On 02/01/2013 08:15 PM, Paul B. Gallagher wrote:
> NoOp wrote:
...
>> That said, I'd still turn on Java *only* if it is absolutely necessary &
>> then *turn it off* when no longer necessary.
> 
> Interesting...
> 
> The site you linked reported my speeds in SE Pennsylvania based on their 
> Newark, NJ server:
>       6.91 Mbps down
>       13.3 Mbps up
> 
> A moment later, <http://www.speedtest.net/> reported based on their New 
> York server:
>       57.46, 58.43 Mbps down (two tests)
>       32.68, 32.81 Mbps up (two tests)
> 
> I wonder who to believe?
> 
> I do seem to be able to stream HD video without jaggies or dropped 
> frames, so I'm leaning toward speedtest.
> 

The link you provide only requires Adobe Flash and has nothing to do
with this thread. The link I provided was to demonstrate a java *and*
flash requirement. Speed testing is subjective & is anyone's choice -
sort of like Windows AV's...

Anyway here is another with a java requirement:

<http://netspeed1.stanford.edu:7123/>
See: http://netspeed.stanford.edu/toolkit/

====
Stanford University Web100 based Network Diagnostic Tool (NDT)
Located at Stanford, CA
This java applet was developed to test the reliablity and operational
status of your desktop computer and network connection. It does this by
sending data between your computer and this remote NDT server. These
tests will determine:

    The slowest link in the end-to-end path (Dial-up modem to 10 Gbps
Ethernet/OC-192)
    The Ethernet duplex setting (full or half);
    If congestion is limiting end-to-end throughput. "
=======

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