I've never seen a resource that organizes bandwidth usage that way - even
within our individual respective spaces I think that would be tricky data
to acquire!

But two things that aren't obvious about Internet usage (and how bandwidth
is just a tiny part of the equation) until you've had hundreds of people
piping through a shared connection every day:

1) bandwidth is important, but latency is more important. Without getting
super duper technical, latency is the speed that the network responds,
which is different from how fast files download.

MOST people spend a lot of their day clicking around the Internet, or using
internet connected apps. With some rare exceptions like game developers and
video editors, the files we move around in our daily work are relatively
small.

But when the latency is bad - everyone feels it because clicking to load a
page, or refresh email, or live typing on Google docs etc feels like it has
a lag. Our network (internal wireless + gigabit) plus our 50mb down/10mb up
almost always has more than enough bandwidth for 120+ people working hard
every day. And that includes streaming videos, music, etc.

Where things go haywire is when latency ratchets up. This can happen in our
network because wifi coverage is interrupted, or because our internet
provider is having issues, or most often because someone on the network is
uploading a huge file (offsite backup like a Dropbox sync or uploading a
video to YouTube) and our ISP starts to throttle latency because it thinks
something is wrong. This tool is FOREVER to figure out!

Our normal network latency is 20-30ms response time from a popular site
like google.com when it goes above 100ms, you start to notice things
slowing down. 200ms and the network feels like it's crawling.
Interestingly, though, you can still download big files quickly they just
take a few extra moments before they start.

It's a rough experience to explain to people, and they don't care if it's
latency or speed they just want to work. So understanding that more speed
without an improvement in latency is important.

2) the network itself is just as important as the Internet connection.
There's been a bunch of great discussions on this list about network design
and what hardware to get before, but Jon Markwell's post sums up the
majority of the best of it:
http://jonathanmarkwell.com/2014/11/22/best-coworking-wifi/

We upgraded to the Unifi system that he mentions in this post and it's been
a MASSIVE improvement over everything else we tried. I heartily endorse
this recommendation now from first hand experience!

-Alex

On Wednesday, April 1, 2015, Cassidy <[email protected]
<javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','[email protected]');>> wrote:

> Hi everyone!
>
> do you recommend any websites or databases for researching average data
> consumption by industry and/or company size?
>
> or do you have any insights to share regarding how your ventures provide
> internet services?
>
> thanks :)
>
> Cassidy
>
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