Posted on 08/10/2014 7:08:33 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
The northeastern part of the United States may be endowed with faster Internet than most other quadrants of the country. However, it doesn't have the undisputed champ in terms of Internet speed.
The fastest connection speed in the country belongs to the state of Virginia. The southern state, which is known for raising presidents and housing the CIA, has almost twice the Internet speed of Alaska, Arkansas, Kentucky and Montana.
A map from Internet services provider Broadview Networks shows the disparity in connection speeds in different parts of the country. In general, people in northern states seem to have faster Internet speeds than their southern brethren. However, there are states that don't fit this simplification. The states of Montana, Idaho and Wyoming rank low in terms of connection speeds, breaking rank with other states in the same region.
The map lifted its data from the latest State of the Internet report of New York-based cloud services company Akamai. In its rankings, Akamai revealed that Virginia clocked in with an average of 13.7 megabytes per second. Its closest rivals were Delaware and Massachusetts, which both registered connection speeds of 13.1 megabytes per second.
(Excerpt) Read more at techtimes.com ...
yes
It’s where all the politicians live. Not surprised at all.
Why would anyone be surprised.
An unfortunate swath of Virginia has been invaded by DC bureaucrats
It is also where a lot of internet companies have servers and data centers.
It would be a better article if the author knew the difference between megabytes and megabits. The map has Mbps which is megabits per sec.
A better question is why Internet speed in the US sucks compared to the rest of the world.
It’s also much more densely populated. It costs money to build infrastructure and many people in the South are happy with dial-up, as many Freepers can attest.
Averaging internet speeds has little validity.
I have cable internet. It is sold in 3 or 4 different packages — depending on customer use. The slowest packet is about 1Mbps. I have the ‘preferred’ which was recently increased ‘up to’ 50Mbps and 250Gb of downloading. There are 2 more packages that provide even greater download speeds and accumulative download amounts.
There are still people on dial up and satellite. Most satellite offer only about 5GB of downloading per month.
Lumping all of that to get an ‘average’ is relatively meaningless.
the areas around Herndon and Reston have many organizations that monitor all Internet traffic
ans: legacy systems combined with a large, spread out population
Yep! My thought, too.
It reminds me of the Hunger Games.
I can't get over how much faster it is now compared to old mid-90's dialup. Download megabytes in milliseconds almost. Used to download Quinn In The Morning after work, a 17MB show took 45 minutes and don't blink or surf OR ELSE!
It sure surprises me, LOL. We’re in central Virginia. All we can get is Verizon DSL, which is barely able to stream a Youtube video. Movies and TV are absolutely out of the question. Our service regularly goes out. When we call for repairs, the techs know exactly who and where we are.
One of them told us that Verizon spent a couple of million to provide Fios to one of their execs, who has a lake home not too far from here. It was done on the quiet; no one else in the area was offered the service.
I just downloaded an old public domain movie of about 1GB in 4 minutes.
Regarding dial-up, in 1998, I started downloading a large zipped file — probably around 300 Mb. It literally ran 24-hours per day and took a full week to finish.
U-verse here. It is blazing fast. (burbs of Ft. Lauderdale).
I can almost see the fiber optic junction box from my house.
10mb file goes in 3 seconds.
A week for 300mb, phew. I used our local Free-Net at first but they would kick you off every 2 hours, you could redial but when the pimples got home from school, good luck—hello auto-redial! I about soiled myself willing a download of NS Communicator to finish before the time expired, made it by mere seconds—got another provider real quick!
Yep, the real unknown factor is the speed of the server you’re downloading from. Could fly or could be slower than Biden. Luck ‘o the draw.
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