About Bandwith..!
What Is Bandwidth?
Bandwidth:
The internet is a group of millions of computers connected through networks.
The cables and equipment that a user connects to the internet with (including
the millions of other people’s opposing internet cables and equipment),
basically determine how fast your internet will be. Information between
networks and the internet travels in packets made up of bits (which is related
to bandwidth). A bit is either 0 or 1 (an off or on pulse in an internet
signal). These bits are arranged into bytes (8 bits to a byte) and kilobytes
(thousands of bytes), megabytes (millions of bytes), and gigabytes (billions of
bytes) typically comprise the words, images, sounds, and videos that are
transferred through to your computer. The person who provides most of the
cabling and equipment to connect you to the internet is your ISP (internet
service provider). ISP’s usually allocate internet speeds ranging from 12
kilobits per second to 1000 megabits per second to certain users, depending on
how much you pay and where you’re located.
If an ISP has 320 megabits per
second allocated to them, they can give 123 people an internet speed of 2.6
megabits per second (320/123). If fewer than 123 people are on the internet,
your internet speed will be higher as more bandwidth is allocated to you.
However, if more than 123 people are online, your internet speed will become
slower. When people download, they take a lot of bandwidth, and everyone else’s
internet (including your own) will slow down. Also, please note that ISP’s
charge money for connecting you to the internet, because they must pay for the
servers on the internet backbone and they need to have servers of their own and
provide wiring and maintenance to consumers. To test your internet connection
and your internet connection's bandwidth, visit speedtest.net
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