How Far Will You Go For Highest Speed Internet? 142
Zecheus (1072058) writes "This community is extraordinarily rural. It is considered among the northernmost in the world. In the summer, temperature rises as high as 40F. There are more polar bears than humans. Even the usual ubiquitous and generous Norwegian health care is out of reach: inhabitants leave for the south to give birth or to die. On the other hand, it enjoys the highest quality Internet experience in the world due to recently installed fiber. Care to give it a try? By the way, the area has a turnover rate of over 25% every year."
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Except the polar bears will be better neighbors.
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i go outside to Skate or Die.
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They go south precisely because it isn't very summery where they live. :)
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Tropics are overrated and the humidity plays havoc with connectors. The margaritas are good, though.
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"Dry" -
That word you keep using. I do not think it means what you think it does. -Inigo Montoya
I lived in Orange County as well as Oceanside. Dry is not the term I would use. When the air is so humid you have to chew it, that is wet. My position is relative, I grew up in a desert and lived at high altitudes the rest of the time except for that foray into SoCal.
Re:I'd Walk A Mile... (Score:4, Funny)
I would walk five hundred miles and I would walk five hundred more, just to be the man who streams Netflix and torrents even that much more...
Re:I'd Walk A Mile... (Score:4, Funny)
So how fast is it...? (Score:5, Insightful)
How do you write an article about the "highest speed internet" in the world without a single quantification of how fast it actually is?
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Did you read the article?
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The most specific the article gets is
.
Given that it's possible to get gbit fiber, well...
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The most specific the article gets is
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Given that it's possible to get gbit fiber, well...
But you *did* read it. See what they did there?
Thus endith the lesson. :)
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Yes. And the closest thing to a quantification was "10 to 20 times as fast as any in the rest of Norway." Which means....what? It tells me that the guy has 43 TB of storage capacity, and even specific climate info about the town, but I'm left to guess the specs of the internet link, which is the subject of the article?
Did I miss something?
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No, no. Not at all. I was simply suggesting that maybe their point wasn't to get statistics out; but, rather, obtain eyeballs.
I think you're totally spot on - what a wasted opportunity and inferior article. They made a claim without substantiating it at any length.
Oh, and sorry if I offended you. That certainly wasn't my intent. The whole thing is humorous to me.
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Oh...never mind...subtle whoosh on my part. :)
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And the closest thing to a quantification was "10 to 20 times as fast as any in the rest of Norway." Which means....what?
A Norwegian will tell you that the rest of Norway is twice as fast as Sweden. A Swede will claim the opposite.
Hope that helps.
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Why, yes, yes I did. Twice, to make sure I wasn't imagining it.
But noooooo, not a single mention of the speed.
I've got fiber right to the little box under my table for 29.95 Euros a month+tax. I have to limit the Bit torrent rate because my hard disk can't keep up with full speed downloads and Windows 7 craps its pants trying to expand the page file to cope (does that make sense to any OS designers outside Redmond?). I'm sure his can't be that much better.
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It's as much uTorrent's fault as it is Window's. It is clearly
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If you're using uTorrent, it incorrectly uses memory mapped files in Windows,
I am, yes.
Maybe I should change...
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Or maybe I should view restricting the bandwidth to a speed the hard disk can cope with as a First-World Problem...
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Also how is the backhaul? (Score:5, Interesting)
I mean sure, they have fast FTTH. Fair enough, but that doesn't do you much good if the backhaul to the rest of the Internet isn't sufficient to support the speeds.
This is something that always gets left out of the "OMG t3h fast internetz!!!" articles on Slashdot. A lot of the "really fast" Internet in the world is basically a big WAN where you have a fast line, and thus fast speeds to your neighbors and ISP, but then lack the backhaul to get those kind of speeds to the wider Internet, since that's the really expensive part.
Not saying that's the case here or not, but it is the kind of info that needs to be included to be useful. Along with, of course, the actual speed.
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Your claim is nonsense. And just for your interest: it is not caled 'backhaul' but 'backbone', or 'interconnect'.
