Latency???

gjspear

Member
Feb 19, 2002
91
0
0
what does latency of an internet connection mean? Isn't its speed the only factor determinig its performance?
 

n0cmonkey

Elite Member
Jun 10, 2001
42,936
1
0
latency is how long it takes to get somewhere. Bandwidth (what I think you meant by speed) is only telling you how much is coming through at one time.

EDIT: High bandwidth + high latency sucks for games. Low bandwidth + low latency is probably better for games. High bandwidth + low latency = the best.
 

Torghn

Platinum Member
Mar 21, 2001
2,171
0
76
Latency *really* only comes into play with games. If you have a high latency connection you're downloads can still be quick as the delay is only when requesting the file. A friend of mine has a high latency 2.5Mb internet connection, but the latencys are so high games run about the same speed as dial up. His downloads are awsome though.
 

L3Guy

Senior member
Apr 19, 2001
282
0
0


<< Latency *really* only comes into play with games >>


I have a co-worker on a sat feed that has great downloads.
However, telnet to the practice rack is "bad". He has to use dial-up
for telnet. Because of the low bandwidth requirements, it works fine.

While games are a good example, a number of applications can be affected by latency.

Regards;

Doug
 

ProviaFan

Lifer
Mar 17, 2001
14,993
1
0
Latency can be noticable with regular browsing. I have, for example, browsed on a cable connection, and a T1. While the cable had faster DL speeds, the T1 was noticably snappier when navigating through a site. (of course the lower latency of his cable connection could have simply been due to a crappy provider)
Edit: I didn't finish typing my sentence. :)
 

Tallgeese

Diamond Member
Feb 26, 2001
5,775
1
0


<< High bandwidth + low latency = the best. >>

Don't you mean to say:

High bandwidth + low latency = THE SHIZNIT!
 

n0cmonkey

Elite Member
Jun 10, 2001
42,936
1
0


<<

<< High bandwidth + low latency = the best. >>

Don't you mean to say:

High bandwidth + low latency = THE SHIZNIT!
>>



Nope, dont mean that at all :)