millisecond the speed test ends, your throughput, your bandwidth, gets severely throttled. Typical throttled throughput is less than 200 Kbps downstream upstream and less than 300 Kbps downstream. Makes that 768Kbps number in the first paragraph seem huge, doesn't it! Probably why the FCC took that definition off their website. Probably why no cable company or ISP will give you a broadband/throughput 'guarrantee'. Their business model depends on them giving you less and charging you more. ALWAYS. The solution is Fiber To The Home (FTTH), not FTTN or FTTP or any other fiber solution that is less than FTTH, the reason is simple...with FTTH your connection goes from your home to the switching station, you do not share it with your neighbors, thus their is no business reason to throttle your throughput. Of course companies like FIOS (50M/5M) still do, even though it is not neccessary if they build out their fiber correctly. Remember this, if they offer the same throughput upstream as downstream, i.e. 5Mbps/5Mbps or 10Mpbs/10Mbps or 20Mpbs/20Mbps or 100Mbps/100Mbps. Per the video, as of 2015, the FCC has defined 'broadband' as 25Mbps/6Mbps, note the upstream is less than the downstream...so you know it is not FTTH. If you had 5Mbps/5Mbps, not throttled (limited) in any way, you would love it. Less than 30 cities in the USA have sychronous, bi-directional bandwidth, they are all FTTH communities. If they are in one of the 20 states that Replublicants have limited competition, they got it before those laws went into efect, North Carolina Wilson NC got it, Raleigh NC got FTTH, than the legislature (Republican controlled) passed laws preventing any other cities from getting FTTH. Guess who paid for that law, yes you guessed it, the Cable companies and telecoms. And they wonder why people cut their cords.... Think this way, DSL, promises less, but gives you more as they throttle less than cable companies do. Yes DSL internet providers do thottle, but they give you more bandwidth than the cable companies...your speedtest lies...get DD-WRT and learn your real bandwidth in real time...