Wouldn't 40Gbps be way faster than SATA (3Gbps)? And hard drives in real world scenarios max out at around 300 Mbps anyway. I guess if you're going to eventually split it, it would have some use for sharing lots of bandwidth with others.
The latest Serial-attached SCSI (SAS) specification supports up to 6Gbps. That said, SSDs in a high-performance RAID configuration such as RAID-10 could easily surpass that. There are fibre channel, SSD-based SANs on the market that can theoretically deliver 20GB (yes, GigaBYTES) per second, provided your pocket is deep enough.
Most of the time, IOPS is a much bigger deal than overall bandwidth, though.
interesting....tom...the link didn't work for me
that said...you can have a gazzillionbilliontrillion download speed and it won't matter if the sites you're downloading from have their rate capped. which many do, except, the big sites like microsoft or game download sites.
i purchased a download speed of 20 mbps....and rarely get that from anything i download. maybe i am just not savvy enough on internet downloading.![]()
interesting....tom...the link didn't work for me
that said...you can have a gazzillionbilliontrillion download speed and it won't matter if the sites you're downloading from have their rate capped. which many do, except, the big sites like microsoft or game download sites.
i purchased a download speed of 20 mbps....and rarely get that from anything i download. maybe i am just not savvy enough on internet downloading.![]()
For one thing, that's advertised in megabits per second, and downloads are often shown in mega-bytes per second. I have a 1.5 Mbps connection, which is 180 MBps, and I usually get downloads at around 150 MBps, provided I have a good connection.
I have a 1.5 Mbps connection, which is 180 MBps, and I usually get downloads at around 150 MBps, provided I have a good connection.
I don't understand this, all ISPs use megabits per second and speed testers such as Speednet likewise. So what is the difference between Mbps and MBps? You should also remember that TCP/IP and ATM impose a high overhead on the transmission of data packets.
http://www.fatsquirrel.org/veghead/wot/atm.html
Hmm I think you meant to say 180 Kilobytes. One Byte = 8 Bits. So a 1.5 Megabit/sec line would yield 187.5 Kilobytes/sec in a perfect world. But 150 Kilobytes/sec downloads are what I would expect, for the reasons Tom mentioned.
A bit is 1/8 of a byte.
Did you know that there are 4 bits in a nibble?
What about tits?
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