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Bandwidth V.

s Internet Speed

What is bandwidth?
The term bandwidth refers to high-speed data transmission that transports large amounts of data
from one location to another in a single cable. The most common types of broadband Internet
connections are cable, fiber, and DSL, and bandwidth is now a new standard for Internet
connections.

Bandwidth can be compared to the amount of water that can flow through a water pipe. The
larger the pipe, the more water can pass through it at once. The same goes for bandwidth.
Therefore, the higher the capacity of the communication link or pipe, the more data can pass
through it in one second. In general, bandwidth is measured in megabits per second (Mbps). The
more bandwidth you have, the faster the data transfer from one device to another. When
requesting an ISP for Internet service, Internet packages are usually priced according to
bandwidth.

What is Internet speed?


Internet speed is measured by the number of bits or bytes transferable per second. Download
speed measures the amount of data transfer from the Internet to our device. Our download speed
determines how fast your movies, music, and files load on your computer. It also determines how
fast videos and web pages are loaded. Upload speed tells us how fast our data transfer from the
device to the Internet. On the other hand, upload speed determines how fast we can upload
images to a website, how reliable and uninterrupted our video calls are, and how fast messages
are sent across different platforms.

Bandwidth vs. Internet speed


First of all, we need to know that bandwidth is not equal to speed. They are related but not the
same. The difference between bandwidth and speed can be summed up in one line. Internet
bandwidth determines how much data can be uploaded or downloaded from our device, and our
internet speed determines how fast data can be uploaded or downloaded on our device.

A simple example can show the difference between the two concepts. If we consider bandwidth
as a freeway and cars are data that travel at almost the same speed, to increase their speed, we
need to expand the freeway, in other words, increase the bandwidth.

Bandwidth is commonly shared between subscribers for home use. That is, the bandwidth or
capacity of our network depends on the number of online users. The more online users, the
slower our data will be uploaded or downloaded. It should be noted that in a shared service, the
download speed is usually faster than the upload speed.
Therefore, it can be concluded that if a business needs high speed internet for upload and
download and a large number of devices are connected to a network, should look for another
solution. Of course, this is not limited to companies and businesses, but any person who needs
high-speed internet and low ping for work at home or even online gaming, in many cases shared
bandwidth will not meet his needs.

Bandwidth is commonly shared between subscribers for home use. That is, the bandwidth or
capacity of our network depends on the number of online users. The more online users there are,
the slower our data will be uploaded and downloaded. It should be noted that in a shared service,
the download speed is usually faster than the upload speed.

We offer a dedicated bandwidth service that has none of these limitations and provides
subscribers with stable internet 24 hours a day. In a dedicated bandwidth service, all the
purchased bandwidth is allocated to the same subscriber, and as a result, during peak hours and
as the number of online users increases, they do not experience a slowdown. Dedicated
bandwidth is also available symmetrically, resulting in the same upload and download speeds.

Source: https://respina.net/blog/what-is-the-difference-between-bandwidth-and-internet-speed/?
lang=en

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