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The United States even saw an increase of 26 percent, and that number may continue to increase thanks to the FCC's new broadband regulations, which plan to bring faster Internet to underserved regions of the U.S.
I totally read that as undeserved >.<
Knowing average speed is nice, here in Mexico we can get up to 100MB internet, but overall we pay the most for internet no matter the speed. We want cheaper internet, not just faster!
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On April 29 2012 09:52 Haato wrote:Show nested quote + The United States even saw an increase of 26 percent, and that number may continue to increase thanks to the FCC's new broadband regulations, which plan to bring faster Internet to underserved regions of the U.S.
I totally read that as undeserved >.< Knowing average speed is nice, here in Mexico we can get up to 100MB internet, but overall we pay the most for internet no matter the speed. We want cheaper internet, not just faster! Mexico has huge problems with monopolies in some industries, Carlos Slim has become one of the richest men in the world thanks to monopolistic practices and to the detriment of his countrymen
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Korea has amazing infrastructure for their internet. Plus it's more centralized than the U.S.
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I'm surprised to say the least. I've had 100 Mbit internet for I don't know how many years now at two different apartments from two different providers. Almost everyone I know has access to 100 Mbit, although not all of them concider the extra money over the 10 or 24 Mbit speeds to be worth it. In any case, does anyone know how reliable this research is?
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I'd say it's reliable.
Much more reliable than what the companies themselves claim.
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Chart from the same source:
![[image loading]](http://royal.pingdom.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/akamai-q3-2011.001.jpg) Source
Here's another article showing South Korea having the fastest Internet.
http://mashable.com/2011/09/21/fastest-download-speeds-infographic/
Which Country Has the World’s Fastest Internet? [INFOGRAPHIC]
Which county has the world’s fastest Internet service? How about South Korea. That’s according to a new study from content delivery service Pando Networks that sampled some 35 petabytes of data from 27 million downloads and 224 countries. The service found that South Korea is top in the world in terms of download speed, averaging 17.62 Mbps.
Romania has the second fastest Internet speeds on the planet, clocking in at 15.27 Mbps, and a trio of Eastern European countries round out the top five, Bulgaria, Lithuania and Latvia. The United States musters a very pedestrian 4.93 Mbps — good for 26th in the world — while China, home to the world’s largest Internet population, manages a dismal 1.96 Mbps.
The slowest Internet, according to the study, is in the Congo, with an average of just 13 KBps, a speed that would make even a 1990s dial-up Internet user cringe. Most of the world’s slowest countries on Pando’s list are located in Africa, where broadband access is sparse and mobile is often the most prevalent point of access for users. However, we suspect that the data from some countries may have suffered from too small a sample size for an accurate reading.
If you want the fastest Internet in the United States, head to Andover, Mass., the only American city to crack the top 10. Andover residents are downloading at a very speedy average of 22.41 Mbps. That pales in comparison to speeds in Seocho, South Korea, though, the fastest city on Earth at 33.5 Mbps.
Pando also sliced up the data by ISP, gathering data on 18,017 of them. The fastest in the U.S. is Verizon Internet Services, which offers users average downloads that are 153 Kilobytes per second faster than the next closest ISP on the list (Comcast). Those speeds are still almost five times slower the average connection offered by Dacom Corp. in South Korea, which takes the cake as the world’s fastest ISP by average download speed.
Pando provided Mashable with the infographic below illustrating some of the key findings in the report. The company also created an interactive map showing all of the findings.
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Korea is very advanced technologically compared to the rest of the world. You'll see robotic functions in everyday life, online shopping and delivery, extremely fast internet, cell phone service no matter where you go, etc.
Going to Korea from the US and admiring its technological advancement is akin to someone from Africa coming to the US. Of course, the gap is not quite as big, but I'd like to think the feeling is the relatively similar.
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Korea got it's internet infrastructure up a lot later than other nations. This holds true for what places like Japan and South Korea are known for. They take technology that's already out there and they make it better.
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New Zealand is still in the stone age. huhuhu.
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when did hong kong become a country
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hey ~13 down is like the speed i play sc at lol. Uni internet is a totally different story though...
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this article is totall bullshit - where the hell is Sweden on that list
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any idea why korea's average speed fluctuates sinusoidally? it appears to peak in Q3's and have a trough in Q1's
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Sweden still has a lot of rural areas with shitty internet. My parents for instance can't get better than 8 MB/s down.
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Although South Korea has the highest average... what the fuck does that have any relevance to?
Cuz i'm pretty sure Sweden or other Euro countries have WAAAY higher speeds if you're only comparing the highest of speeds... however, due to SK's massive tech population, and (i'm assuming), the other countries' NON tech... it makes South Korea look amazing...
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I think Sweden is missing because they are counting the average speed/person (?) I guess. The big city's and pretty much any appartment in Sweden will have access to 100/10 at least. But Villa's/People on the country-side or just people who own a house in general don't have access to higher speeds than 25/1.
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For the obvious reasons its easier to setup up a network in tiny countries where most people live in apartment blocks. Complaining about 8mb dl in a rural area is abit lol.
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actually i think singapore beats korea in internet speed.
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South Korea has really great internet speeds and at really affordable prices as well. The way the infrastructure is set up it allows them to deliver fast internet at good prices.
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What I'm curious to see is the ranking for the slowest average Internet by country. Especially for developed countries, and if possible, also by pricing. See which nation's citizens get complaining rights for being the most ripped off.
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