Japan sets world record for the fastest internet speed ever (www.newsnationnow.com)
from alphacyberranger@sh.itjust.works to world@lemmy.world on 05 Jul 2024 12:57
https://sh.itjust.works/post/21822684

#world

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itsathursday@lemmy.world on 05 Jul 2024 13:30 next collapse

Cries in Australian internet. Tears fill the pits. Network connection error.

gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world on 05 Jul 2024 15:01 next collapse

I’m pretty sure the WJET/WFXP tag on the front of the article means it’s a reprint of an article originally written by the Fox TV affiliate for Erie, Pennsylvania, so yeah this is like a content mill husk that most for-profit local news in America has turned into being regurgitated by a source somehow even more soulless and predatory

Anyway, mirror link - web.archive.org/…/japan-sets-world-record-for-the…

Jumuta@sh.itjust.works on 05 Jul 2024 17:07 next collapse

rupert quality

Deceptichum@quokk.au on 05 Jul 2024 18:16 collapse

Eh I’m happy enough with my gbps internet. Australian Internet has come a long way since 2011.

Could be worse, this could be America where I’m trapped into one provider who doesn’t offer a good deal.

palordrolap@kbin.run on 05 Jul 2024 13:53 next collapse

What exactly is sending and receiving over such a link?

That has to be be a large amount of expensive fast RAM in the computers at either end trying to keep up with that.

Consumer-grade hardware is an order of magnitude slower, even for the good stuff.

Pretzilla@lemmy.world on 05 Jul 2024 14:04 next collapse

Think more like backbone, a bunch of sources and requests all getting there faster.

Chainweasel@lemmy.world on 05 Jul 2024 15:05 collapse

It’s more to carry the load of multiple computers, instead of one computer connecting at 400 Tb/s think of it as a few thousand computers running gigabit connections over one single line.
You could supply an entire office building with internet with a single line from the provider.

Pretzilla@lemmy.world on 05 Jul 2024 14:06 next collapse

(the news source looks good and worth visiting BTW)

An international team in Japan has set a new record for the fastest internet speed at a blazing 402 terabits per second (Tb/s).

The staggering number is hard to put into perspective. Compared to the average U.S. broadband speeds of around 226 megabits per second, it’s over 1.5 million times faster.

For example, a video game released in 2021, “Call of Duty: Vanguard,” is 170 gigabytes large. With an internet speed of 402 Tb/s, the game would be downloaded in 3 milliseconds. This speed is faster than a blink of an eye — over 3,000% faster.

Back in March, scientists in the United Kingdom set the previous world record for internet speed clocking in at 301 Tb/s. Researchers have increased the speed by over 25% in just a few short months.

Speeds like this are only possible using a fiber optic connection utilizing a multitude of new and different wavelengths to send data across the fiber system. These fiber optic systems will be a technology that will allow “Beyond 5G” information services to work faster than ever, and the technology is expected to become more commonly seen.

Invalid_hihdk_263637@lemy.lol on 05 Jul 2024 14:18 next collapse

Access to this page has been denied

Eggyhead@kbin.run on 05 Jul 2024 16:02 collapse

The internet was so fast you must have missed it.

3ntranced@lemmy.world on 06 Jul 2024 08:45 collapse

Now they need to design an ssd that just shotguns the data to the disk at Mach 1.