• Shadow
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    1757 days ago

    Pretty clickbait title to compare a lab speed to average internet. I’m sure it’s several million times faster than average Japanese internet too.

      • JohnEdwa
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        6 days ago

        ranked by Speedtest.net data for January 2025

        And the average speed of a passenger car is 170km/h, as ranked by speed data from the Nürburgring.

        People on shitty slow connections don’t have a need to go test that speed much, they know it’s shit, people who just got their fancy new 1Gbit fiber and want to know exactly how fast it is, do.

      • @[email protected]
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        6 days ago

        ranked by Speedtest.net data

        I have no other ideas to collect that data better but i’m sure that does not give a good generic view of the reality. Every tech I know in Sweden uses bredbandskollen. Even if an end-users is asked if they did test speed and delay, the site was bredbandskollen in nearly 100% of the cases if they had done so. Therefore I dare say speedtest is missing data and that list has no statistical relevance outside the scope of the speedtest user population.

        Also, measuring speedtest result tells us about the subscription users took out. It does not tell anything about availability. I can get Gbit here, but subscribed to 100/100 because my average is low

        • Pycorax
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          36 days ago

          Not to mention that Japan tends to use their own local services usually so I’m not sure if speedtest.net is even well known there.

      • xep
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        87 days ago

        Is this all of Japan? I wonder what it looks like comparing just Tokyo with LA

        • @[email protected]
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          117 days ago

          Most DOCSIS (cable tv) systems are pushing gigabit speeds these days, especially in Los Angeles. That said, it is a bit of a misnomer considering CATV’s upload speeds are still doodie compared to fiber.

      • @[email protected]
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        287 days ago

        This is yet another thing the Republicans have been attacking (funding for rural broadband providers). Our rural areas are actually extremely well covered. Most of the midwest is fibered up. My local co-op’s minimum offered speed is 350x350.

        • @[email protected]
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          26 days ago

          I’m in a rural place and I just have DSL for my house and LTE for my phone. Lived here 20 years and that’s the worst thing about it.

          • @[email protected]
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            26 days ago

            My condolences. We have one last office to convert at the coop I work for. We’ll be 100% fiber by the end of the year. Hope your ISP is close as well.

      • Shadowedcross
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        27 days ago

        Japan seeming to be ahead of the curve 20 years ago but now being at the same level or behind, seems to be a common theme.

        • @[email protected]
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          36 days ago

          Could be related to their stagnating economy and population. Conservatives love to point to Japan as a successful ethnostate, but their xenophobia has directly led to the stagnation.

        • @[email protected]
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          87 days ago

          Wasn’t Google Fiber available in like, one town in Kansas? So I suppose yes, it did increase the average speed, but by a very small amount.

          • osaerisxero
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            56 days ago

            Not quite. Google fiber did 2 things: 1) in any market thry entered, they forced an ante speed and 2) they provided a model that a bunch of local coops and/or municipal networks could follow (and did)

            They are currently in 28 markets in the US.

        • @[email protected]
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          27 days ago

          I feel they may have been something of a catalyst that got other providers to start upping the speed. At this point, a lot of service providers offer at least 1 gig download speeds, with fiber being synchronous often. Some places offer up to 10 gigs to residential.

    • @[email protected]
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      187 days ago

      Its just got nothing to do with “internet”. That is the issue with the headline. Its just some random piece of fiber that isnt even connected to any wider network. Im assuming they just used big ass rolled up rolls of fiber connected to one another to get to the 1800km. There are no end user “internet” applications for it either. The only thing it could be used for is isolated connections between internet hubs or inside datacenters for local network.

      Still impressive ofcourse but just doesnt have anything to do with “internet” in the end user sense.