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How much disk and how much transfer?
What SSD storage you looking for?
1GB unmetered uplink, 8 GB ram, Quad core, 1 TB HDD -> 90 bucks / Month
If interested contact me: [email protected]
Doesn't that contradict itself?
1TB uplink ( network connection ) that is unmetered, unlimited Bandwith
Sorry I`m a verrt tired man. i wanted to say 1GB uplink
There's a difference between GB and Gb, im sure it doesn't come with a 8Gbit/s uplink?
why dont all providers advertise in GB/s instead of using confusing Gb/s a-like values? as far i know GB/s is what you really get and Gb/s is just to confuse people thinking they get more than they'll recieve. This message is not about doubting you in being straight-forward but is just for me to recieve some answers on why people whould use Gb/s instead of GB/s.
Thank you and everyone else who might be able to enlighten this case for me.
Man i
ve been here for 50 minutes and you wolves are getting on my back. If you have a better offer, just post it and let me be ! Success is a dream I
ve been chasing for a long time as it vanished a couple of Months ago. And yes, the vps comes with 1 gb ( 1000 mbit ) line that supports speed up to 125mb/s.The standard is to measure in Gb/s (gigabits) rather than GB/s (gigabytes).
Because network speed is measured in Gb, not GB.
@kcaj @MicroLinux
but isn't it more realistic to provide a average customer with GB/s values? there are alot of people that do not know what is the difference, it would be nice if we all just provide them with the real GB/s they get right? alot of people assume we talk in GB/s instead of Gb/s and fall into this trap.
Or is it ultimately more confusing since everywhere else they will see Gb/s values, and just about every bandwidth calculation assumes bits rather than bytes? Standards exist to standardize things.
I know there have to be standards but people so far assume they get the max percentage instead of less, giving them Gb/s values is not the max percentage. thats what troubles me and alot of other people most likely. I'm still confused between the two values and thats no good.
1 Gb/s = 125 MBps
1 GB/s = 8000 Mbps
Try VPS Dime that have excellent storage VPS plans - like: 1 TB HDD/8 TB BW/10Gbit Connection for under $20
http://www.soyoustart.com/ie/essential-servers/
I FTFY
I don't understand what you are trying to say here?
Ok. Why provide customers with Gb/s values when you can give them GB/s values that are more true to them? the average client does not know the difference between GB/s or Gb/s - I'd say you provide them with the max value which is indicated in GB/s - this way they know what they Truly get.
And advertise 0.125GB/s vs 1Gb/s? No - get with it.
could you be more detailed with this? english is not my primary language so i might have missed the point because it was too vague (my apologies.)
Advertising in Gb/s is the norm. If you were to advertise in GB/s, the usual 1Gb/s you see here would be 0.125GB/s.
GB/s (capital is a gigabytes per second
Gb/s (lowercase is gigabits per second
There are 8 bits in a byte, so 1GB/s is 8Gb/s
Bandwidth is usually measured in Gb/s (or Gbps) so 1Gbps will give you a download speed of (1000 / 8) about 125MB/s. 100Mbps will give you a download speed of (100 / 8) about 12.5MB/s
It was an unintentional mistake & thanks for the correction.
Why not help the community by showing off the max GB/s you can deliver instead of presenting them a much lower value in Gb/s ? like I mentioned before, alot of people do not know the difference or care about it, they assume you are talking in the max value instead of a little bit of Gb/s .
You should be honest and talk about what they really get with the appropriate values which is not ending up with Gb/s - GB/s is the true amount of what we get and should be mentioned instead of the Gb/s.
1Gb/s is equal to 0.125GB/s, neither is greater than the other so neither would be 'presenting a much lower value'.
customers assume a higher value is better when it comes to speed. when we calculate in Gb a higher value will be actually alot lower compared to GB/s value.. customers only care about what GB/s they get and dont wanna hear about Gb/s because they would have to learn the difference between them first in order to determine whats better. Feeding them with Gb/s values instead of GB/s values is a scam in my opinion.
Deleted!
People seem to have a hard time grasping the difference between a rate and an amount.
Network speed is a rate and is measured in bits, e.g. 100 mbps (megabits per second).
Data transferred is an amount and is measured in bytes, e.g. 500 MB/month (megabytes per month).