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The Internet Networking United States Technology

The Fastest ISPs In the US 199

adeelarshad82 writes "PCMag recently put Internet browsing speeds to the test to see which ISP was the fastest. The results were based on a quarter million tests run between May 1, 2009, and April 30, 2010, by more than 6,000 users. The tests were carried out using SurfSpeed, which takes into account the complete, real-world download time of a web page to a browser. According to the results, Verizon's FiOS took the top spot as the nation's fastest ISP, with a SurfSpeed score of 1.23 Mbps. Interestingly though, of all the regions where Verizon's FiOS is available, its dominance is only seen in the northeast and the west, whereas cable service from Cox and Comcast won out in the southern region. Moreover, cable through Cox and Optimum Online beat AT&T's fiber optic service in the nationwide results, with SurfSpeeds of 1.14Mbps, 1.12Mbps, and 1.06Mbps respectively. The worst results mostly consisted of DSL providers, bottoming out at 544 Kbps from Frontier and going up to 882Kbps by Earthlink. Other interesting facts noted in the test were that broadband penetration was highest in Rhode Island and lowest in Mississippi, while the average Internet bill was highest in Delaware and lowest in Arkansas."
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The Fastest ISPs In the US

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  • Neat, but... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Chih ( 1284150 ) on Saturday June 26, 2010 @01:32PM (#32703248)
    I'm more interested in cap numbers these days
  • by t0qer ( 230538 ) on Saturday June 26, 2010 @01:43PM (#32703322) Homepage Journal

    Even though Speakeasy was slashdot recommended, a lot of my geek friends used it, I had to cut them this year.

    I never got the advertised speed out of them for what I was paying. My business was close to the CO, but when I'd complain their answer would always be "Replace the wire going from the pole into your building"

    Why should I have to do that? I'm old, I hurt when I fall. NO thanks.

    So after 6 years with SE, I called up Comcast. They sent an installer who made sure everything was working right. My speeds were out of sight, 20mbps down and 5mbps up. My bill is $20@mo less too.

    DSL can compete, but they have to give up a little margin for better customer service.

  • by Josh Triplett ( 874994 ) on Saturday June 26, 2010 @01:54PM (#32703410) Homepage

    Despite using bandwidth units (Mbps), their "SurfSpeed" "benchmark" actually depends heavily on latency, as it tries to simulate a web browser fetching resources sequentially from a site as it discovers them.

    Found this report analyzing the article and the benchmark: http://blog.ookla.com/2010/06/23/the-fastest-isps-not-quite/ [ookla.com]

  • Re:Only 1.23 Mbps? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by CastrTroy ( 595695 ) on Saturday June 26, 2010 @01:58PM (#32703436)
    Sounds a little odd. How do you know the users aren't downloading multiple things at the same time? I live in Canada, and I am on the 3 mbit plan with Rogers. When I'm downloading, I almost always max it out. Others I know on faster plans are also able to max out their 5 mbit and 10 mbit connections all the tims. Maybe things are different in the US, but I really hope things are this bad.
  • Re:Mississippi (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Mitsoid ( 837831 ) on Saturday June 26, 2010 @02:21PM (#32703574)
    Yes, you can buy higher speed and thus invalidate the 'findings' of the article... Which is really just self-promotion with a fancy title to attract attention.

    I was kinda disappointed that the article doesn't address maximum speed, or average speed amongst all "5mbps" connections, instead it lumps in DSL, Cable, and Fiber and says "HEY LoOk! Fiber is usually faster!!"

    What this is really testing is "How much speed do Americans purchase, by region,"... it's just.. almost.. completely useless... except for a few statistical data points that are not frequently mentioned (broadband penetration by state).. We're comparing ISP by what the end-users paid for, as opposed to what end users CAN pay for (i.e. the limit of the technology)... or, as an alternative test, they could have tested Like-speed connections average performance across carriers, but instead they are grouping DSL, Fiber, and Cable..... and ignoring that some people pay $20 for internet while others want to pay $50 (for semi-basic home internet service) and claiming an ISP is "The best" because they have more users that spend more money on internet. (or they have less users but much higher speed to result in the same data skewing of results).

