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Comment by SkyPuncher

6 hours ago

That's faster than my cell phone in the areas where I desperately need Starlink....500kb > 0

Be aware that it is bits, so 62.5kb. But I agree, the internet is still usable with that.

  • > Be aware that it is bits, so 62.5kb

    Ok, I’m not normally one to be the pedantic bits/bytes guy, but if you’re gonna go and make a bit/byte “clarification” you need to get the annotation correct or you'll just confuse everyone.

    It’s 500kb (small b for bits) and 62.5kB(capital/big B for bytes).

  • People always use bits for connectivity. 62.5kB/sec -- maybe really 55-60kB/sec downloaded. Or 18 seconds to get a megabyte.

    This is simultaneously fast (on my 14400 bps modem that I spent the most time "waiting for downloading", I was used to 12-13 minutes per megabyte vs. 18 seconds here) and slow (the google homepage is >1MB, so until you have resources cached you're waiting tens of seconds).

    It would be nice if everything were just a touch more efficient.

  • > the internet is still usable with that.

    We lived for years on 56kbps, granted the Internet was different back then, but we'd still "use" it, download stuff, etc.

    • Unfortunately, the 56kbps internet was a lot more usable. I've been on 256kbps cellular connections (T-Mobile free international roaming) and it works, but it's pretty bad. Everything takes way more data these days, and nobody thinks about slow connections when writing software so there are a ton of overly aggressive timeouts and bad UI that assume operations won't take more than few seconds.

  • I've never heard bandwidth being expressed in bytes. But if we're being pedantic then I'd like to throw my hat in and call it 62.5kB.

    Or even better, 62.5KiB (for kibibyte)

    • > Or even better, 62.5KiB (for kibibyte)

      Well, we can’t know if Starlink’s marketing team used 2^10 or 10^3, and since it’d inflate their numbers I guess the latter.

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