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by ssmoot 5618 days ago
I've backed up a few hundred GB with Backblaze. I think the implication being made here is unfair. I'm much more likely to believe any issues with my upload were caused by shady AT&T QoS.

You know the kind. Goto any speedtest site and somehow you're getting exactly 12MB down, 3MB up, but it never really seems to add up that way anywhere else. Even to my own office, which I know has an extra 100MB to burst, yet somehow my downloads from the data-center across town are more likely to end up in the 3MB range 99% of the time.

2 comments

The likely reason Speedtest doesn't add up is because the file you are downloading to test with is hosted by your ISP.

Speedtest was originally made to test the 'last mile', assuming your ISP's connections to the rest of the world is always faster than that. In most cases that is true, but it is possible it isn't in your area.

As a particular clear example of that, here's my little write up on Speedtest.net usage in Rwanda: http://blog.nyaruka.com/stuff-0

The model I had in my head was web hosting providers with "unlimited" data storage vs. ones with 1TB of storage. Even though a normal user would probably get nowhere near 1TB, it gives the company a fallback on what 'acceptable' usage is. If the price ever does go down, they can always adjust the limit.