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In this case, the connection out of Svalbard is decent - 10 Gb/s, "with a future potential capacity of 2,500 Gbit/s" via currently unused fiber. See Svalbard Undersea Cable System [wikipedia.org].
One imagines that with the $50 million cost partly funded by NASA, that they also paid some attention to the peering connection at Harstad, where the connection terminates.
Re:So how fast is it...? (Score:5, Informative)
Digging a little they're talking about a 50/50Mbit connection (Norwegian) [teknologia.no], so the article is wildly exaggerated... triple the mean connection yes, not 10-20 times.
And how is that best in the world? (Score:2)
Where I live, you can get cable Internet that is 150/20mbps. It has the backhaul to support it too, you really get those kind of speeds. I've a friend on the other side of the US with FIOS who has even faster, 150/65mbps again with the backhaul to support the speed.
This is in the US too. There are other countries that claim better.
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So much for "fastest in the world".
I have 1000 Mbit at home for 18 bucks a month, flat rate, no limits.
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Size of the pipe. (Score:1)
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Re:Size of the pipe. (Score:4, Insightful)
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If you've just bought a new game on Steam and it's a 20GB download, do you want to wait half an hour (100Mbit) or 3 minutes (Gigabit)? If you're browsing 20MP+ photos online, do the pictures load faster in your browser? What if your disk crashed and you want to get something big from online backup? And as far as I know there's still no BluRay quality streaming service, if you're downloading a torrent then 5 minutes or an hour certainly matters. Yes, 100 to 1000 Mbit is less important than 10 to 100 and even
Back in my day (Score:5, Insightful)
I remember how happy I was the first time I had cable internet. I was beta testing for comcast. Free for the first 6 months. So exciting. Now, I'm old (37) and bandwidth doesn't excite me the way it used to. I'm paying for 10MB I get 12MB... I could get up to 100, but why bother. I come home, sit on my couch and have a beer. The kids can and I can play all the minecraft we want on that 12MB connection.
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Because of the well-known maxim: :-)
The faster you download, the bigger your penis gets
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Because of the well-known maxim: :-)
The faster you download, the bigger your penis gets
It's not the size of your bandwidth, but the motion of the torrents.
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If my dick was growing at the same ratio as my bandwidth, it's end would be approaching the speed of light (assuming a human could maintain relativistic wood).
Re:Back in my day (Score:5, Funny)
The cynic in me would say, all customers of Comcast are beta testing for them...
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I'm happy with a 5 MB connection, I hardly tap it out and the matter of bandwidth caps is also a consideration - I'm not planning to pay money when I hit a cap, it's better to just take a vacation from the interwebs.
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when i explained what a smart TV was to my mom all she said was that it was a way to make you spend more money, which is true
all the faster connections do is make impulsive challenged people buy something NOW and spend more money
Becoming content (Score:2)
Becoming content is the first step to becoming complacent.
How do you become content?
I've heard about providing content, but becoming content? Is that, like, entering the matrix?
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Becoming content is the first step to becoming complacent.
How do you become content?
I've heard about providing content, but becoming content? Is that, like, entering the matrix?
I think it has something to do with Facebook. Or maybe Google.
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Becoming content is the first step to becoming complacent.
How do you become content?
I've heard about providing content, but becoming content?
Facebook.
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Technology is the foundation of all of society. It is the wheel, it is hospitals, it is the phone, is is electricity. Losing fervor about technology is like giving up on life and the betterment of society. Communications is the backbone of all technology, without the sharing of ideas, nothing would be accomplished.
That's right, you have a moral obligation to buy the fastest internet access available to you.
Hmm, now that I think about it, I'm going to try this argument on my wife. If she doesn't let me buy an ultrabook, she hates humanity.
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When I was younger, I thought this way.
Now I've realized that with each new/faster thing, it's better to weight the pros and cons.
Maybe the faster internet connection ISN'T the best thing to spend money on, and buying a gym membership more rewarding.
My old tech watch gives me instant time for no cost, so I used it instead of a "pocketwatch/smartphone" combo.
So....
new for new's sake isn't new, it's just being taken advantage of.
