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  2. Bandwidth throttling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandwidth_throttling

    without bandwidth throttling, a server could efficiently serve only 100 active TCP connections (100 MB/s / 1 MB/s) before saturating network bandwidth; a saturated network (i.e. with a bottleneck through an Internet Access Point) could slow down a lot the attempts to establish other new connections or even to force them to fail because of ...

  3. Network throughput - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_throughput

    An additional minimum interframe gap corresponding to 12 bytes is inserted after each frame. This corresponds to a maximum channel utilization of 1526 / (1526 + 12) × 100% = 99.22%, or a maximum channel use of 99.22 Mbit/s inclusive of Ethernet datalink layer protocol overhead in a 100 Mbit/s Ethernet connection.

  4. TCP tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP_tuning

    At any given time, the window advertised by the receive side of TCP corresponds to the amount of free receive memory it has allocated for this connection. Otherwise it would risk dropping received packets due to lack of space. The sending side should also allocate the same amount of memory as the receive side for good performance. That is ...

  5. 100 Gigabit Ethernet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/100_Gigabit_Ethernet

    100 Gigabit Ethernet (100 GbE) ... Further pushing silicon limits, this is a double rate variant of the previous, giving full 100GE operation over 1 medium lane ...

  6. Internet in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_in_the_United_States

    Internet usage in the United States varies widely from state to state. For example, in the U.S. overall in 2011, 77.9% of the population used the Internet. But in that same year (2011), there was a large gap in usage between the top three states - Washington (80.0%), New Hampshire (79.8%) and Minnesota (79.0%) - and the bottom three states ...

  7. Jumbo frame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jumbo_frame

    Jumbo frames have payloads greater than 1500 bytes. In computer networking, jumbo frames are Ethernet frames with more than 1500 bytes of payload, the limit set by the IEEE 802.3 standard. [1] The payload limit for jumbo frames is variable: while 9000 bytes is the most commonly used limit, smaller and larger limits exist.

  8. Ethernet over twisted pair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethernet_over_twisted_pair

    100 4 3 2.6 6: 8B6T PAM-3 Half-duplex only: 25 12.5 100 Cat 3: 16 Market failure: 100BASE-T2: 802.3y-1997: obsolete 100 2 2 4 LFSR PAM-5 25 12.5 100 Cat 3: 16 Market failure: 100BASE-TX: 802.3u-1995: current 100 2 1 3.2 4B5B MLT-3 NRZ-I: 125 31.25 100 Cat 5: 100 LAN 1000BASE‑TX: 802.3ab-1999, TIA/EIA 854 (2001) obsolete 1,000 4 2 4 PAM-5 250 ...

  9. Commit charge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commit_charge

    The corresponding performance counter is called "Committed Bytes". Limit is the maximum possible value for Total; it is the sum of the current pagefile size plus the physical memory available for pageable contents (this excludes RAM that is assigned to non-pageable areas). The corresponding performance counter is called "Commit Limit".