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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. Commit charge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commit_charge

    These do not show how much has actually been written to the pagefile, but only the maximum potential pagefile usage: The amount of pagefile that would be used if all current contents of RAM had to be removed. In Windows 2000 and Windows NT 4.0, these same displays are labeled "Mem usage" but again actually show the commit charge and commit limit.

  4. 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.

  5. Ethernet over twisted pair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethernet_over_twisted_pair

    Intended usage StarLAN-1 1BASE5: 802.3e-1987: obsolete 1 2 1 1 PE 1 1 250 voice grade ~12 LAN: StarLAN-10 802.3e-1988: obsolete 10 2 1 1 PE 10 10 ~100 voice grade ~12 LAN LattisNet: pre 802.3i-1990: obsolete 10 2 1 1 PE 10 10 100 voice grade ~12 LAN 10BASE-T: 802.3i-1990 (CL14) legacy 10 2 1 1 PE: 10 10 100 Cat 3: 16 LAN [34] 10BASE-T1S: 802 ...

  6. Jumbo frame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jumbo_frame

    Jumbo frames for PPPoE is defined in RFC 4638, with the purpose of removing the old 1492-byte limit (originally defined because PPP needs 8 more bytes of overhead), so that normal 1500-byte Ethernet can run without fragmentation. The "PPP-Max-Payload" tag can still accommodate much larger, non-baby jumbo frames.

  7. Memory leak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_leak

    A memory leak can cause an increase in memory usage and performance run-time, and can negatively impact the user experience. [4] Eventually, in the worst case, too much of the available memory may become allocated and all or part of the system or device stops working correctly, the application fails, or the system slows down vastly due to ...

  8. Internet Mix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Mix

    Early scholarly studies in 2004 indicated that TCP traffic in particular exhibits a bimodal distribution with spikes around minimum-sized packets (less than 100 bytes) and Ethernet MTU (more than 1400 bytes). [1] Later studies confirmed this for backbone [2] [3] and enterprise [4] networks.

  9. Internet in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_in_the_United_States

    At least 100 million U.S. homes should have affordable access to actual download speeds of at least 100 megabits per second and actual upload speeds of at least 50 megabits per second by the year 2020. The United States should lead the world in mobile innovation, with the fastest and most extensive wireless networks of any nation.