sead Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 Saying something like this is insulting. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Darkside Gray Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 They didn't check my internet that's for sure! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
i84teen Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 17 hours ago, NilSS said: OK fair enough. For the record, I usually get ping times via my SG rack to the UK around 190 ms round trip, pretty close to the theoretical best case for that route. Pinging from Thailand I don't think I ever saw it go under 220 ms round trip from Thailand to London (UK) always less than 200ms (197ms) on my connection. Don't need Sg. .0-macosx\ 2/speedtest ; exit; Speedtest by Ookla Server: Structured Communications - London (id = 11445) ISP: UK Dedicated Servers Limited Latency: 197.93 ms (0.33 ms jitter) Download: 259.31 Mbps (data used: 380.5 MB) Upload: 121.66 Mbps (data used: 202.7 MB) Packet Loss: 11.3% Result URL: https://www.speedtest.net/result/c/d7ca8611-9e18-4b05-b26c-e82fc10525f1 logout Saving session... ...copying shared history... ...saving history...truncating history files... ...completed. [Process completed] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
i84teen Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 5 hours ago, muratremix said: root@Synology:~# ./speedtest --server-id=367 Speedtest by Ookla Server: NewMedia Express - Singapore (id = 367) ISP: 3BB Broadband Latency: 36.09 ms (1.21 ms jitter) Download: 668.26 Mbps (data used: 1.1 GB) Upload: 904.78 Mbps (data used: 1.1 GB) Packet Loss: 0.0% Result URL: https://www.speedtest.net/result/c/ae1def8a-82f6-4007-8935-4e3db44754d2 Hi, if using ookla in CLI, is it possible to manually select server location for the test? Tanks a lot. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaisabai Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 wish it was true. soooooooooooo slow (Pattaya). nothing but problems, slow speed, disconnected frequently etc may be it is my hotel, but tried n several hotels/restaurants, all the same pain in the a....... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pib Posted May 11, 2020 Author Share Posted May 11, 2020 (edited) 38 minutes ago, i84teen said: Hi, if using ookla in CLI, is it possible to manually select server location for the test? Tanks a lot. Yes. You enter the command like "speedtest -L" or "speedtest --servers" and it shows a list of nearby servers with an ID number for each server. If wanting a list from say around London then make a VPN connection and then run speedtest -L to show the list of nearby servers to London. Like below is the list given from my location here in Bangkok. Jot down the number of the server you want to test against....maybe make several VPN connections to different parts of the world to develop your list. Say you want to run the test against the 3BB server just enter the command "speedtest -s 8990" Entering "speedtest -h" with provide a help screen on the various command options. ************************** C:\Users\Downloads\Speedtest CLI>speedtest -L Closest servers: ID Name Location Country ============================================================================== 8990 3BB Bangkok Thailand 13871 CAT Telecom Public Company Limited Bangkok Thailand 6521 Symphony Communication Public Company Limited Bangkok Thailand 2459 AWN Bangkok Thailand 5394 CS LoxInfo Bangkok Thailand 9830 Bangmod Enterprise Co., Ltd. Bangkok Thailand 16628 NIPA.CLOUD 1st Cloud Thailand Bangkok Thailand 3147 AIS Bangkok Thailand 9361 TOT Public Company Limited Bangkok Thailand 5431 Chulalongkorn University Bangkok Thailand Edited May 11, 2020 by Pib Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
digger70 Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 Thailand Has 4th Fastest Internet Speeds in the World As of March 2020. Yea right if you believe that than you believe anything. Down South here its as fast as a Wet wick . Hopeless waiting to load a page or Fb or U tube or TV. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mrfill Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 18 hours ago, Chelseafan said: 1000mps ? It may be advertised but I doubt anyone gets that. However, I agree, upload speeds in the western world are appalling. In February engineers were busy outside my house installing FTTP (Fibre to the premises) lines. These will provide 1GB download regardless of distance from cabinet. Then Covid popped up and all the work stopped. Expecting it to be completed within 6 months though. And this is in rural North Suffolk, miles from London or any big city. It won't be cheap though - likely to be around £50/month (2000Bt). Thai internet is very good - generally cheaper and faster than UK by miles. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AAArdvark Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 Surprised how high Romania was. One of the things that I miss after moving from Thailand to the Philippines is the internet. My cable company delivers an amazing 2.5/.5 mbps. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chelseafan Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 14 minutes ago, mrfill said: In February engineers were busy outside my house installing FTTP (Fibre to the premises) lines. These will provide 1GB download regardless of distance from cabinet. Then Covid popped up and all the work stopped. Expecting it to be completed within 6 months though. And this is in rural North Suffolk, miles from London or any big city. It won't be cheap though - likely to be around £50/month (2000Bt). Thai internet is very good - generally cheaper and faster than UK by miles. Nice, who is that with ? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pib Posted May 11, 2020 Author Share Posted May 11, 2020 4 minutes ago, AAArdvark said: Surprised how high Romania was. One of the things that I miss after moving from Thailand to the Philippines is the internet. My cable company delivers an amazing 2.5/.5 mbps. This article expands why Romania has fast internet speed. https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/jp5aa3/why-romanias-internet-is-so-much-faster-than-americas And your low speed in the P.I. must be due to your internet line running "uphill" to your residence. ???? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mick501 Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 Such a waste of technology when legislation about downloading porn is ambiguous. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bwpage3 Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 You are talking Mbps. When I lived in Arizona USA, COX offered fiber internet that was 5 Gbps. Right now in Florida I have 400 Mbps with Spectrum. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pib Posted May 11, 2020 Author Share Posted May 11, 2020 5 minutes ago, bwpage3 said: When I lived in Arizona USA, COX offered fiber internet that was 5 Gbps. Little hard to believe unless talking some special leased line to a big business which would probably cost an arm and a leg. COX in Phoenix AZ now only shows plans to 1Gb. https://www.cox.com/local/residential/az/phoenix/internet 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mrfill Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 11 minutes ago, Chelseafan said: Nice, who is that with ? Vodafone and Hyperoptic are around £50, BT nearer £80 (surprise, surprise) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tomazbodner Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 19 hours ago, Chelseafan said: No I'm in London. Converted GBP into Baht. My point is that Internet is just as cheap in UK. 200/200 mbps from FiberNet costs 399 THB/month. And that's 200 mbps uplink, not 20. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chelseafan Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 12 minutes ago, mrfill said: Vodafone and Hyperoptic are around £50, BT nearer £80 (surprise, surprise) I don't understand why BT is so expensive. It's their lines. Will check it out. Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bwpage3 Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 18 minutes ago, Pib said: Little hard to believe unless talking some special leased line to a big business which would probably cost an arm and a leg. COX in Phoenix AZ now only shows plans to 1Gb. https://www.cox.com/local/residential/az/phoenix/internet There is always some keyboard warrior finding something on the internet to bolster their lack of experience or Knowledge When Cox first started fiber in Arizona, 6 or so years ago, 5 gb residential internet was available for $79.95 a month. Now if you are one of those St**** S**** that cannot believe anything they can't find on the internet, sorry to be you. And 1 gb is a hell of a lot faster than 200 Mbps 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mrfill Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 26 minutes ago, Chelseafan said: I don't understand why BT is so expensive. It's their lines. Will check it out. Thanks I did some contract work for them a few years ago. Too many chiefs, not enough indians..... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pib Posted May 11, 2020 Author Share Posted May 11, 2020 (edited) 31 minutes ago, bwpage3 said: When Cox first started fiber in Arizona, 6 or so years ago, 5 gb residential internet was available for $79.95 a month. Never-ever heard of a 5Gb residential plan....would require special business class equipment....cost a lot of money. Sorry, still don't believe it. Now back around that timeframe 5GB mobile data packages would cost around $79. And below 6 year old/2014 news article talks COX first coming to Phoenix and offering its 1Gb Gigablast interet speed plan for $69. See weblink for full article...partial quote also below. https://www.azcentral.com/story/money/business/2014/10/26/cox-internet-gigabit-high-speed-phoenix/17949237/ Quote The race to provide gigabit Internet service in Phoenix appears to be revving up. Cox Communications will provide its ultra-high-speed Internet service called G1GABLAST to its first residential customer by the end of the month, and plans to sign on more customers in an Ahwatukee Foothills neighborhood in November, company officials said. Phoenix is the first city where Cox is offering residential customers access to gigabit Internet, a service the company has been deploying to businesses since 2007. As neighborhoods come online with gigabit service, the company plans to promote the available service by e-mail