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Bandwidth doesn't really matter after a certain point, 10 Mb is certainly enough for most purposes. Latency is important, though. I'd rather have a 10 Mb connection with no significant latency than an 100 (or 1000) Mb connection with an annoying latency.
My current connection is 1 Gb up and down (campus student housing network), with the real download bandwidth being around one third of that at peak times. I see no significant difference to my previous 100 Mb up/down, as no services support this high speeds.
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Also, 640k will be enough for anyone!
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i have 20/2 and netflix only needs 5 down for HD
i can stream netflix and live TV or hbo go at the same time with no problems
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Not every game needs 2 million players, but once they start digitizing the real world, we could see realistic reenactments of famous wars. Another application would be bigger MMORPGS. Some say,"Who needs that many players at once." But I say games have always trended better when the game play li
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Sir, I work with the CIA and our sentiment analysis filters have flagged your post with a positive reaction towards Comcast Corporation. Please use this syntax in the future to assist us in avoiding such false positives: <span data-date-posted="April 1"></span>
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I guess you are too young to remember downloading DOOM on at 2400bps modem. That took about 2 hours... And that is all you could do with your PC. Unless you had an expensive OS/Shell like OS2 or Desqview. And still your modem was fully occupied.
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BBSs died off? That's why no one is playing Usurper with me any more!
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The advantage of living in a densely populated area was that I could take a HDD, go to a friend and transfer it directly. The trip back and forth, couple beers and transfer, added up, more than matched downloading it through modem lines, alone and munching own nails.
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Still the way to swap media collections.
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In a metropolitan area? Not really. Everyone I know has either 500 or 1000 Mbit/s bandwidth, and we just temporarily share folders through filezilla when needed.
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It takes days to copy my media collection at SATA speed.
How far? Not very... (Score:3, Insightful)
Eventually it will come to me. Every couple of years I get a free upgrade as the pipe gets fatter. I can wait.
My speed is fine, fix the latency (Score:4, Interesting)
Bad Neighborhood (Score:2)
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However, my latency seems to rise few ms every year.
That's just old age catching up with you. You need more fiber.
It's only fast for now... (Score:2)
As soon as all your neighbours start using it too, it'll slow down.
*ducks and runs*
turnover? (Score:2)
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What repopulates the area? Easy.
Taxes & import duty are very tiny. You've got some of the most beautiful nature you can imagine. There's lots of researchers connected with universities etc. - making for lots of interesting people to talk with.
A lot of the turnover is actually students wrapping up their studies.
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Taxes & import duty are very tiny.
Are those different than the rest of the country?
Rural Electrification Act of 1935... (Score:2)
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why can't these republicans, and the rural areas are almost fully republican who preach the evils of taxes and high government spending not pay for it themselves? all the tea party nonsense is how bad the blue high tax parts of the country are and yet it's the red states that suck up most of the federal government money for airports that like 5 people use in a year and bridges with one car a day of traffic
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yeah, billions in pork to build and support airports in rural areas along with hardly used bridges and lots of other "infrastructure"
and i pay a tax to build out telecommunications in rural areas in the form of USF
lots of studies show that the blue areas pay the most taxes and the red areas use up most of the federal spending while they preach independence and whatever
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Just as an FYI. Obama administration has done a large number of federal grants to get fiber to rural schools, hospitals, libraries, and court houses. These grants allowed the companies to add on any commercial business along the way. These grants as far as I know do not include residential access however. You'll find that going to legal zoom and quickly creating an LLC will give you access however. We we're finally able to go from a T1@$800/month to 10Mbps at $500/month. Or in our case 50Mbit @ $900/month.
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We did.
Back in the '90s we gave $2B to the telcos to run
Which they did. Not even waiting to hear the last half of the sentence.
One part conveniently left out (Score:5, Insightful)
One part conveniently left out is the military's part in this, they want fiber optics for a bunch of NATO surveillance activities, polar satellites and so on. It's pretty obvious why if you look at a map [unep.org]. Supplying the about 2600 permanent inhabitants with really fast broadband (100% fiber optics now) is just a side effect. True, this cabin area about 3 miles from the main settlement wasn't originally included in the plans, but when the inhabitants dig the ditch and all the fiber company has to do is roll out the cable drum it's a pretty good deal for them too. There are several rural areas - though not quite that remote - here in Norway which has done the digging as a community effort to make the cost bearable for the fiber company. Just last quarter the median broadband in Norway passed 10 Mbit/s, the mean is 18.4 Mbit/s and improving at a nice pace.
