For the mom who gives us everything - Mother's Day gifts that connects us.
Get superfast AT&T Fiber internet
Teacher
•
19 Messages
Wednesday, December 18th, 2013 11:48 PM
Upstream speed?
What is the upstream speed?
Questions
3.9K
13
0
0
Responses
Related Conversations
Tags
No tags available
Not finding what you're looking for?
New to the AT&T Community?
Start by visiting the
Community How-To.
New to the AT&T Community?
Visit the Community How-To.
Visit the Community How-To.
Accepted Solution
Official Solution
brafish
Teacher
•
18 Messages
10 years ago
0
0
ms_unicorn
Former Employee
•
4.9K Messages
10 years ago
Hello, again!
Did brafish answer your question? You can find more information about GigaPower here.
Let me know if you have any other questions or concerns!
-Mariana
0
0
billcrowley
Mentor
•
62 Messages
10 years ago
0
0
timjtierney
Teacher
•
7 Messages
10 years ago
sent private to Marianne
0
0
lrosenman
Mentor
•
58 Messages
10 years ago
0
0
billcrowley
Mentor
•
62 Messages
10 years ago
this is the site that they gigapower techs use: http://www.att.com/speedtest/
I have also used speedtest.net and tested against the Temple Texas location per instructions from a gigapower tech
0
0
rupesh.bk
Tutor
•
10 Messages
10 years ago
There are a few sites to test your speed:
Your results should be more or less same.
0
0
nated0309
Tutor
•
17 Messages
9 years ago
I'm having an issue with my upload speed. In Houston I have the 1GB service and I am only getting an average of a 350 MB upload while I get between 800-900 down. I thought the speeds were supposed to mirror?
I am on a Desktop running Win7 and connected directly to the gateway via LAN
0
0
Tigereyze209
Professor
•
3.9K Messages
9 years ago
NO internet service, that I'm aware of, has an upload speed equal to the download speed. I am dsl, and i get six megabits down, and one half of a megabit (512 k) up.
My parents have cable, and while they get upwards of 75 mbps down, they only get about 7-10 mbps up.
Truth is, that is just as well, because the way it works, you are typically downloading way more than you''d ever upload.
Even under the new fcc broadband standars, it's like 30 mbps down, and 3-5 mbps up.
Just the nature of the beast.
0
0
JefferMC
ACE - Expert
•
35K Messages
9 years ago
Some services do have symetric data rates, but it's rare. Actually, I think Gigapower 300 was 300/300.
When allocating limited bandwidth resources (e.g. frequency bands on copper on the last mile, fibers and frequencies on multi-mode fibers), most data is flowing downstream and so more resources are provided to carry data in that direction. The bandwidth limitations placed on subscribers normally reflects this reality.
0
0