5 devices are operated (2x PC 1x laptop 2x cell phone). How much MB / s should we have?
Depending on what is done, 50k / device is sufficient for almost everything. For special things, of course, more. And of course, if you can afford it, you can always take more.
It depends on what should run at the same time.
With me 2 computers and 4 cell phones run at 10MB / s and also works.
We ourselves are a household of 5, and especially in the evenings we run permanently
3 PCs
1 laptop
5 smartphones
now and then too
up to 4 tablets
a couple of consoles
In addition, thanks to me, various services are always running in the background
And we get along well with a 50k line… Your values are nice, but unnecessary, because the high speed naturally costs everything extra…
If you absolutely NEED such a fast connection and are willing to pay the surcharge, you can of course go higher
Note: The 50k are of course 50 MBit / s, so rounded approx. 6 MB / s… Your minimum 250 MB / s are utopian
I assume you are talking about the network speed of the connection of your provider?
Information is completely inadequate.
Probably 50 MBit / s (not MB!) Are sufficient.
One 50000 cable per device?
That's a lot, but since you mentioned such high numbers, I just picked it up. Anyone could watch 4k videos at the same time. In itself, a 50 would be enough depending on the user. I used to get along with 16k in a 4-person household.
No MB / s and not MBits / s because that's 7-9 MB / s converted to MB / s only!
With MB / s you have to be careful, because the information provided by the provider is usually in MBit / s and not in MB!
50k = 50000 for me so I understand a 50000 line! So I think you just want to hug me can that be?
That would load 50GB in 1 second. Extremely practical, but certainly not cheap:;)
10 MB / s is very unusual. That would be 80 Mbit / s…
Then you would need an 8 gigabit line for your highest possibility. I just doubt that.
You understand something wrong. Lines indicate in k. 16k is 16 megabits per second, i.e. 2 megabytes / second.
Which provider can you currently order a 1 GB line from?
In Steam I always have a maximum of only 3.2 MB / s, which is about 25.6 in MBits / s, so I have to tell you that there's a big risk of confusion! If you want to convert MB / s to MBits / s you have to take the MB / s times 8 then you have the MBits / s. Because 25.6 MBits / s are not 25.6 MB / s!
Is a 16000 line with actual 10 Mbit / s where it all runs over it
* yawn '* you don't want to understand it? Then just leave it. And dream of your 8 Gbps line:-)
I'm well aware of this, you are confusing something, not me. In the case of downloads, you usually calculate With byte, for lines with bit.
Ah ok. It fits. Just because the questioner is having big problems with MB / s vs. Mbit / s seems to have.
I still live in my parents' house. I have made myself on the Internet times what a 1000 line per month costs. That would cost 79.95 euro a month. That's a lot of money.
16k = 16000
In the youth language, k = 1000 (so 16k is then 16000). I'm not very familiar with it, but I always say MB / s and not like the other MBits / s.
Because MBits / s = 8x MB / s. I have a maximum of 3.2 MB / s in MBits / s, that's 25.6
Thought I'll take his units…
This is also true with k = 1000. I just didn't want to confuse you anymore with 16,000 kbit / s. If you look at a provider for a contract, this is always given in bits, not in bytes. Even 250 MB / s are very rare. Gigabit lines are pretty much the highest at the moment, but that is "only" 125 MB / s.
I think you have no idea! It's called MBits / s and not GBits / s. 8 MBits / s is 1 MB / s (approximately 950 KB / s). As I said: If you want to convert MB / s to MBits / s, then you simply calculate the MB / s that you have at times 8.
So that you get a bit clear: You currently have a 25k line, the highest that is possible is a 1000k line, and 250k lines would be 31.25 megabytes per second.
Yes, that's more than 50% I don't even have to calculate. But what does% have to do with this question now? Nothing!
No!
There are only MB / s or MBits / s!
One does not say k but 1000 lines. There's certainly no 25000 line with us!
You don't understand that, sorry. You have a 25k line, i.e. 25,000 kbit / s. This is the same as a 25 Mbit / s line. 25 megabits / s is 3.2 megabytes / s. There's certainly a 25k line because you have one. If you don't want to see it it's no use writing to you. Google first the few terms and come back when you understand it.
So you can probably not answer such a blanket. For me, only the maximum speed applies. Even if that is a little more expensive. But hardcore gamers are e.g. Depends on a fast internet. In contrast, office PCs with which you only watch videos or surf the Internet are less satisfied with them.
Last attempt: The following terms all mean the same speed:
50k - 50,000 kBit / s - 50 MBit / s - 6.25MB / s - 6.250 kB / s
Your provider specifies in k or MBits / s.
Your computer in MB / s or kB / s.
Hardcore gamers
I'm not a hardcore gamer! I download one or the other game that sometimes spans a few GB. But a 1000 line is already exaggerated.
As I said yes, there's no general answer. For you a 1000 line is exaggerated and for me it can't be fast enough.
A 1000 line loads 1GB in 1 second! Can't you tell me it's too slow for you?
What are you downloading there please?