BlazingSpeed Posted March 5, 2005 CID Share Posted March 5, 2005 i just go back from a freshman orentation type thing for college, and they said pretty much the whole campus is wireless then they said in the dorms that they run a T9 connection.....i was like :haha: lol.....can anyone tell me what kind of speeds i will be looking foward to? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
t1wireless Posted March 7, 2005 CID Share Posted March 7, 2005 Nah i dun think they run t9,or that there even is a such thing as t9. Maybe oc-48 or something but t9 sounds mythical to me lol. Later Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BlazingSpeed Posted March 7, 2005 Author CID Share Posted March 7, 2005 the girl that was showing us the rooms or sum....i thought the highest was t-3 too....but she said it didnt mean nothing to her but that its really fast Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
reno Posted March 7, 2005 CID Share Posted March 7, 2005 I thought i saw somethign that a T9 was right above a OC- 252 or what ever the 200 one is. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
REV0LUTI0NIZED Posted March 7, 2005 CID Share Posted March 7, 2005 I have never heard about a T-9. I have just heard about T-1, T-2, and T-3 thats all and the OC's. That's pretty much it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Odysseus_____ Posted March 7, 2005 CID Share Posted March 7, 2005 I gotta agree with speedy... I've never heard of a T9... Maybe an OC-9, but at 466.56Mbps I'm not sure a university would need a pipe like that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
xs1 Posted March 7, 2005 CID Share Posted March 7, 2005 Network line types and speed table 13.21 Gbps OC-255 10 Gbps OC-192 4.976 Gbps OC-96 2.488 Gbps OC-48, STS-48 1.866 Gbps OC-36 1.244 Gbps OC-24 933.12 Mbps OC-18 622.08 Mbps OC-12, STS-12 466.56 Mbps OC-9 155.52 Mbps OC-3, STS-3 100 Mbps CDDI, FDDI, Fast Ethernet, Category 5 cable 51.84 Mbps OC-1, STS-1 44.736 Mbps T-3, DS-3 North America 34.368 Mbps E-3 Europe 20 Mbps Category 4 cable 16 Mbps Fast Token Ring LANs 10 Mbps Thin Ethernet, category 3 cable, cable modem 8.448 Mbps E-2 Europe 6.312 Mbps T-2, DS-2 North America 6.144 Mbps Standard ADSL downstream 4 Mbps Token Ring LANs 3.152 Mbps DS-1c 2.048 Mbps E-1, DS-1 Europe 1.544 Mbps ADSL, T-1, DS-1 North America 128 Kbps ISDN 64 Kbps DS-0, pulse code modulation 56 Kbps 56flex, U.S. Robotics x2 modems, 33.6 Kbps 56flex, x2 modem communications rate 28.8 Kbps V.34, Rockwell V.Fast Class modems 20 Kbps Level 1 cable, minimum cable data speed 14.4 Kbps V.32bis modem, V.17 fax 9600 bps modem speed circa early 1990s 2400 bps modem speed circa 1980s Units of Measurement bit = smallest unit of digital information, i.e. ones & zeros byte = a set of bits bps = bits per second Kbps = kilobits per second =1000 bits per second Mbps = Million bits per second =1,000,000 bits per second Gbps = Gigabits per second = 1,000,000,000 (one billion) bits per second Tbps = Terabits per second = 1,000,000,000,000 (one trillion) bits per second (Network speed is mesured in 1000 units, memory and storage space in 1024 units) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Indestructable Posted March 7, 2005 CID Share Posted March 7, 2005 damn fast! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Odysseus_____ Posted March 7, 2005 CID Share Posted March 7, 2005 2400 bps modem speed circa 1980s hahaha... That made me just remember that my first modem was 300 baud... and now I am connected via 4 multiplexed DS-3's... insane. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
just- Posted March 7, 2005 CID Share Posted March 7, 2005 BlazingSpeed u got to post some speed test of that stuff here camoneeeee Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CA3LE Posted March 7, 2005 CID Share Posted March 7, 2005 2400 bps modem speed circa 1980s hahaha... That made me just remember that my first modem was 300 baud... and now I am connected via 4 multiplexed DS-3's... insane. ahhhh, the bad 'ol days Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Odysseus_____ Posted March 8, 2005 CID Share Posted March 8, 2005 Yep... I miss my ol' Atari 800XL sometimes...lol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aggr3 Posted March 8, 2005 CID Share Posted March 8, 2005 Yep... I miss my ol' Atari 800XL sometimes...lol 800XL.....How about a trash 80....or a commodore 64??? The first computer I bought had a 40Meg hard drive....OK ..so it's been a while since I played Santapravia..(if that's spelled right).. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marcin541 Posted March 8, 2005 CID Share Posted March 8, 2005 Network line types and speed table 13.21 Gbps OC-255 10 Gbps OC-192 4.976 Gbps OC-96 2.488 Gbps OC-48, STS-48 1.866 Gbps OC-36 1.244 Gbps OC-24 933.12 Mbps OC-18 622.08 Mbps OC-12, STS-12 466.56 Mbps OC-9 155.52 Mbps OC-3, STS-3 100 Mbps CDDI, FDDI, Fast Ethernet, Category 5 cable 51.84 Mbps OC-1, STS-1 44.736 Mbps T-3, DS-3 North America 34.368 Mbps E-3 Europe 20 Mbps Category 4 cable 16 Mbps Fast Token Ring LANs 10 Mbps Thin Ethernet, category 3 cable, cable modem 8.448 Mbps E-2 Europe 6.312 Mbps T-2, DS-2 North America 6.144 Mbps Standard ADSL downstream 4 Mbps Token Ring LANs 3.152 Mbps DS-1c 2.048 Mbps E-1, DS-1 Europe 1.544 Mbps ADSL, T-1, DS-1 North America 128 Kbps ISDN 64 Kbps DS-0, pulse code modulation 56 Kbps 56flex, U.S. Robotics x2 modems, 33.6 Kbps 56flex, x2 modem communications rate 28.8 Kbps V.34, Rockwell V.Fast Class modems 20 Kbps Level 1 cable, minimum cable data speed 14.4 Kbps V.32bis modem, V.17 fax 9600 bps modem speed circa early 1990s 2400 bps modem speed circa 1980s Units of Measurement bit = smallest unit of digital information, i.e. ones & zeros byte = a set of bits bps = bits per second Kbps = kilobits per second =1000 bits per second Mbps = Million bits per second =1,000,000 bits per second Gbps = Gigabits per second = 1,000,000,000 (one billion) bits per second Tbps = Terabits per second = 1,000,000,000,000 (one trillion) bits per second (Network speed is mesured in 1000 units, memory and storage space in 1024 units) 3.152 MBPS = ADSL Why do they not have it there? -.- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Odysseus_____ Posted March 8, 2005 CID Share Posted March 8, 2005 800XL.....How about a trash 80....or a commodore 64??? The first computer I bought had a 40Meg hard drive....OK ..so it's been a while since I played Santapravia..(if that's spelled right).. Yeah... you were one of the lucky ones then... First hard drive I got was a whopping 10 megs, and costed around $400... and the thing was huge... looked like an intake manifold for an engine or somethin......lol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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