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UVic team helps smash data transfer record

November 27, 2012 by richardd

During the SuperComputing 2012 (SC12) conference earlier this month, an international team of physicists, computer scientists, and network engineers from the University of Victoria, the California Institute for Technology, the University of Michigan and Vanderbilt’s Brookhaven National Lab broke their own record for data transfer using the latest generation of wide area network circuits. Apparently, this is just the start, according to this report, 1,000 Mbps speeds will be possible in the next 12 months.

Overall, the transfer rate achieved by the team hit 339 Mbps. For the sake of comparison, a 3G cellphone can usually achieve data transfer rates of around 18 Mbps while brand new super-exciting 4G cellphones can hit 30-35 Mbps in real-world scenarios.

Filed Under: UVic Tagged With: News, UVic

Comments

  1. igable says

    November 28, 2012 at 12:01 am

    Your quote has the wrong unit for cell phone bandwidth. That’s 3G at 18 Mbps not Gbps.

    • Richard Davies says

      November 28, 2012 at 12:06 am

      Thank you, corrected.

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