You can get T1's for a lot cheaper per month than that these days.Originally posted by: IamElectro
Your looking at $1000-$2000 setup and probably $1000 per month depending on bandwith allowances.
Originally posted by: Spac3d
You can get T1's for a lot cheaper per month than that these days.Originally posted by: IamElectro
Your looking at $1000-$2000 setup and probably $1000 per month depending on bandwith allowances.
Originally posted by: gigapet
what exactly is a T1 equivalent to bandwidth wise?
It would be a dedicated connection to a server expected to recieve lots of hits and traffic
Originally posted by: rahvin
Originally posted by: gigapet
what exactly is a T1 equivalent to bandwidth wise?
It would be a dedicated connection to a server expected to recieve lots of hits and traffic
A T1 is a symetric connection with 1.5mbits up/down.
Originally posted by: gigapet
Originally posted by: rahvin
Originally posted by: gigapet
what exactly is a T1 equivalent to bandwidth wise?
It would be a dedicated connection to a server expected to recieve lots of hits and traffic
A T1 is a symetric connection with 1.5mbits up/down.
so how many hits a day would that be suitable for?
Originally posted by: rahvin
Originally posted by: gigapet
Originally posted by: rahvin
Originally posted by: gigapet
what exactly is a T1 equivalent to bandwidth wise?
It would be a dedicated connection to a server expected to recieve lots of hits and traffic
A T1 is a symetric connection with 1.5mbits up/down.
so how many hits a day would that be suitable for?
How many hits would be entirely dependent on the amount of traffic contained in each page and only you know that answer. Take the amount of data per hit and divide the 1.5mbit by that amount and that tells you how many hits/sec.
Originally posted by: BaboonGuy
197kbytes/s ? that's extremely weak for 600 a month! i'm running $50 a month comcast cable and i have 261 kbytes/s download! the only benefit for t1 that i can see is the upload not being capped, (mine is capped at around 30 kbytes/s).
Originally posted by: gigapet
how much more is a t3?
any links for getting one of those?
Originally posted by: BaboonGuy
197kbytes/s ? that's extremely weak for 600 a month! i'm running $50 a month comcast cable and i have 261 kbytes/s download! the only benefit for t1 that i can see is the upload not being capped, (mine is capped at around 30 kbytes/s).
Originally posted by: BigFatCow
Originally posted by: BaboonGuy
197kbytes/s ? that's extremely weak for 600 a month! i'm running $50 a month comcast cable and i have 261 kbytes/s download! the only benefit for t1 that i can see is the upload not being capped, (mine is capped at around 30 kbytes/s).
The upload is the main thing that makes a T1 so expensive, also they guarantee no down time.
Originally posted by: FoBoT
Originally posted by: BigFatCow
Originally posted by: BaboonGuy
197kbytes/s ? that's extremely weak for 600 a month! i'm running $50 a month comcast cable and i have 261 kbytes/s download! the only benefit for t1 that i can see is the upload not being capped, (mine is capped at around 30 kbytes/s).
The upload is the main thing that makes a T1 so expensive, also they guarantee no down time.
yes, with a T1 you get a "SLA" , service level agreement, that means they will actually give a crap if it breaks, with retail bandwidth like comcast cable, if it goes down, you have no guarantee that they will ever fix it , let alone quickly
also the reliablity of commercial lines/uptime is much higher than retail services like cable
