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uploading VS downloading (pg. 2)
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| DeviantxPete |
| At the college I go to, our T3 uses bandwidth plans. There are various amounts of bandwidth-per-week plans. Uploading + Downloading = Bandwidth used. That's how it works here. |
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| Kamikaze Badger |
| 768/256 download/upload is what I have. Upload is generally slower then download, it's a fact of nature. |
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| -=M=- |
| quote: | Originally posted by Orbax
server side software limits upload, the cable never changes |
lol @ the possibility of that theory being correct for adsl |
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| -=M=- |
lol @ the complete lack of understanding of the adsl nature here
and you call yourselves GEEKS?!?! |
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| whiskers |
| quote: | Originally posted by -=M=-
lol @ the complete lack of understanding of the adsl nature here
and you call yourselves GEEKS?!?! |
not everyone is as smart and godlike as you, you'll have to learn to live with it. |
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| -=M=- |
| quote: | Originally posted by whiskers
not everyone is as smart and godlike as you, you'll have to learn to live with it. |
when will people end up being as good as me? |
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| Orbax |
| you do realize that its just a ing piece of metal in a plastic coating, right? That the only thing that could possibly be limiting the rate at which electrical impulses shoot through it is software. |
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| whiskers |
| quote: | Originally posted by Orbax
you do realize that its just a ing piece of metal in a plastic coating, right? That the only thing that could possibly be limiting the rate at which electrical impulses shoot through it is software. |
i want to see you use a cat5 cable 300 meters long :) |
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| SuperFarStucker |
| quote: | Originally posted by Orbax
you do realize that its just a ing piece of metal in a plastic coating, right? That the only thing that could possibly be limiting the rate at which electrical impulses shoot through it is software. | Limiting the rate, yes - but. Resistance, interference, and signal strength all affect signal quality as well. At the protocol level upstream and downstream transfers are identical, just reversed in directions. However, most in home technologies have limited available upstream bandwidth. ADSL= Asynchronous Digital Subscriber Line. Generally speaking, that means your upload will be significantly less than your download... Cable also has limited available upload bandwidth because it was designed to be a downstreaming technology. |
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| 3xx3r7 |
| ADSL as opposed to SDSL. SDSL is only required by some businesses since your D/U ratio equals to one. That is why it is more expensive. |
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| meneedit |
| quote: | Originally posted by Boomer187
however you usually have to pay when you upload, well thats what I saw when I was looking for T1 lines.
is that what you mean. |
bingo ;) |
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| Orbax |
| quote: | Originally posted by whiskers
i want to see you use a cat5 cable 300 meters long :) |
itll just be slower and ty. same speed both ways. Havent you ever used a home network? same speeds if your computers are fast enough...
attenuation and interference have nothing to do with the transition from upload to download. |
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