notifications, mailers, door-to-door sales ambassadors and neighborhood rallies. G1GABLAST will cost $69.99 per month when combined with Cox's most popular service bundles. Edited May 11, 2020 by Pib 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Led Lolly Yellow Lolly Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 1 hour ago, Pib said: Never-ever heard of a 5Gb residential plan....would require special business class equipment....cost a lot of money. Sorry, still don't believe it. Now back around tha I find all of this pretty absurd actually. Who needs a 1 Gbps connection in their home, really? It's no different from all the nonsense hype around 4G and 5G. Who needs a gagillion gabillion bps on their mobile phone? Ridiculous. You can stream a HD movie for 3 Mbps. Now, if you're tranferring large volumes of data between offices on fixed lines, then yes, it will help. We don't have any 1 Gbps lines but we achieve those speeds cumulatively. We have a main line from ToT, corporate line with a block of 5 static IPs. It's only 100 Mbps symmetrical but more then enough. The other 3 lines are baseline packages from 3bb, CAT and True. Total bandwidth between them is around 1 Gbps, which we load balance. The major advantage of this arrangement is very robust redundancy. But really, nobody needs these ridiculous speeds at home, certainly not in 2020. Maybe in the future. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rebreb Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 Maybe, when works, as the mess of it, hangs in the air. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Led Lolly Yellow Lolly Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 Great first post mate. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jadee Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 I don't know much about internet but I have a True 30mbps package, the bog standard, and yes, it does get that speed when I test it - but the ping is really high - this makes playing games terrible. It depends where the other people you are playing with are located. I don't know whether anyone is bothering about the ping when they report these high speeds, but if they are playing games, they should. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Led Lolly Yellow Lolly Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 Means nothing without the location of the remote client and your results. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ranshoko Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 Hard to believe. Surveys differ widely on this particular subject Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chelseafan Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 5 hours ago, mrfill said: I did some contract work for them a few years ago. Too many chiefs, not enough indians..... So THAT's where Thai Airways got their business model from... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chelseafan Posted May 11, 2020 Share Posted May 11, 2020 3 hours ago, NilSS said: I find all of this pretty absurd actually. Who needs a 1 Gbps connection in their home, really? It's no different from all the nonsense hype around 4G and 5G. Who needs a gagillion gabillion bps on their mobile phone? Ridiculous. You can stream a HD movie for 3 Mbps. Now, if you're tranferring large volumes of data between offices on fixed lines, then yes, it will help. We don't have any 1 Gbps lines but we achieve those speeds cumulatively. We have a main line from ToT, corporate line with a block of 5 static IPs. It's only 100 Mbps symmetrical but more then enough. The other 3 lines are baseline packages from 3bb, CAT and True. Total bandwidth between them is around 1 Gbps, which we load balance. The major advantage of this arrangement is very robust redundancy. But really, nobody needs these ridiculous speeds at home, certainly not in 2020. Maybe in the future. One word. P@@n! The other point is that your DL speed is only going to be as good as the UL speed from where you are downloading from. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
muratremix Posted May 12, 2020 Share Posted May 12, 2020 14 hours ago, i84teen said: Hi, if using ookla in CLI, is it possible to manually select server location for the test? Tanks a lot. it is possible. --server-id=SERVERID however ookla cli app only lists nearby servers, I use python version of speedtest-cli on github to get server list I want speedtest-cli --list | grep Country Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cricky Posted May 12, 2020 Share Posted May 12, 2020 On 5/10/2020 at 9:30 PM, NilSS said: 20 years ago, even 10 years ago, Thailand's WAN capabilities were just laughable This is not true. Ive been with 3bb for around 15 years. My original Internet package started at 2mb bandwidth for 590 baht per month with free upgrades over the years 2mb then 4mb 6mb 10mb 20mb 50mb now 1gb. Visiting Australia occassionally over the years Id be annoyed with their broadband speeds, very poor bandwidth, speeds were shockingly slow. So basically for as long as domestic broadband internets been available, Thailand has always outperformed Australia. I never had a dialup connection in Thailand. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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