Broadband Speeds

| January 19, 2009 | 2 Comments

I’m not a fan of all the recent bleating about broadband speeds and how we’re apparently being “conned” by our ISP’s. The wording is already clear… you get “up to” 8 Mbps. You can’t then complain that you only get 2 or 3.

However, testing your actual connection speed is something else entirely. How do you know what speed you are actually running at? Using 7 different online speed testers I’ve just received an upload speed of anything between 537 and 960 Kbps and a download speed between 2498 and 3494 Kbps. That’s a rather big difference and the kind of thing that will cause more people to write to Watchdog, Ofcom, and whoever else.

Is there a definitive way of working it out?

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Category: Comment, Web Development

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David is the owner and main author of Artiss.co.uk. By day he's a developer for a well known UK retailer, by night he looks after this site and write WordPress plugins.

Comments (2)

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  1. Mike Fisher says:

    In my rural area and on BT;they quote up to 8 MPS.
    The best download speed in the morning is around 170 KPS.
    In the evening this can drop to the 20 KPS but is generally below 50 KPS.

    This is 3 miles from the centre of Droitwich,Worcs and the BT Exchange

    • David says:

      Are you saying therefore that BT are wrong to quote “up to 8 MPS”? I would have thought that being in a rural location and 3 miles from your exchange, that kind of speed wouldn’t be unexpected.

      Do the online checkers (where you put in your phone number/postcode) give you any better idea of speed? For example, what does O2 estimate?

      And, of course, and the ISPs can’t be held to account for this, a lot of the speed is down to the quality of the wiring and connectivity from the BT plate in your home. Have you tried an iPlate?

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