Hi Gene,

Just to be pedantic - are you sure that you have a 100 000 kilobit line or
is it 100 Mib/s line (1 Mi = 1024^2).

Regards

Martin

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 19 January 2008 17:04
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:40156] RE: UPLR Jurisdictions

Bill,

NIST Handbook 130 is separated into clickable sections, so choosing to
examine the UPLR section only should take much less than a looooong time.

At my rural home, I have only dial-up access to the Internet, very slow, at
the best of times only a few tens of kilobits per second. DSL is not
available because of low population density.  However at my office on the UI
Campus,
access speed is 100 000 kilobits per second (yes, 100 megabits per second)
I go there when I anticipate long downloads.
  
Gene. 

---- Original message ----
>Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2008 14:01:45 -0800
>From: "Bill Potts" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  
>Subject: [USMA:40152] RE: UPLR Jurisdictions  
>To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
>
>I should have added that, in this case, 295 pages translates to just under
>22 megabytes. For dial-up users, that represents a looooong download time.

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