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CNN: New Internet Speed Record Set

GENEVA, Switzerland (Reuters) -- Two major scientific research centres said on Wednesday they had set a new world speed record for sending data across the Internet, equivalent to transferring a full-length DVD film in seven seconds.

The European Organisation for Nuclear Research, CERN, said the feat, doubling the previous top speed, was achieved in a nearly 30-minute transmission over 7,000 kms of network between Geneva and a partner body in California.

CERN, whose laboratories straddle the Franco-Swiss border near Geneva, said it had sent 1.1 Terabytes of data at 5.44 gigabits a second (Gbps) to a lab at the California Institute of Technology, or Caltech, on October 1.

This is more than 20,000 times faster than a typical home broadband connection, and is also equivalent to transferring a 60-minute compact disc within one second -- an operation that takes around eight minutes on standard broadband.

Using current technology, a DVD -- or digital video disc -- film of some 90 minutes length takes some 15 minutes to download from the Internet.

Olivier Martin of CERN, which is also the European Laboratory for Particle Physics and home to a hugely ambitious particle-smashing project to unravel the fundamental laws of nature, hailed the feat as a milestone.

It would bring closer researchers' final goal of abolishing distance and making collaboration between scientists around the world efficient and effectively instantaneous, he said.

Harvey Newman of Caltech, another of the world's major research centres, said the achievement boosted hopes that systems operating at 10 gigabits per second "will be commonplace in the relatively near future."

CNN
 
Wow... I wish my internet access at home was that fast. Then it wouldn't take so long to update windows from a fresh installation.
 
great, now can they get that to my house? oh wait.. 1.5mbit cap... damnit I miss @home.. no cap, all speed
 
Originally posted by: Bootprint
Originally posted by: gistech1978
this happened a while back.
im with conjur on this one
i remember reading it too.

You mean this one, back in March

from /.

Seems more recent. Esp. if they did this on Oct. 1...seems like it would have made news then.

<shrug>
 
Originally posted by: Bootprint
Originally posted by: gistech1978
this happened a while back.
im with conjur on this one
i remember reading it too.

You mean this one, back in March

from /.
That has to be a different occurrence... this new article clearly states it happened "on October 1."
 
This is more than 20,000 times faster than a typical home broadband connection, and is also equivalent to transferring a 60-minute compact disc within one second -- an operation that takes around eight minutes on standard broadband.

Using current technology, a DVD -- or digital video disc -- film of some 90 minutes length takes some 15 minutes to download from the Internet

Okay... I'm not really going to do all the math, but 1 second to 8 minutes is 480 times faster.... So, within 1 second, do they really mean, about 1/40th of a second? Or, is the 20,000 figure off?

Or, You mean to tell me that it takes less than double the time to download a dvd than it does to download a CD?

CNN people... if you read this, I'd be willing to work for you proof-reading your stories for mathematical inconsistencies (and perhaps, some scientific errors). In my experience, people going to journalism school typically aren't good with math.


 
Originally posted by: Orsorum
I just got wood.

Expressed yourself yet? 😉

I agree tho. With that kind of speed, you really COULD download the entire internet in a few weeks. LoL

Need to buy myself a few dozen terraservers. LoL
 
Meh, GT's network speed is fast enough for me. Its finding other places that can maximize it thats the problem 😀
 
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