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.

10G uplink vs 1G uplink

2»

Comments

  • 1gservers1gservers Member, Patron Provider

    We have seen most of our customers utilize 10Gbps uplinks on their dedicated servers primarily for video & audio/radio streaming. Having said that, there are many other reasons to have a 10Gbps uplink. In fact, as it becomes more of the norm as hardware & bandwidth prices fall, you will start to see 10Gbps uplinks coming standard on dedicated servers. At the present time though, it does generally cost more to get a server with a 10Gbps uplink.

    The majority of customers still tend to go for servers with 1Gbps uplinks, as the need for higher capacity 10Gbps uplinks isn't necessarily required for the most common of scenarios.

  • seems everyone is focused on bandwidth capacity for 10Gbps vs 1Gbps but forget to mention the better latency as well :)

    Thanked by 1anrikaz
Sign In or Register to comment.