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Re: 10 Mbit/s problem in your network


From: Mikael Abrahamsson <swmike () swm pp se>
Date: Sun, 10 Feb 2013 07:59:09 +0100 (CET)

On Sat, 9 Feb 2013, Constantine A. Murenin wrote:

When you are staying at a 3* hotel, should you have no expectations that you'll be getting at least a 3Mbps pipe and at least an under 100ms average latency, and won't be getting a balancer that would be breaking up your ssh sessions?

Not really. Best way to improve this would probably be to get the hotel booking sites to include a separate rating for the internet connectivity.

Up until then, getting Internet connectivity into a hotel is either just cost (in case they offer it for free) or probably a badly performing profit center (because as soon as they try to charge their outrageous prices I imagine take up is abysmal).

If a good performing hotel actually got better rating out of having bad connectivity, and a badly performing hotel got worse rating at rating sites, then I'd imagine that more emphasis would be put on this.

*But* it also requires a standard test that people can run to understand if things are bad or good. For instance, my ISP guarantees to provide 50-100 megabit/s down and 7-10 up on my 100/10 home connection to a speed test site located on neutral ground here in Sweden.

So if the hotels could market themselves with some kind of lowest speed guarantee according to some standard, I believe things would improve. Especially if hotels.com (and others) had a special search item for this, where you could do a search and it would only show results for hotels that guaranteed a certain speed.

--
Mikael Abrahamsson    email: swmike () swm pp se


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