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interweb upgrade. this is laptop direct into cable modem, mind. I need to tweak my router to get better than 13Mbps. this will do until VDSL or fibre broadband arrives in our neighbourhood.
might have to edit some images now.
Speedtest_voda_chc_20130831_2
This is effective bandwidths of AIS 3G at Muang district Chonburi. I used EEEPC 1000H + usb cable + nokia E71 for the measurment.
Ps. nokia E71 's 3G HSDPA maximum speed is 3.6 Mbps for downstream and 384 Kbps for upstream.
OK. So this is a brief comparison between two closely related MacBook Pro 13.3" unibody laptops with a simple boot speed test. The Laptop on the left is a Late 2010 with an intel Dual Core 2.4 ghz Processor. The upgrade this video is demonstrating is found in the Harddrive. The standard 5400 RPM drive was replaced with a Seagate Momentus XT 750 GB 7200RPM SATA 6Gb/s 32 MB Cache 2.5 Inch Solid State Hybrid Drive ST750LX003, as well as a slight RAM upgrade to 8GB of 1067 DDR3.
In contrast, the macbook on the right is a stock late 2011 MacBook Pro with an Intel i5 2.3 ghz Processor, 4 Gb of 1333 mhz DDR3 Ram, and a 320 GB 5400 RPM Hitachi 2.5" Hard Drive.
My average boot time with the new upgrades in my late 2010 model is between 8-10 seconds from a full power down. To do the upgrade yourself, you will simply need a #00 Phillips and T6 screwdrivers.
I picked mine up from Amazon, but you can grab yours at www.amazon.com or www.bhphoto.com each around the same price, but different shipping speeds depending on your "Prime" status.
*Ignore the stumble at the beginning describing the drive - recorded this on a spur of the moment*
How to check Internet speed from the command line on Linux
If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com
This shows my Internet Speed from Time Warner Cable. You can run that test at internetfrog.com/mypc/speedtest/
How to check Internet speed from the command line on Linux
If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com
في دولنا العربية والعالم الثالث يعتبر اداة قياس سرعة الآنترنت من بين الاساسيات التي ترافقها دائما ، فرغم الصبيب القليل الذي تتمنى علينا به شركات الاتصال الا انه لا يصل إلى المسستوى المطلوب ويتم خنق الصبيب في مرات عديدة في اليوم ، لهذا كثيرا ما نستعمل خدمة “speedtest” للتأكد من سرعة ...
www.3faf.com/2016/05/20/%d9%85%d9%88%d9%82%d8%b9-%d8%ac%d...
Now testing Samsung Galaxy S4 speedtest on Lisbon Portugal in 4G LTE not to much diferent from iPhone Speedtest, but it was on diferent places.
Network TMN
Amoreiras
just realized that with my new wristwatch (and relatively new SanDisk Extreme III SD card) i could re-attempt the burst mode speed test.
the results are pretty much what i was expecting, the shot-rate is essentially unchanged (~4fps) but the sustained rate-of-fire is greatly increased thanks to the high write-speed of the Class 6 SD card.
there's 81 shots here and i only stopped because a 9x9 grid seemed big enough. plus i like the number 9.
last time i cropped & aligned all 36 shots manually, this time i tried using Adobe Bridge's contact sheet export feature. still not sure how i feel about that.
bottom line: the D5000 RULZ, as does SanDisk.
(same setup as before - JPEG-only, Medium size, Fine quality onto a 4GB SanDisk Extreme III Class 6 SDHC card)
While the upload speed is a bit painful, the new Telus/Bell HSPA network strikes me as awfully fast for mobile download speeds. Tethering is going to be great. These are all things I never thought I'd say about mobile in Canada.
Summary:
Encrypted SSD about 40 percentage points slower than non-encrypted SSD, but still yber fast over traditional HDD.
Access the benchmarks directly at XBench Database and do your own comparisons:
"SSD17" MacBook (Core 2) — Snow Leopard, non-encrypted SSD
db.xbench.com/merge.xhtml?doc2=446997
"SSD17-Lion-Encryption" MacBook Pro — Lion, encrypted SSD
db.xbench.com/merge.xhtml?doc2=543713
"TK17" MacBook Pro (Core 2) — 2008 Snow Leopard/Leopard non-encrypted HDD
db.xbench.com/merge.xhtml?doc2=446987
Diclaimer: For some reason Xbench has/had troubles running on OS X Lion, and even now I was only able to run parts of the test. Because of this hassle I missed the opportunity to do non-encrypted Snow Leopard vs. non-encrypted Lion SSD test to see the potential effect of the new SSD Trim functionality. I'll leave that to someone else. :)
Here you can see the bandwidth hit a VPN connection makes. Instead of 1,780 kbps, my download bandwidth speed is just 340 kbps. Same WiFi hotspot, and same test just about 30 seconds after the first one. This is about one-fifth as fast. :-(
On a 200Mbps/100Mbps (down/up) Fiber Optics connection. Wi-Fi is maxed out. Not bad. Not bad at all :)
Called my internet provider Telfort for the first time in over 7 years. They were charging 5 euros a month for a phone landline, which is quite ludicrous, so I had to abandon my beloved 020-6895662 I'd been using for some 15 years. En passant I tested the aDSL which is fast and acceptable for me.
Using a VPN connection is really important when you are using a public hotspot, but it significantly hurts your bandwidth / connectivity speed. This shows my current download speed WITHOUT VPN is about 1.78 Mbps, or 1,780 kbps.
1st Day of Jumping: SpeedTest. 2014 World Equestrian Games. Penelope LEPREVOST (FRA). Flora de Mariposa
Speeds over the free Net connection at the DGI Byen hotel in Copenhagen. This is to a server in New York, over my own little wi-fi access point. Not bad.
Comcast sent me a post card telling me I could upgrade my cable from 6MB/384kb to 16MB/1MB up. This is the first time I get it to test close to advertisement. The cost? $10 more per month.
Hell yeah.
Test from www.speakeasy.net/speedtest/
I need to test this with My Galaxy S4 and HTC One when it arrives.
Network: Vodafone
Margem Sul Fórum
Speed at our temporary home, in the dining room where the PowerBooks are having trouble with download speed, measured by Speakeasy. The connection is via Cox High Speed Internet, 250 feet of ethernet cable run through the woods, and a Netgear hub/router. The computer is an IBM ThinkPad T40 laptop running Novell (SUSE ) Linux Desktop.
These are regular speeds over a residential fiber optic connection. And the monthly cost is cheaper than cable and DSL.
No problem watching two 1080p HD videos in full screen size at the same time. And I don't have to wait for them to buffer. Just click play as soon as both open and they never stop to buffer.
Downloading large files is a snap.
Uploading large files in no time at all.
I can download and upload any size files at the same time, even many very large ones (several GBs each).
This ISP has a 1GB fiber optic connection to the Internet back-haul, but they throttle individual customers to much lower speeds as you can see.
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