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Supplying the about 2600 permanent inhabitants with really fast broadband (100% fiber optics now) is just a side effect.
That's not how the telco official described it. He seemed to say that they were treating Svalbard as a small version of mainland Norway, where they could try new things and get quick feedback to make sure they're doing it right. He claimed that Svalbard was 10 years ahead of mainland Norway. He also suggested that they were seeing substantially lower maintenance costs with fiber, and were looking into removing all of the phone lines and coax and just using fiber. He seemed to imply that all of this was
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That's not how the telco official described it. He seemed to say that they were treating Svalbard as a small version of mainland Norway, where they could try new things and get quick feedback to make sure they're doing it right. He claimed that Svalbard was 10 years ahead of mainland Norway. He also suggested that they were seeing substantially lower maintenance costs with fiber, and were looking into removing all of the phone lines and coax and just using fiber. He seemed to imply that all of this was in preparation for rollout across mainland Norway.
We have a lot of cheaper places they could use as test beds, they don't pull long underwater fiber cables just for that but as PR it sounds better. It is true that they're planning to move off copper though, actually the first trial county has already gone all fiber - no more copper service just fiber + mobile and maybe cable for those who already have that. They've said the copper network is supposed to be phased out by 2017, so if Svalbard is 10 years ahead then they're many years behind schedule on the m
50 - 100 Mb/s (Score:4, Informative)
Of course Telenor themselves mention the bandwidth: http://www.telenor.com/media/a... [telenor.com]
Fibre optic with lots of Gb/s to the European mainland: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S... [wikipedia.org]
Can be noted that any citizen of a country which has signed the Svalbard treaty can move there without needing any permit.
ISP monthly bandwidth limits temper speed (Score:1)
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It has gotten seriously out of control. There are some monthly plans around where I live where you can hit your Monthly cap in well under an hour of usage. What use is that?
It's the upload speed that matters (Score:1)
Wait until... (Score:2)
Nothing in article says highest speed in the world (Score:2)
Typical slashdot bad editors. Fastest in Norway != fastest in world.
I now live in a small beach town in Uruguay, on a dirt road, and I got a free upgrade to fibre-to-home, which is being extended to every home in Uruguay. Time for me to get my bogus submission ready for "Uruguay has the best internet in the world". Just because a country is socialist on basic services, and extends fiber to everywhere, does not make it the best in the world. Makes it damn good, but "best" or as hyperbolically stated, "the hi
I doubt it. (Score:2)
Is it standard Internet access or Internet II access?
Because Internet II kicks the ever living hell out of standard internet even with the best and shiniest fiber connections. Your in route switches and routing means everything and Internet II still is massively faster than the old public internet.
Um, thanks, no (Score:2)
I live on the edge of the urban growth boundary in my area, and have fiber to the house, so internet access is just fine, thanks. And we have a total lack of polar bears here. Health care sucks, but we can do our own medical research on the net and order medical supplies from Amazon, so I guess it's not all bad.
How Far Will I Go? (Score:2)
Well I won't, but I would have to leave my continent to get decent Internet.
At least Northern Norwegia borders places with good Internet speed, so all they needed was a few dozen miles of cable. As a rural Canadian I would have to cross Oceans to get to decent Internet.
More polar bears than humans? (Score:2)
Hell, sign me up
Alaska (Score:1)
Bandwidth (Score:2)
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Bandwidth is important because it's usually a bottleneck. When your ISP connection is faster than your LAN, faster than anything upstream from your ISP, and faster than your disk drives, the exact speed is irrelevant.
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"-1: Off-Topic" x 15 ;-)
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I love you, too, apk, we make quite the pair. I'd be offended by all this if I hadn't anticipated it when I posted my GP troll...