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Debate
May 18, 2006 0:54:37 GMT -5
Post by degicank on May 18, 2006 0:54:37 GMT -5
We talked about this before, my town has ADSL2+ at 24,000,000 bps
and yours?
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Debate
May 18, 2006 12:46:39 GMT -5
Post by Bill on May 18, 2006 12:46:39 GMT -5
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Debate
May 18, 2006 12:59:25 GMT -5
Post by Bill on May 18, 2006 12:59:25 GMT -5
At&t is the undeniable king when it comes to Internet backbone in North America. On the map above they don't even have anything in VT as of 2000. In a more current map they only have 2 nodes in VT. In the above map it shows 3 OC12 - 622 megabits per second (4 OC3s) pipes going into the bay area. Plus a number of other pipes as well... 622x3=1866 1,866,000,000 BPS +++++ all Att's other pipes, all of the other ISP's in the area and much more.
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Debate
May 18, 2006 22:51:53 GMT -5
Post by degicank on May 18, 2006 22:51:53 GMT -5
Lets be clear here , after your pipe goes down through gateway and remote access router, then through ISP, what is the actual bitrate for the customer, That is what I posted, We get 24,000,000 bps right to our Library, and for limited # of subscribers at home. Surley the figures you presented are dilluted by the time you get down to the consumer level.
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Debate
May 19, 2006 13:05:51 GMT -5
Post by Bill on May 19, 2006 13:05:51 GMT -5
Its actually much higher then that because At&t is only one of many ISP's here.
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