Comrades,

Continuing my quest for ISDN. 

One of the many things i had planned was to host a small webserver over the 
ISDN line for the use of a limited number ( 10 ) of people. 

My ( maybe flawed ) logic being that at an average of 5kb per second transfer 
, my ISDN line ( being 64kb ) could cater for 10 people accessing the site at 
any one time ( 5kb * 10 = 50kb , leaving me 14kb for running my terminal 
emulator ).

However , reading this months Linux Format article on co-location , i came 
across the following snippet...

"its no good trying to use a 64k leased line for a company web server, 
because it maxes out at roughly 5.5kb per second. That means that a user who 
hits on your website can only pull in that much data per unit time - and if 
two or more users go to your site simultaneously it will slow to a crawl"

This appears to put a dampner on my webserver hopes. However i can't make the 
maths add up , if you've got a 64k ( which i'm taking is 64kb per second ) 
line and your only using 5.5kb per second , why does it max out? I make it 
that the above scenario would leave 59.5kb per second of unused bandwidth.

Can someone set me straight on where i'm going wrong ( as i'm the first to 
admit that Linux Format know a damn site more than i do about these things ).

KW
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