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Does Internet Speed Vary by Season?
- Subject: Does Internet Speed Vary by Season?
- From: swm at emanon.com (Scott Morris)
- Date: Wed, 07 Oct 2009 14:22:31 -0400
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
- References: <[email protected]>
I may be having my wires a little crossed (I'm not an electrical
engineer) but I was always under the impression that manipulation of the
physical characteristics like that from heat/dampness didn't reduce the
"speed" but the "quality" (like line noise/errors/etc) of the line.
Whether old telco lines or newer data lines it's all about electrical
signal and bit error rates. More errors = more retransmissions = slower
perceived throughput.
Just my thinking.
Scott
Joe Greco wrote:
>> http://www.wired.com/gadgets/miscellaneous/magazine/17-10/ts_burningquestion
>>
>
> It used to be that we would notice this, except that it had everything to
> do with temperature *and* dampness. In the '90's, it was still quite
> common for a lot of older outside plant to be really only "voice grade"
> and it wasn't unusual for copper to run all the way back to the CO,
> through a variety of taps and splice points. Even though Ma Bell would
> typically do a careful job handling their copper, the sheer number of
> potential points of failure meant that it wasn't unusual for water to
> infiltrate and penetrate. If I recall correctly, the worst was usually
> a long, hard cold rain (hey we're in Wisconsin) after which people who
> had been getting solidly high speed modem connects would see a somewhat
> slower speed.
>
> ... JG
>