FCC Officially Raises Minimum Broadband Metric From 25Mbps to 100Mbps

Rapidcreek@lemmy.world to politics @lemmy.world – 542 points –
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100Mb/s is still pretty abysmal.

A 4x increase for download and a 7x increase requirment for upload.

That's a pretty solid improvement, honestly. They also have plans on whne to increase it to 1Gbps down/500Mbps up, so it seems like they are taking it seriously.

It’s long overdue and gigabit should be standard

It is long overdue, as the last update was 2015, when a democrat was President. The GOP refused to do it, and it took some time to seat a new FCC head due to Republican obstruction.

Gigabyte is coming, just not yet. This is a fine incremental step.

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my third world country's internet has a minimum of 100mbps on most internet plans in the cities.

100mbps in the supposed best country in the world is shit, no matter how higher it is than 2003 standards.

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lol I've never had anything over 12Mb/s. Currently have 8Mb/s, which costs roughly half than what I use to pay for 500kb/s

I would love to have 100Mb/s. Hell even half that.

It's interesting. I have a remote place (not where I live) in the least populated, podunkest county in the state (which is saying something). And we were still able to get fibre and 50Mbps out there (and it could be higher, but not really worth the extra money since it's rarely used).

Still within a couple hours of a big city, though. Guessing you're further away than that, or something?

The 500kbps was 15 minutes outside of a metro area of 2.5 million lol

It was decades of CenturyLink making sure no one else moved in on their turf.

Where I'm at now the fiber is a couple of miles away and no cable, but 8Mbps feels lightning fast after CenturyLink lol

That’s enough to watch exactly one 1080p 30fps stream on YouTube and literally nothing else.

100Mb/s is 800Mbps. This is 25Mbps to 100Mbps so 3.125mb/s to 8.33mb/s

Mbps = Mb/s = Megabits per second.

MBps = MB/s = Megabytes per second.

The p is just the /. It’s the capital or lowercase B that makes the difference.

Shit I found the one person who can actually remember the written difference bit and byte

As a computer engineer, I had better know. And don’t get me started on MiB vs MB

Please do I'd like to know more! ;)

kB = kilobytes = 1000 bytes

MB = megabytes = 1000 kB

kiB = kibibytes = 1024 bytes

MiB = mibibytes = 1024 kiB

Generally on hard drive/ssd capacity it will be listed in GiB (Gibibytes). This is the reason a 1 Terabyte drive is actually something like 931 GB showing in your system. Because your system uses GiB and the manufacturer uses GB.

1GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes

1GiB = 1,073,741,824 bytes

1 GB =~ 0.931 GiB

Edit: I had it backwards, it is fixed now

You messed it up, actually - it's the bi units that are 1024

Shit haha appreciate the correction. I fixed it.

Understandable, and I'm really sorry to have to do this to you... But it's mebibyte, not mibibyte ;D

You know, when I typed it out it seemed wrong. I then proceeded to be lazy and do absolutely nothing to verify. I’m leaving it, I deserve to be ridiculed at this point.

  • 3.125MB/s to 12.5MB/s

He is right though on megabits to megabytes. Internet speed is advertised in bits/s where files and transfer speeds are usually shown in software as megabytes/s

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