Macaroon-Upstairs@alien.topB to Home Networking@selfhosted.forumEnglish · 1 year agoI only have a 1 gigabit connection and my router is 1 gigabit. How does this happen?alien.topimagemessage-square138fedilinkarrow-up12arrow-down11
arrow-up11arrow-down1imageI only have a 1 gigabit connection and my router is 1 gigabit. How does this happen?alien.topMacaroon-Upstairs@alien.topB to Home Networking@selfhosted.forumEnglish · 1 year agomessage-square138fedilink
minus-squareImpressive_Change593@alien.topBlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1 year agoit’s the fact that he has a 1 gig router. with overhead only like 940 Mbps is possible
minus-squarepdt9876@alien.topBlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1 year agoThat can’t be right because I’ve seen higher speeds than that during downloads with a download manager on my 1GBs infrastructure https://imgur.com/a/aIaVpi8
minus-squareImpressive_Change593@alien.topBlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1 year ago9k. somehow you have less overhead. or that counts the overhead into the total transfer speed. you still have less then 1 gbps
minus-squarepdt9876@alien.topBlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1 year agoThat’s windows task manager measuring the bandwidth at the network card. Not sure how or why it would incorporate switching overhead.
minus-squarenospamkhanman@alien.topBlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1 year agoHis router is rated for 1 gig, meaning it’ll do minimum that amount. It’s not like they’re going to set a software rate limit to make sure he doesn’t go over that amount in ideal circumstances. Unless he owns a Cisco router and hasn’t purchased a performance license.
minus-squaretand86@alien.topBlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1 year ago“His router is rated for 1gig, meaning it’ll do minimum that amount” Uh, No? What are you on about lol.
it’s the fact that he has a 1 gig router. with overhead only like 940 Mbps is possible
That can’t be right because I’ve seen higher speeds than that during downloads with a download manager on my 1GBs infrastructure https://imgur.com/a/aIaVpi8
9k. somehow you have less overhead. or that counts the overhead into the total transfer speed. you still have less then 1 gbps
That’s windows task manager measuring the bandwidth at the network card. Not sure how or why it would incorporate switching overhead.
His router is rated for 1 gig, meaning it’ll do minimum that amount.
It’s not like they’re going to set a software rate limit to make sure he doesn’t go over that amount in ideal circumstances.
Unless he owns a Cisco router and hasn’t purchased a performance license.
“His router is rated for 1gig, meaning it’ll do minimum that amount”
Uh, No? What are you on about lol.