Holy crapcakes, I've not seen speeds like that outside of commercial ones - especially the parity between d/l and u/l.mtbnut":38um2sd4 said:I can strongly recommend Gigaclear, fibre right to the modem
My parents have Infiniity and whilst it's fast, it's not very stable
They have an early smart TV and it spends a lot of time buffering BBC iPlayer even though they're getting about 16mbps
mtbnut":16l5dzdf said:I can strongly recommend Gigaclear, fibre right to the modem
My parents have Infiniity and whilst it's fast, it's not very stable
They have an early smart TV and it spends a lot of time buffering BBC iPlayer even though they're getting about 16mbps
Realistically, useful for testing latency (by that I mean beyond the brief remit of the speedtest).Bats":3oki6j6l said:Mb/s Down : How fast stuff gets to your computer.
Mb/s Up: How fast your computer sends stuff back out.
ping: about how much time it takes for stuff to get from your computer to a given point, in milliseconds. In this case the point is the speedtest server, but could be anywhere you want it to be when you measure it. Useful for checking consistency.
Ideally, I'd do it on a machine that uses a wired connection, straight into your router - then you're taking out your WiFi environment as being the potential bottleneck. If you check the stuff you've been supplied with, you may well find a cat 5 / 5e cable in there, somewhere - that'll be a generic looking cable with square-ish type plugs (the same on both ends, more square and stubby than the type that a normal phone will use to plug into a phone socket, though) with little plastic lugs (on the top, not the side as in phone cables) that you need to depress to remove the cable from a socket.TGR":1es5rvaf said:Just to clarify, should I do the speed test on one thing ie the laptop ?
Thanks
Richard