MySpeed Detail for Test #712490

Summary

This report refers to a connection test carried out by IP address - on Dec 31, 1969 6:00:00 PM.

Download speed  - Kbps (HTTP test)
Upload speed  - Kbps (HTTP test)
Quality of service  0 %
Maximum delay  0 ms
Round trip time  0 ms
Upstream jitter  0.0 ms
Upstream packet loss  0 %
Upstream packet order  0 %
Upstream discards  0 %
Downstream jitter  0.0 ms
Downstream packet loss  0 %
Downstream packet order  0 %
Downstream discards  0 %



Bandwidth Test

The graphs below illustrate various properties of your Internet connection obtained during the test process. They show the throughput, data and service quality of your connection.

Download speed graph: This graph illustrates how your download speed fluctuates over time. You may notice that the maximum download speed shown on the graph is more than the connection speed rated by your ISP. This is usually due to how your connection is regulated. For example, an ISP may supply a 10 Mbit connection by allowing 100 Mbit for 10ms, and pause for 90ms.
The higher the download speed, the better, but a quality connection will also demonstrate very little fluctuation in download speeds. If the graph below shows a rapidly changing speed then this indicates that the data is impacted and the quality of service degraded. Whilst this does not necessarily affect applications such as email it will definitely affect multimedia applications such as video or voice.



TCP pause graph: Data is sent across the Internet in "blocks". Usually a connection will send a block of data and pause before sending the next. (This pause is known as the TCP pause.) The graph illustrates the TCP pause between receiving subsequent blocks of data. If the pauses become excessive it means that the connection throughput is being degraded.
A good connection will have both a low TCP pause (less than 20 ms), and also demonstrate very little fluctuation in the TCP pause values. This in essence defines a quality of data as it defines how much of the test time was spent actually transmitting data versus being idle waiting for data to arrive.
The - - - - - line shows the maximum TCP pause recorded. If you see many TCP pauses exceeding 80-100ms then it is likely that the connection test is spending more time waiting for data than moving data. If the TCP pause pattern looks very symmetrical and regular then it may indicate that there is a throttling process managing/restricting the data flow. If the TCP pause pattern is more erratic and variable then it would indicate network delays as a result of congestion or other network problems.



You can download the raw data used to produce these graphs.
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VoIP Quality Test

The graph below shows the variance of UDP jitter over time. For voice-over-IP application, this variance must be kept to a minimum otherwise call quality will be degraded.
Packet loss is shown in red. High packet loss (for example more than 5% sustained over a short period) will result in broken sound during calls.

Upstream results (client-to-server)


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Downstream results (server-to-client)


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Route Test

The route test identifies the connection quality by measuring the packet loss and latency for each hop end-to-end. This data is only provided by MySpeed Server Remote Testing Agent (NOC Edition), Remote Support Agent (Support Edition) or the Professional-edition MySpeed PC Client.



Environment Test

The environment test provides information on the computer that ran this test, including information on its network environment. This data is only provided by MySpeed Server Remote Support Agent (Support Edition).



Client Headers

No HTTP headers were recorded for this transaction