Internet Speeds Your Internet Service Speeds
Gridcom provides residential and business customers with a variety
of high speed Internet plans to choose from. Gridcom engineers its
network to ensure that its customers can enjoy the speeds to which
they subscribe. However, Gridcom does not guarantee that a customer
will actually achieve those speeds at all times. Gridcom advertises
its speeds as "up to" a specific level based on the tier of service
to which a customer subscribes. The "actual" speed that a customer
will experience while using the Internet depends upon a variety of
conditions, many of which are beyond the control of an ISP such as
Gridcom.
Conditions that may hinder the Internet speed may include but are
not limited to the following:
1. Performance of a customer's
computer, including its age,
processing capability, its operating system, the number of
applications running simultaneously, and the presence of any adware
and viruses.
2. Type of connection between a
customer's computer and modem. For
example, wireless connections may be slower than direct connections
into a router or modem. Wireless connections also may be subject to
greater fluctuations, interference and congestion. Gridcom does not
recommend wireless modem connections for use with its higher speed
tiers as some wireless connections do not perform at the speeds
delivered by these tiers.
3. The distance packets travel (round
trip time of packets) between a
customer's computer and its final destination on the Internet
otherwise known as latency, including the number and quality of the
networks of various operators in the transmission path. The Internet
is a "network of networks." A customer's connection may traverse the
networks of multiple providers before reaching its destination, and
the limitations of those networks will most likely affect the
overall speed of that Internet connection.
4. Congestion or high usage levels at
the website or destination. If a
large number of visitors are accessing a site or particular
destination at the same time, your connection will be affected if
the site or destination does not have sufficient capacity to serve
all of the visitors efficiently.
5. Congestion or high usage levels
within the Gridcom network. With the
recent increase in the number of applications available on the
internet the bandwidth being used by our customers has risen. This
means that during peak hours internet speeds may become slower than
normal. We continually strive to improve our networks capacity and
currently have plans to procure more bandwidth by early 2013. The
reason we are unable to receive bandwidth sooner is due to
construction of a new fiber optic network to provide us with
considerable more bandwidth.
6. Gating of speeds or access by the
website or destination. In order to
control traffic or performance, many websites limit the speeds at
which a visitor can download from their site. Those limitations will
carry through to a customer's connection.
7. The performance of the DSL modem
installed. Modem performance may
degrade over time, lightning and power outages sometimes have an
effect on modems and / or DSL filters in your home.
8. Gridcom Network Management.
Gridcom currently does not limit or block any internet traffic on
its network. We do however; reserve the right to begin reasonable
network management to provide better service to everyone if our
network becomes too congested. You can view our network management
policy on our website,
HERE.
Speed Tests
Speed tests provide an outlet to test the speed of your internet
connection. However, several factors may affect the results of the
test. In addition, a speed test encompasses the customer's home
network configuration, modem, and computers, and therefore, does not
necessarily reflect the performance of the Gridcom network. Multiple
computers utilizing the same Internet connection may affect the
outcome of the test.
Gridcom recommends using http://speedtest.net as your preferred
speed test site and suggests using the closest recommended test site
available.
Please consider that internet speeds are based in bits while file
sizes are normally sized in bytes. One byte is equivalent to 8 bits.
This means that to download a 1 megabyte file on a 1 megabit
connection it would take roughly 8 seconds at full speed. This is a
large source of confusion when downloading files and why they seem
to be taking longer than expected.
Please note that all speed tests have biases and flaws and that such
tests measure limited aspects of an ISP's speed and therefore, must
be seen as a guide rather than definitive measurements of
performance.
Latency
Latency is another measurement of Internet performance. Latency is
the time delay in transmitting or receiving packets on a network.
Latency is primarily a function of the distance between two points
of transmission, but also can be affected by the quality of the
network or networks used in transmission. Latency is typically
measured in milliseconds, and generally has no significant impact on
typical everyday Internet usage. As latency varies based on any
number of factors, most importantly the distance between a
customer's computer and the ultimate Internet destination (as well
as the number and variety of networks your packets cross), it is not
possible to provide customers with a single figure that will define
latency as part of a user experience.