A T1 line provides you with 1.544Mbits per second, full duplex. Full duplex means that, you get the 1.544Mbps in up- and download direction. 1.544 Mbit per second equals 0.192MByte per second.
Any one of the infinitely many values.Any one of the infinitely many values.Any one of the infinitely many values.Any one of the infinitely many values.
Any graph of a mapping which is one-to-one or many-to-one but not one-to-many.
1. One to One -function- 2. One to Many -relation- 3. Many to Many -function-
One tenth as many.
USB1 - 1.5 Mbit/second and 12 Mbit/secondUSB2 - 1.5 Mbit/second, 12 Mbit/second and 480 Mbit/second (but bus overhead limited this to 280 Mbit/second in actual usage)USB3 - 1.5 Mbit/second, 12 Mbit/second, 480 Mbit/second and 5.0 Gbit/second (but bus overhead limited this to 4.0 Gbit/second in actual usage)USB3.1 - 1.5 Mbit/second, 12 Mbit/second, 480 Mbit/second, 5.0 Gbit/second and 10 Gbit/second (but bus overhead limited this to 7.2 Gbit/second in actual usage)See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB#Version_history
16664.5 MB = 16.2739258 GB Same goes for Mbit -> Gbit.
3000
There are many Linksys Router Wireless supporting different wireless standard, such as 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g and 802.11n (draft n). I will summarize all wireless standards in the table.ProtocolFrequencyTypical Data RateMax Data rateRange802.11a5 GHz23 Mbit/s54 Mbit/s115 feet802.11b 2.4 GHz4.5 Mbit/s11Mbit/s115 feet802.11g2.4 GHz19 Mbit/s54 Mbit/s125 feet802.11n5GHz and/or 2.4GHz74 Mbit/s300 Mbit/s (2 streams)230 feet
Up to the maximum bandwidth of the limiting side of the connections. So if one side is 10 Mbit and the other side is 100 Mbit, then the max sustainable throughput would be 20 Mbit-- 2 connections at 10 Mbit each.
Depends: are you talking about the hard drive's spin speed, or the speed of data transfer? The first would be "rpm", meaning "rotation per second", while the second is measured in Mbit/s or Gbit/s, I seriously hope you're familiar with the notion of Mbit and Gbit (in the '90s MB and GB, megabyte and gigabyte were used mainly everywhere, which were replaced by megabits and gigabits when talking about data transfer, not static data, this is why I'm asking, no harm intended). The two units don't have a universal relationship between them, except for the fact, that when a hard drive spins faster, it is capable of a higher transfer speed.
FireWire 400: 400 Mbit/s half-duplex data rates (the actual transfer rates is 393.216 Mbit/s) Firewire 800: transfer rate of 786.432 Mbit/s full-duplex
Ethernet supports speeds as low as 10 Mbps and as high as 1 Gbps. There are new initiatives to support 10 Gbps in the near future.
a mbit more specific please
The Sata II is has a transfer speed that is two times as fast as the original Sata. The Sata has a communication speed of 1.5 Gbit/s while the Sata II is 3.0 Gbit/s.
It is referring to internet wifi speeds. B - 11 MBIT/S G - 56 MBIT/S A - 56 MBIT/S N - 100 MBIT/S So if it is Wi-Fi B/G, your wireless card can only connect to a B/G network, meaning the speeds above are the fastest you would get even if you had faster broadband unless you upgraded your card.
1000 Mbit/s