Author Topic: NET NEUTRALITY NOW EXISTS  (Read 5494 times)

108 megabytes per second.

Hot stuff on a stick.
Pretty sure that's the speed of the connection between his computer and the wireless access point, not from the ISP.

108 megabytes per second.

Hot stuff on a stick.
That isn't his internet connection. It's his LAN connection.

wait
what is net neutrality i haven't followed up on the stuff here

« Last Edit: February 27, 2015, 07:47:56 PM by F3d323 »

Ey, me estas choreando el credito!

Anyways, translation from the video:
Mr. President! Democracy is at risk!
I will take care of this myself!
---
loving buster!




lol at people posting what their wifi adapter and router's maximum possible transfer rate as if it means anything.


millibits per second!
oh stuff
I didn't think about that but yeah it would be that lol
of course unlike b/B everyone knows you mean mega because 'millibit' doesn't make sense

Its cheaper just to buy your own modem and not pay the monthly fees. A good modem will pay itself in one year.
Fun fact: The internet equipment Comcast leases to you broadcasts a "Xfinity Wifi" wireless  network that you can't disable, that allows any random person, if they're a paying Comcast customer, to connect to and use your internet

but its likely that zanaran was meaning to put MB/s
because why else would he type out the exact same information that was already on display on the picture he posted
Of course
It's just annoying when it seems like every speed thread has people coming in and saying "You need to convert it to megabytes!!!" then completely failing the conversion by using the wrong unit


Am I cool yet?
If screenshotting our LAN network's speed capacities is what we're going to do now, then:

Not that this is anything to brag about, just standard wired speed
« Last Edit: February 27, 2015, 07:55:02 PM by Headcrab Zombie »

It's the maximum speed of my modem. I don't have an ethernet cable laying around to screenshot my wired connection.

Fun fact: The internet equipment Comcast leases to you broadcasts a "Xfinity Wifi" wireless  network that you can't disable, that allows any random person, if they're a paying Comcast customer, to connect to and use your internet
This explains a few weird things that happened to a pal of mine.