//trv/
File: 00001 .jpg (44.6 KB)
44.6 KB
(�/�#,��g�m4Beenan Airbnb814 Mbps?ewspefi scam? �=�"- �K�!�h�ÆS�T���x��
{���g{;E�G
Showing all 30 replies.
>>
>>2885168
>have gigabit internet
>run speed test
>shows between 814mbps
>put that in listing
OP are you retarded? that's pretty normal, I'm in the midwest and 800-900 is what I get on a normal speed test.
>>
>>2885204

That's true for a wired connection, but the Airbnb listing specifically badges it as "Wifi - 814 Mbps."

Considering overhead and typical wifi bottlenecks, you'd usually expect real-world speeds to top out around 500 Mbps on a gigabit line.
>>
>>2885222
Anon that's just normal speeds for like Wifi 6(6e) or any modern router. I've gotten 800mbps on a speed test from my home router that has 6e to a 1gbps line.
>Considering overhead and typical wifi bottlenecks, you'd usually expect real-world speeds to top out around 500 Mbps on a gigabit line.
Yeah so read my post again, and see they probably just ran a speed test and marked down the number of whatever it was or what the router said it could go to. WTF are you doing in an airbnb that needs more than 100mbps anyways? Even my largest screenshares with multiple RDP sessions and management consoles up, I might pull ~20mbps.

Are you so autistic you can't fathom some non-technical person just did a basic test and wrote down the number they saw on screen?
>>
Honestly, who even needs 814 Mbps at an Airbnb?
Only remote workers and hardcore gamers would give a shit. Maybe streamers too, I guess.
>>
Just run the speed test in the official Airbnb app to get the 'Fast Wi-Fi' badge.

But yeah, 814 Mbps is total overkill. Pretty much only digital nomads would care about that kind of speed.
>>
I heard some luxury hotel in Abu Dhabi holds the record for the world's fastest hotel wifi at around 1.2 Gbps.
>>
>>2885234
>>2885243
I digital nomad and work fine on 50/50, I can't imagine needing >150mbps. If I need to DL a big file I'll just start it when I sleep or am out and about in the city
>>
Well, it never hurts to have more speed though.
>>
>>2885272
> I NEED HIGHER NUMBER
>but anon you only use 10% of it
>BUT YEAH WHAT IF THO
Unless it's 800mbps for 80 rooms you're fine, even then they most likely have some QoS set up by default so you are never without some internet. Hell even home routers ship with some basic QoS so that one box can't hog the entire WAN link
>>
Where in Japan is this exactly?
>>
>>2885290
Near Kyoto.Around the area between Koka and Iga.
Showed up when searching for Airbnbs in Kyoto.
>>
>>2885168
It's a typo dumbass
>>
>>2885402
Where is it? Couldn't find shit. Are you trolling, dumbass?
>>
Did you even look? It shows up right away
>>
Is Japan Airbnb Wi-Fi actually stable enough?
Coming back from being out just to find a failed download would ruin my schedule. Legit a bit worried about it.
>>
>>2885780
Airbnb doesn't have a standard it's usually just consumer whatever wifi probably the same you have at home if not better.

It's fucking Japan you can pay 50 bucks for unlimited 5G as a backup if it's that big a deal
>>
>>2885258
The world's fastest internet is in Sweden I think with bredbandbolaget and they put it in an old ladies house. The server in the laundry she uses the heat to dry her laundry
It was 10gbit/10gbit or 100gbit/100gbit it's a few years since I knew that news story though
>>
>>2885894
Back in 2007, she had a 40Gbps connection—the absolute fastest in the world at the time, downloading an HD movie in like 2 seconds.
There were even plans to bump it up to 100Gbps by 2008.
But recently, her son downgraded it to only 10Gbps just to save a few bucks on the power bill.
>>
>>2885782
I heard most of those "unlimited" tourist SIMs in Japan actually throttle you down to 128kbps if you hit something like 10GB in 3 days.
No way in hell I'm traveling back to the ISDN era while on a trip
>>
>>2885904
My plan with Nomad never seemed to limit me, besides 10GB is fine in a pinch. Are you one of those retards who when traveling refuses to use wifi and only does their cell service? lol
>>
>>2885721
I did look, dumbass
>>
Nobody burns through 10GB in 3 days unless they're binge-watching Netflix or YouTube in high quality outdoors.
Besides, what's the point of going to Japan if you're just gonna spend your time watching videos while you're there?
>>
Listing: High-speed Wi-Fi
Reality: Just a home router (5G wireless).
This is super common in urban Airbnbs in Japan.
The connection gets dogshit slow between 19:00 and 24:00.
>>
>>2885168
Multi-gig fiber + a decent router can easily hit 800+ Mbps.
>>
>>2886212
Internet/social media addicts justify their hours of video watching each day by calling it “research” on places they want to go. Yknow, instead of just going out and finding stuff on their own they have to watch a bunch of youtube basedfaces telling them about “hidden gems” that every other tourist goes to
>>
(�/�#,��gZh<69biography.�3S�i��#��<7O.CN��
>>
(�/�#,��g�%c02�R��m!f?*Y��;|�V{�(VeI�����8�&��4i6(�mip�=Ϟ�
�{�~�#C�� ��6­1�v��{�z^�����%��@H�E
>>
(�/�c,��g �EP2�O
^٠������.�@4� �خ�����Ϋ�����?e�%���fVCѽo�����W9 :�eQ$-]�8�@U%_vu}������L��"�ቋ(�?�e*��t��k�����^GQo�f�e���Y�~�G���,V�èj� ��
��.�"�Wu�}���NF����J����dRS�C��2��!�OÞ#���(g 68}��C�Z�n��A;
>>
(�/�c,��g�-�B��5*�I �?b��f�|���X�r`h���PۏN�/�'� ~P�� #����B%�ю+O.�B�H=b! Z:1��� �P��5�F�Do�|��en��-��03�n3�x�z�r��韛O�j�ף2��q ���4Qd�k�+5]:#���� E��
>>
(�/�#,��gj@<78treal����'�x��Ʃ�W�O�j�e��q"

Reply to Thread #2885168


Supported: JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP, WebM, MP4, MP3 (max 4MB)