    So yeah, Metrics, IMO, are mostly crap. And Mississippi can pull ahead of every state in this 'survey' simply by spending an extra $5... hell for $10 extra you can probably get speeds 5 times faster then most of the United States!
  • Re:Only 1.23 Mbps? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by zero0ne ( 1309517 ) on Saturday June 26, 2010 @02:36PM (#32703666) Journal

    I have FioS @ 25/25, and I can EASILY get to that max on a normal basis:

    STEAM download: ~3MB/s
    ISO download from MSDN site (bizspark license): ~2.6MB/s

    Clearly browsing an actual site is going to go slower, as you have to take into account a lot more things since it just isn't one large file.

    However, did these results take into account video streaming? game playing, etc etc? All of those things would run well above that 2Mbps streaming HD content.

  • by moxley ( 895517 ) on Saturday June 26, 2010 @02:54PM (#32703800)

    As everyone has pointed out, this test in this article really isn't measuring the bandwidth that your ISP is providing; it's like saying "let's see how fast you can run - oh, by the way, you'll be wearing this heavy backpack, dodging traffic." They say it's real world surf performance, but there are so many variables at work here that it really isn;t a very useful metric.

    You can use the JAVA or Flash based speed tests at places like www.broadbandreports.com (which is a great site BTW if you aren't familiar for it) those tests are fairly accurate - but not always.

    The best, most accurate way I have found to test whether I am getting the speeds I am supposed to, is to use newsleecher and download a bunch of binaries from my premium newsgroup provider. I use Giganews, and I have been really happy with them, but I assume the other top tier newsgroup providers are similar..... With most premium news providers, you get multiple connections and most of the good ones can max out your connection at anytime, provided you are using multiple connections.

    I'm sure that most people here know this, but if not: - to figure out if you're getting what you're supposed to, once you're as certain as you can be that you are maxing out your connection, take youy average download speed in megabytes and multiply it by 8.

    I live in Philly and have a 22 megabit at home, and 50 megabit at work.

    When downloading at home I get about 2.8 megabytes/sec.....when downloading at work I get about 6.2 megabits per second.......so 2.8 x 8 = 22.4 and 6.2 x 8 = 49.6 So all is well...if I notice that something seems to be off, or slow - the first thing I do is queue up some binaries and check....

  • by Josh Triplett ( 874994 ) on Saturday June 26, 2010 @03:59PM (#32704222) Homepage

    According to the article I linked to, they access a grand total of 10 sites: microsoft.com, aol.com, ebay.com, msn.com, google.com, yahoo.com, mapquest.com, go.com, apple.com, and myspace.com.

    On the one hand, I'd expect none of those sites to have a slower connection than any consumer ISP. (Some sites with large files such as video sites will throttle for bandwidth reasons, but no sane site throttles HTML and similar; better to just serve the files quickly and close the connection.)

    On the other hand, that doesn't look like a particularly representative sample of "top" sites. Who uses mapquest anymore? And how often does the average user visit microsoft.com or apple.com? (As opposed to msn.com or live.com, which seem somewhat more likely for regular visits. Windows Update doesn't count, since *hopefully* that gets much more non-interactive use than interactive use. Similarly for the various Apple services, which don't necessarily live on the same server as apple.com.)

    But in any case, the bandwidth of the server will matter less to SurfSpeed than the latency of responding to each request quickly so it can start the next one.

    The concept of a benchmark for real-world site load times seems perfectly reasonable, but it should not have a misleading unit of "Mbps". A better idea: measure the total number of milliseconds required for page loads during some representative real-world browsing paths (*not* just site front pages either).

  • Re:Only 1.23 Mbps? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by osu-neko ( 2604 ) on Saturday June 26, 2010 @04:43PM (#32704514)

    Fair point, but it still sucks that the figure is even that low. I honestly thought it would be much higher - here in the UK, iChoons tells me it pulls songs from the music store at about 16Mbps, and that's on what's advertised as 20Mbps.

    Would you expect a measurement of the speed of car driving through downtown on a busy day while obeying all traffic laws to be anything close to the car's maximum speed? Why would you expect a the number to be higher?

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