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Average Broadband Speed in US Rises Above 50 Mbps For First Time (techcrunch.com)

Internet speeds are getting faster in the United States, especially in cities such as Kansas City, Austin, Seattle, San Francisco, and Phoenix, according to a new Speedtest Market Report. The report, by Ookla's popular service, found that fixed broadband customers saw the biggest jump in performance this year with download speeds achieving an average of over 50Mbps for the first time ever. The result marks a 40 percent increase since July 2015. From a TechCrunch report: That average, 54.97 megabits per second is 42 percent higher than the same period last year, and upload jumped even more -- 18.88 is 51 percent higher year over year. This is all based on the 8 million or so daily tests conducted on Speedtest's website and apps, by the way, so the data is pretty sound. Comcast Xfinity took the honors for fastest speed on average, but its 125 megabits wasn't that much higher than the competition: Cox with 118 and Spectrum with 114. [...] On mobile, Verizon and T-Mobile are tied for first place with 21 megabits and change download speed on average, though the latter beats the competition by a long shot with upload speeds averaging 11.59 megabits. Poor Sprint, though.

13 of 108 comments (clear)

  1. This by johnsmithperson123 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Is probably the result of people using mobile phone data instead of DSL .

  2. I call fould by mrlinux11 · · Score: 3, Informative

    I and my neighbors are nowhere near 50mb, I have the fastest and it is just 3mb's

    1. Re:I call fould by 110010001000 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Me too. I live in Seattle and we only have 300 baud modems. We share them with 25 other people too.

    2. Re: I call fould by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      300 baud modem? My family of 50 has to share a connection, which is just cousin Cletus shouting "one" and "zero" from the top of a telegraph pole and listening for a response from cousin Billy-Joe standing on Comcast's roof.

  3. Time Warner Maxx by butchersong · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm not surprised. Time Warner, the largest provider in the states has been rolling out decent upgrades recently. I'm in Kentucky (not typically the best availability) and am at 300/20 mbps as of this year. Not sure if this is a trend with other ISPs

  4. Thanks, Google by pak9rabid · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I can directly attribute this bump in speed in my town (Austin) to Google Fiber. Before Google announced they were coming to Austin, the absolute fastest consumer-grade connection one could get was 50 Mbits, through TWC. As soon as Google mentioned their intentions to enter Austin with their Fiber service, TWC immediately started offering 100, 200, and even 300 Mbit plans, with plans for a 500 Mbit service level on the horizon. AT&T did something similar with their U-Verse service as well. Hell, I can even get these speeds in the next town over (Buda), where Google hasn't even announced they're going to go into. A little competition goes a long way.

    1. Re: Thanks, Google by ZeroWaiteState · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes, it absolutely has to do with Google. Otherwise they would just amortize the older DOCSIS infrastructure over more years and only upgrade to avoid equipment failure. Just because new tech is available doesn't mean there is any reason to deploy it if you have no competitors. In the telcos case they did fiber projects in order to get grant money, and Verizon sold off their fiber business to Frontier after the grant money ran low. I've seen other smaller fiber operators setting up shop because the incumbents aren't interested in upgrading their networks. This usually works out with the incumbent purchasing the small operator and driving the price back up, but Google is the first one I've seen that AT&T etc can't afford to buy out.

  5. Lots of data does not mean representative by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is all based on the 8 million or so daily tests conducted on Speedtest's website and apps, by the way, so the data is pretty sound.

    So how many people on the same old DSL line run a speed test to check that there speed is the same as it was 10 years ago? People use speed tests when they got a new line, they've upgraded it or they're troubleshooting. They don't do it at random. Our national statistics here in Norway is based on collection of subscription statistics, which seems far more reliable as users would probably complain if they didn't get what they paid for. Last figures are 1,914,431 broadband connections, average of 40.2 Mbps with a median of 25.6 Mbps.

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  6. How is this measured? by oneiros27 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They say this is "broadband" speeds, but broadband was redefined last year to require 25Mbps downloads.

    So, someone could be sneaky and say 'oh, those 10 Mbps connections aren't broadband anymore', and you just drop out the lowest numbers, and miraculously the average goes up.

    Schools were using this trick by keeping the poorly performing students from taking standardized testing to raise their test averages.

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  7. Re:Pretty Sound? by Calydor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    *looks out window*

    So this is what Seattle looks like? Weird, can't see the Space Needle from here.

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  8. ...and mirrors by fyngyrz · · Score: 3, Funny

    My family has to stack wood so we can emit a burst of one's and zero's with our signal fire. The baud rate is terrible, and we keep getting parity errors when the blankets burn through. The cost of enough cords of wood to keep the connection up is horrific.

    To be fair, they did try to put a telegraph line in, but the Smith's down the road a ways cut and burned the poles trying to watch porn, and so that never came about.

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    1. Re:...and mirrors by Yvan256 · · Score: 3, Funny

      To be fair, they did try to put a telegraph line in, but the Smith's down the road a ways cut and burned the poles trying to watch porn, and so that never came about.

      Well at least he did get wood.

  9. Akamai says 15 Mbps by TheSync · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Akamai State of the Internet Q1 2016 has a US average Internet bandwidth of 15 Mbps, which is far more believable.

    I agree that there are plenty of people in the US with 50 Mbps+ (I have that myself), but there are still a lot of people on the end of long DSL loops who will never get higher than 5 Mbps.