Right?? That’s in a customer’s office building too… I’ve got the same connection on my workstation of course. I actually have another test that I don’t normally share. It’s NOT fake. I found out that the speedtest algorithm rounds to the nearest whole millisecond. And that it will round DOWN below 400ns… A friend, being kind of sassy, said recently “Hey Ben, so like when you got the 10g, did you just like, download all of Netflix?” And I had to pause and give a semi serious reply, where I said “Actually no… Because we’ve got a Netflix Openconnect in SF2 that has like 80g into the fabric, and we’ve got 100g into there, and even over the 10g to my desktop, that’s still faster than my SSD. So no, I’m not going to be downloading all of Netflix. The internet is my LAN, I already have…" (It’s honestly all so cool that I wake up every day without an alarm clock, and *run* downstairs to do what I do. Best job in the world.) -Ben Cannon CEO 6x7 Networks & 6x7 Telecom, LLC ben@6by7.net <mailto:ben@6by7.net>
On Jan 25, 2020, at 8:29 PM, Aaron Gould <aaron1@gvtc.com> wrote:
I love the symmetric ~10 gig speed test to put it into perspective for how far we’ve come….also the 3 ms ping result. Ain’t it great
-Aaron
From: Ben Cannon [mailto:ben@6by7.net <mailto:ben@6by7.net>] Sent: Friday, January 24, 2020 5:27 PM To: bzs@theworld.com <mailto:bzs@theworld.com> Cc: Aaron Gould; NANOG Operators' Group Subject: Reminiscing our first internet connections (WAS) Re: akamai yesterday - what in the world was that
I started what became 6x7 with a 64k ISDN line. And 9600 baud modems…
in ’93 or so. (I was a child, in Jr High…)
-Ben.
-Ben Cannon CEO 6x7 Networks & 6x7 Telecom, LLC ben@6by7.net <mailto:ben@6by7.net>
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On Jan 24, 2020, at 3:21 PM, bzs@theworld.com <mailto:bzs@theworld.com> wrote:
On January 24, 2020 at 08:55 aaron1@gvtc.com <mailto:aaron1@gvtc.com> (Aaron Gould) wrote:
Thanks Jared, When I reminisce with my boss he reminds me that this telco/ISP here initially started with a 56kbps internet uplink , lol
Point of History:
When we, The World, first began allowing the general public onto the internet in October 1989 we actually had a (mildly shared*) T1 (1.544mbps) UUNET link. So not so bad for the time. Dial-up customers shared a handful of 2400bps modems, we still have them.
* It was also fanned out of our office to a handful of Boston-area customers who had 56kbps or 9600bps leased lines, not many.
-- -Barry Shein
Software Tool & Die | bzs@TheWorld.com <mailto:bzs@theworld.com> | http://www.TheWorld.com <http://www.theworld.com/> Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: +1 617-STD-WRLD | 800-THE-WRLD The World: Since 1989 | A Public Information Utility | *oo*