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Comments
You cannot even estimate how much I hate you for that image.
I LOVE(D) BANANAS! The only fruit besides apples that work(ed) for me.
And now you ruined it. You Fucklord. I will always think this (or at least spider eggs) whenever I eat a banana. Shall your next metabolism be very uncomfortable! FUCKER!!1111!!1!!! Debian. Thx.
Sir, May i offer you an bottle of bourbon to wash your insane swearing tactics away.
It tastes better than soap.
Love you old man.
Centos. Thx.
What happened to them? I just request managed VPS and they got banned
Chris is taking a banana up his asshole right now, deleted the offer thread , split the thread with comments they can hide shit, and be sketchy as hell.
Classy colocrapping!
oh fuck you too, I had not realised it was a banana until I read your comment, when I saw this on the ipad last night in night shift mode I thought it was a baguette!
This claim may be real from providers like ovh, amazon, microsoft etc. But not for summerhost. Ovh will boot them away if they even exceed 1Gbps. 1 Tbps... Holy fck, even cloudflare had a hickups when swallowing 300+Gbps attacks.
I once had a 40Gbps sustained attack at OVH for 14hrs, was not booted from ovh network.
It's difficult to swallow such volumetric attacks -- even for providers with a large capacity to do as such.
My old provider clamed to have 10Gbps attack protection, but a sustained 1Gbps was able to take it offline. My new provider claims to sustain 100Gbps at maximum spread across OVH, Voxility -- and so far, my largest incoming attack to date was 79Gbps, was able to stay online the entire time.
I suppose it depend on who you get and if they're lying or not.
Yeah, they don't kick people. Maybe years ago. If so I would have been long gone long time ago...
Quick question, 1 Gbps means there is 1 Gb of traffic incoming every single second, right?
1 Gbps (= 1 gigabit/second) = 0.125 gigabyte/second (GB/s)
So: 1 GB/s = 8 Gbps
Why using GB/s instead of GBps , is there a difference ?
Given that "Gbps" stands for "Gigabit per second", it would be potentially confusing to write "GBps" for "Gigabyte per second", so this is why "GB/s" is much better for "Gigabyte per second".
There can be, but as mentioned by @angstrom worth avoiding that particular term as Gb Vs GB is ambiguous.