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modeling residential subscriber bandwidth demand
- Subject: modeling residential subscriber bandwidth demand
- From: rvandolson at esri.com (Ray Van Dolson)
- Date: Wed, 3 Apr 2019 09:03:17 -0700
- In-reply-to: <8066.1554277517@turing-police>
- References: <CAF664Dzx0LgSCq+zEdTzfnL9+=ODoySwhO_W0u9w8-=CQew4xA@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]> <CAJL_ZMN5cdc6sq+cZytroJnyvdxoGwvA5a=GO73+5TpSr_0dtw@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]> <CAP7ff458ctGinWK57SAPTYngBD7SNm5kU7=wBNv=DYxxSLic5Q@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <8066.1554277517@turing-police>
On Wed, Apr 03, 2019 at 03:45:17AM -0400, Valdis KlÄ?tnieks wrote:
> On Tue, 02 Apr 2019 23:53:06 -0700, Ben Cannon said:
> > A 100/100 enterprise connection can easily support hundreds of desktop users
> > if not more. It???s a lot of bandwidth even today.
>
> And what happens when a significant fraction of those users fire up Netflix with
> an HD stream?
>
> We're discussing residential not corporate connections, I thought....
>
Yes, Enterprise requirements are certainly different, though inching
upwards with the prevalance of SaaS services like Salesforce, O365 and
file sharing services (the latter are a growing % of our traffic at
branch offices).
I feel like our rule of thumb on the Enterprise side is in the 1.5-2Mbps
per user range these days (for Internet).
Ray