Yes, definitely. But some of those criteria can be combined into one, namely "transaction latency," how long it takes to get something done. Which includes things like uploading a video clip, or a complicated PowerPoint deck, and (behind the scenes from the standpoint of the end user) lots of interactions between various computations and databases (like deciding what ads to clutter your screen with). So while high speed won't solve all problems (the speed of light is rather hard to exceed), it can help alleviate the transaction latency annoyances by making sure those increasingly large data transfers that are involved happen quickly. Andrew On Thu, 26 May 2022, Livingood, Jason via NANOG wrote:
Latency is a limitation for things that are generally relatively low bandwidth (interactive audio, zoom, etc.). Higher bandwidth won’t solve the latency problem
+1 IMO as we enter the 'post-gigabit era', an extra 1 Gbps to the home will matter less than 100 ms or 500 ms lower working latency (optimally sub-50 ms, if not sub-25 ms). The past is exclusively speed-focused -- the future will be speed + working latency + reliability/resiliency + consistency of QoE + security/protection + WiFi LAN quality.
Jason