Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!


Shells Virtual Desktop
BMail.ag - Secure Email Service
Server.net
CPLicense.net
VPS Server
Buy VPN
Vultr
VMs for AI
HostDare
ReliableSite White-Label Dedicated Hosting for Resellers
InterServer VPS
BMail.ag - Secure Email Service
Best VPN
High-Performance Bare Metal Server Solutions
Karvl.com
Server Mania Cloud Hosting
DataWagon Hosting
AlphaVPS Hosting
Evoxt.com
Clouvider
VPS Hosting with NVMe
Residential IPs in the US & 4G Mobile Proxies in EU & US with Unlimited Bandwidth
ReliableSite White-Label Dedicated Hosting for Resellers
Rabisu - Hosting Solutions
Shells Virtual Desktop
New on LowEndTalk? Please Register and read our Community Rules.

All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.

is Location is really an Important One ?

2»

Comments

  • :D alright alright

  • @tmepy said:
    Closer the server to your user, faster the webpage will load.

    Well, that is not always true. What matter is rtt and latency, not actual distance. It is not at all uncommon to have lower rtt to servers that are physically further away then to servers close by, it depends on a lot of other factors as well.

    Thanked by 3Deepak_leb Lee jsg
  • @arachi004 said:
    location is important for latency. but if you don't really care about that, then it won't be a problem

    Exactly, it is entirely depend on the website traffic.

  • jsgjsg Member, Resident Benchmarker
    edited October 2023

    @rcy026 said:
    I would maybe not call it the hub, but it is a hub, and one of the major ones.

    Well, that's pretty much what I said.

    They have a very good infrastructure thanks to the entire country being totally flat, the highest mountain in NL is like 2 inches high or something, makes it easy and cheap to build infrastructure.

    Probably more like 200 feet, but anyway, there's a quite important factor coming with that: As a DC one would very much like to be well above the highest ever possible water level - and that's next to impossible in NL. In fact that is the greatest risk and danger in that country.


    Btw, good point you made mentioning that physical/geo distance != "internet distance". I experienced a quite striking example myself when benchmarking a, I think it was Contabo, VPS and their HE routes to Asia went via Seattle. Similarly I recently read that some Singapore VPS to China route went twice across the Pacific ocean.

  • @jsg said:

    Probably more like 200 feet, but anyway, there's a quite important factor coming with that: As a DC one would very much like to be well above the highest ever possible water level - and that's next to impossible in NL. In fact that is the greatest risk and danger in that country.

    Also a very good point and something I know "the big" players take into consideration. Microsoft located 3 major dc's to Sweden instead of NL and what I've heard is that the risk of flooding was a major factor in that decision.


    Btw, good point you made mentioning that physical/geo distance != "internet distance". I experienced a quite striking example myself when benchmarking a, I think it was Contabo, VPS and their HE routes to Asia went via Seattle. Similarly I recently read that some Singapore VPS to China route went twice across the Pacific ocean.

    I have a vps located in a dc not even 30 km from where I live, it has a rtt around 50 ms. I also have a vps in Amsterdam which is 1800 km from where I live with rtt 19 ms.
    I think "internet distance" as you call it is a perfect term to explain that geographical distance is not what matters. Of course geographical distance to some extent affects response times, but it is just one of many factors that goes into the "internet distance". Other factors can easily make the geographical distance irrelevant by a factor of magnitudes.
    As someone who builds a lot of metro and wan this is something I often struggle with getting people to understand. I think I will actually start using the term "internet distance", just have to figure out a good metric for it. :smile:

    Thanked by 1jsg
Sign In or Register to comment.