Tested: Multi-gig fiber internet is too fast for your PC

If you’re about to bite the bullet on a blazing-fast multi-gig internet deal, you might just have to upgrade your PC’s storage drive and CPU too. I know this because besides having to upgrade my networking hardware, which was too slow for my new Sonic 10Gb internet, I discovered that parts of my PC were also too slow to keep up with the firehose of data. And yours probably will be too—even if you have a reasonably powerful gaming rig with an SSD and a solid 6- or 8-core processor. [ Further reading: The hidden costs of multi-gigabit fiber Internet: A cautionary tale ] How it started It all started when a friend, who was himself contemplating an upgrade to 10Gb internet, and the potentially costly upgrade of his networking gear, asked me to run a test on my own multi-gig network. “Do me a favor,” Greg Vederman asked one morning. “Download a 20GB Steam game—something large enough that there’s enough time to ramp up to the max speed, and then tell me what you actually max out at, and whether it’s just a spike or if it’s sustained. I think that’ll be the deciding factor on whether or not I deal with this upgrade to multi-gigabit internet right now.” While running those tests for “The Vede” I realized that although I knew downloading a game could easily outstrip the raw write performance of a SATA SSD’s theoretical 6Gbps write speeds, I didn’t know how much of an impact it would have in practice. The tests The best Pcie 4.0 SSD for... Continue reading at 'PC World'

[ PC World | 2022-05-18 10:45:00 UTC ]

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Springer Nature signs its first 'pure OA' deal with Sweden's Bibsam

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State school children miss out on author visits, NLT report reveals

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New York City’s Public Libraries to End Film Streaming Through Kanopy

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ALA 2019: In Opening Keynote, Jason Reynolds Celebrates the Libraries Within Us All

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The Week in Libraries: June 21, 2019

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Journalism and Libraries: ‘Both Exist to Support Strong, Well-Informed Communities’

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The Week in Libraries: New Reader Survey Urges Publishers, Libraries to Bridge Their Data Gap

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Washington, D.C. Booksellers Bring Together Women's March Participants

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Tynt Offers Tracking Tools for Publishers

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