Comments
FuturologyBot t1_is0hw7b wrote
The following submission statement was provided by /u/chrisdh79:
From the article: America's fastest internet has become faster. The Department of Energy's (DOE) dedicated science network, ESnet (Energy Science Network), has been upgraded to ESnet6, boasting a staggering bandwidth of 46 Terabits per second (Tbps). Before you get any ideas, hold up. For now, it's strictly for scientists.
"ESnet6 represents a transformational change in the way networks are built for research, with improved capacity, resiliency, and flexibility," ESnet executive director Inder Monga said in a press release. "Together, these new capabilities make it faster, easier, and more efficient for scientists around the world to conduct and collaborate on ground-breaking research."
ESnet was established in 1986, and over the past 35 years, the network has served as the "data circulatory system" for the DOE from the Berkeley Lab. It connects all of its national laboratories, tens of thousands of DOE-funded researchers, and DOE's premier scientific instruments and supercomputing centers.
The network has had several upgrades and transmitted 1.1 exabytes of data over the network in 2021. According to the statement, traffic on ESnet increases by a factor of ten every four years.
To compare, you could be getting by on a few hundred Megabits per second (Mbps), while ESnet6 is equivalent to 46 million Mbps, according to the New Atlas.
Even if you're on a 10 Gbps fiber connection, which is the fastest internet speed available to consumers, ESnet6 has you beat 46,000 times over.
ESnet6 is made up of 15,000 miles (24,000 km) of fiber optic cables spanning the country, enabling network backbone links that can each transfer data between 400 Gigabits per second (Gbps) and 1 Tbps for record-time transfers. Though it set the record for the fastest internet network in the world, it isn't a record data transmission speed. An experimental setup in Japan, which achieved a speed of 1 Petabit per second (PBPs), which is 1,000 Tbps, has bagged the honor for the same.
Please reply to OP's comment here: https://old.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/y221dl/worlds_fastest_internet_network_has_been_upgraded/is0ebft/
nosecohn t1_is0lvwh wrote
This is interesting, but I'm pretty sure the math, taken from the title of the original article, is wrong.
There are 1,000 Gb in 1 Tb, so this connection is actually 4,600 times faster than 10 Gbps, not 46,000 times. Maybe they meant to write 1 Gbps instead, since that's a pretty common speed for home fiber connections.
Voyage_of_Roadkill t1_is0mws2 wrote
This is triggering. only because I woke up to no internet and now it's making youtube laggy.
WellPhuketThen t1_is11ava wrote
I wonder if I'm requesting more or less data than I was 20ish years ago. Then I was constantly using p2p networks, torrents, ect. But today I use streaming services, and just casually access stuff that could be larger than what I was pulling back then.
No-Chemistry1815 t1_is1rbwv wrote
Also the servers you connect to don't have the bandwith to serve you 46Tb/s. Let alone hundreds/thousands/millions of other who concurrently use the servers bandwith, which would require Exabit/s on their side to serve everyone 46Tb/s
wenger4prez t1_is1rk4e wrote
Meanwhile out here is Croatia one guy in the village is pedaling so we can all get 5mbps if the weather is nice
James-VanderGeek t1_is2gxgq wrote
Question for the smart people. At those speeds couldn’t two computers interface at the same-ish speed that the internal components of my computer communicate?
This seems like it could have big implications for distributed computing advances. Am I on the right track?
chrisdh79 OP t1_is0ebft wrote
From the article: America's fastest internet has become faster. The Department of Energy's (DOE) dedicated science network, ESnet (Energy Science Network), has been upgraded to ESnet6, boasting a staggering bandwidth of 46 Terabits per second (Tbps). Before you get any ideas, hold up. For now, it's strictly for scientists.
"ESnet6 represents a transformational change in the way networks are built for research, with improved capacity, resiliency, and flexibility," ESnet executive director Inder Monga said in a press release. "Together, these new capabilities make it faster, easier, and more efficient for scientists around the world to conduct and collaborate on ground-breaking research."
ESnet was established in 1986, and over the past 35 years, the network has served as the "data circulatory system" for the DOE from the Berkeley Lab. It connects all of its national laboratories, tens of thousands of DOE-funded researchers, and DOE's premier scientific instruments and supercomputing centers.
The network has had several upgrades and transmitted 1.1 exabytes of data over the network in 2021. According to the statement, traffic on ESnet increases by a factor of ten every four years.
To compare, you could be getting by on a few hundred Megabits per second (Mbps), while ESnet6 is equivalent to 46 million Mbps, according to the New Atlas.
Even if you're on a 10 Gbps fiber connection, which is the fastest internet speed available to consumers, ESnet6 has you beat 46,000 times over.
ESnet6 is made up of 15,000 miles (24,000 km) of fiber optic cables spanning the country, enabling network backbone links that can each transfer data between 400 Gigabits per second (Gbps) and 1 Tbps for record-time transfers. Though it set the record for the fastest internet network in the world, it isn't a record data transmission speed. An experimental setup in Japan, which achieved a speed of 1 Petabit per second (PBPs), which is 1,000 Tbps, has bagged the honor for the same.