On 27/05/2020 20:09, Stephen Loosley wrote:
any and all local ... 44.2 Tbps app-developments can only widely
happen here with a full-fibre NBN FttP ..
There are many reasons to view our government's cheapskate NBN as a
betrayal of the nation. For the culpable, I favour ritual disembowelling
on
Tom and David write ..
>> The Star Trek transporter requires teraquads of data. ;-)
>
> I look forward to the day when BMUS (Beam Me Up Scotty)
> replaces HTTP. :‑J
Yes, and any and all local BMUS etc 44.2 Tbps app-developments
can only widely happen here with a full-fibre NBN FttP .. one trust
On Wed, 2020-05-27 at 13:26 +1000, David Boxall wrote:
> I look forward to the day when BMUS (Beam Me Up Scotty) replaces
> HTTP. :‑J
I don't understand. What's this BMUS protocol? I do like the natural
pronunciation of that acronym - "beam us", but the fact is I'd never
heard of it until now.
Ho
On 27/05/2020 08:31, Tom Worthington wrote:
The Star Trek transporter requires teraquads of data. ;-)
I look forward to the day when BMUS (Beam Me Up Scotty) replaces HTTP. :‑J
--
David Boxall| When a distinguished but elderly
| scientist st
Particles collide in the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) detectors
approximately 1 billion times per second, generating about one petabyte of
collision data per second. However, such quantities of data are impossible
for current computing systems to record and they are hence filtered by the
experiments
On 24/5/20 7:59 pm, Andy Farkas wrote:
What would you want to stream in at 44.2Tbps? ...
The Star Trek transporter requires teraquads of data. ;-)
--
Tom Worthington, MEd FHEA FACS CP IP3P http://www.tomw.net.au
+61(0)419496150
TomW Communications Pty Ltd. PO Box 13, Belconnen ACT 2617, Au
On 2020-05-24 20:21, Karl Auer wrote:
Please tell me this is just dry humour...
You either forgot the :-) or won't answer the question
-andyf
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On Sun, 2020-05-24 at 19:59 +1000, Andy Farkas wrote:
> What would you want to stream in at 44.2Tbps?
> Disk drives can't record that fast... watching 4k (or 8k and more in
> the future)
> video streams doesn't need that much bandwidth.
> I'm quite happy to wait a few minutes when I copy 2+GB files
> Australians Record World’s Fastest Internet Speed At 44.2 Tbps
What would you want to stream in at 44.2Tbps?
Disk drives can't record that fast... watching 4k (or 8k and more in the
future)
video streams doesn't need that much bandwidth.
I'm quite happy to wait a few minutes when I cop
On 23/5/20 11:30 pm, Stephen Loosley wrote:
And there's more detail here ..
https://theconversation.com/internet-traffic-is-growing-25-each-year-we-created-a-fingernail-sized-chip-that-can-help-the-nbn-keep-up-138620
As I read the paper, they demonstrated an optical transmitter capable of
th
And there's more detail here ..
https://theconversation.com/internet-traffic-is-growing-25-each-year-we-created-a-fingernail-sized-chip-that-can-help-the-nbn-keep-up-138620
> Australians Record World’s Fastest Internet Speed At 44.2 Tbps
>
> By Charanjeet Singh - May 22, 2020
> https://
Australians Record World’s Fastest Internet Speed At 44.2 Tbps
By Charanjeet Singh - May 22, 2020
https://fossbytes.com/australians-record-worlds-fastest-internet-speed-at-44-2-tbps/
A group of researchers in Australia claim to have recorded the world’s fastest
internet speed of 44.2 terabits
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