You must be kidding. I live in small town NC and the most I can get from Centurylink is 6 mbps. The only two options are Mediacom or HughesNet, neither of which are any bargain.
Zee09, I checked and Zoom Internet is not offered at my location.
My Xbox alone is capable of using a full 200Mbps.I support a church campground we have 200 Mbs and WIFI on most of the telephone poles. In the summer we routinely see 40 or 50 clients which are a mix of TVs, phones and laptops. I have yet to see the system reach 200 Mbs of bandwidth usage.
Paying for 1 gig internet is pretty much a waste. You will almost never hit a site or web service that will serve you content at even a fraction of that speed. Even at 300 mbps, the bottleneck will almost always be on the other end of the connection. Save your money.
The question you're asking is, "will I have any better application performance moving from 300Mb/s to 1Gb/s?" The answer is about whether or not you regularly congest your download queue, running against the shaper. My guess is that you don't and if that the case, then you will not notice any difference in performance. Remember that the insertion rate, the speed that packets are put onto the wire, doesn't change when the change your download speed.
The other consideration is the upload speed. If you regularly upload large files, do video conferencing, VoIP or other interactive application, then you may want the higher upload speed that comes with 1Gb/s. That's why I have 1Gb/s speed.
there are nights when I have had the kid playing Xbox, a TV streaming and the wife streaming on her phone.....not one hickup ever.But when you have multiple TVs streaming 4K content and others connected with whatever computer/phone, that's when the faster pipe comes in handy. Especially nowadays with people working form home.
The question you're asking is, "will I have any better application performance moving from 300Mb/s to 1Gb/s?" The answer is about whether or not you regularly congest your download queue, running against the shaper. My guess is that you don't and if that the case, then you will not notice any difference in performance. Remember that the insertion rate, the speed that packets are put onto the wire, doesn't change when the change your download speed.
The other consideration is the upload speed. If you regularly upload large files, do video conferencing, VoIP or other interactive application, then you may want the higher upload speed that comes with 1Gb/s. That's why I have 1Gb/s speed.