GIFs beim Laden am Abspielen hindern
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inhumanist -
18. Oktober 2010 um 21:45 -
Erledigt
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bigpen: Fox2Fox meint: K ist der 11. Buchstabe im Alphabet, M der 13.
Vor ca. 15 Jahren wurden noch Telefonmodems mit 32 oder 56 Kbit/s verkauft, die letzteren waren für diese Technik schon richtig "schnell", manche nutzten auch schon ISDN mit Kanalbündelung. (Dann konnte man kein Telefongespräch während der Datenübertragung führen). Du meinst sicher 50 Mbit/s (über DSL)!?*edit: Dimension (Einheitenbezeichnung) der Datenübertragungsrate korrigiert:
Mb/sMbit/s
https://www.worldlingo.com/ma/enwiki/en/D…abit_per_secondZitat
Megabit per secondA megabit per second (abbreviated as Mbit/s or Mbps) is a unit of data transfer rate equal to 1,000,000 bits per second. Because there are 8 bits in a byte, a transfer speed of 8 megabits per second (8 Mbit/s) is equivalent to 1,000,000 bytes per second (approximately 976 kB/s).
Usage examples
The bandwidth of consumer broadband internet services is often rated incorrectly in megabits (a unit of information) or more correctly in megabits per second; the formal abbreviation for megabit per second is Mbit/s. Note that in this context the term bandwidth is used colloquially to mean the data transfer rate.
Data streams representing compressed video are often measured in Mbit/s:
* 2.0 Mbit/s — VHS quality
* 8 Mbit/s — DVD quality
* 27 Mbit/s — HDTV qualityMore specific examples found on standard Comcast digital streams (transmitted in MPEG2 format):
* 2-3 Mbit/s — a low-definition digital channel with a very clean signal
* 5-6 Mbit/s — a low-definition digital channel with a digitized ("dirty") analog signal (or just an analog channel)
* 8-12 Mbit/s — a medium to high-definition digital channel with DVD quality data (equivalent to HBO-HD)
* 18-20 Mbit/s — a high-definition digital channel at 1080i (equivalent to Discovery HD)Another example, Network cards and cables are typically available in 10/100/1000 Mbit/s. This means they can support a transfer rate of 10 or 100 or 1000 Mbit/s.
Interface and device speeds
Interface Megabits per second Megabytes per second
USB Low speed (USB 1.x, 2.0) 1.5 Mbit/s 0.18 MB/s
USB Full speed (USB 1.x, 2.0) 12 Mbit/s 1.5 MB/s
USB High speed (USB 2.0) 480 Mbit/s 60 MB/s
USB Super speed (proposed) 4.8 Gbit/s 600 MB/s
Firewire 400 (IEEE 1394) 400 Mbit/s 50 MB/s
Firewire 800 (IEEE 1394b) 800 Mbit/s 100 MB/s
CD-ROM, 1x 1.2 Mbit/s 0.15 MB/s
CD-ROM, 52x 62.4 Mbit/s 7.8 MB/s
DVD-ROM, 1x 11.1 Mbit/s 1.3 MB/s
DVD-ROM, 16x 177.3 Mbit/s 21.1 MB/s
BD-ROM, 1x 36 Mbit/s 4.5 MB/s
SATA I 1200 Mbit/s 150 MB/s
SATA II 2400 Mbit/s 300 MB/s
PCIe, 1x 2000 Mbit/s 250 MB/sNote that these raw bit rates do not account for protocol, encoding, or other overheads; so they aren't even the theoretical peak data rates of these interface technologies.
Related: Megabit, a unit of information storage (as opposed to transmission), Gigabit Ethernet
Gruß gammaburst -
Ich habe jetzt nochmals bei cablecom unserem Provider, nachgesehen. Es sind 50'000 Kbit/s. Der Zugang ist über TV-Kabel.
Danke gammaburst!
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