Your Tech Story

Internet speed

China Claims World’s Fastest Internet With 1.2 Terabit-Per-Second Network

China Claims World’s Fastest Internet With 1.2 Terabit-Per-Second Network

China has surged ahead in the global race for lightning-fast internet, defying industry expectations by unveiling a groundbreaking next-generation service that outpaces existing routes by over tenfold. The nation proudly presents a network capable of transmitting data at a staggering 1.2 terabits per second, effectively leaping past the predicted timeline by a solid two years.

Boosting Data Speeds Beyond Imagination

This cutting-edge backbone network forms a vital data conduit linking Beijing, Wuhan in central China, and Guangzhou in the southern Guangdong province. Its unparalleled capacity sends data at a velocity equivalent to streaming a mind-boggling 150 films per second, showcasing a leap forward in digital connectivity.

China Claims World’s Fastest Internet With 1.2 Terabit-Per-Second Network

Image Source: firstpost.com

Despite Nigeria’s ongoing struggle with internet speeds affecting a significant portion of its 150 million users, China’s milestone marks a decisive step toward revolutionizing global internet infrastructure. Recent reports highlighted Africa’s persistent challenges, with average download speeds in Sub-Saharan Africa hovering around 12.11 Mbps, underscoring the urgent need for enhanced connectivity across the continent.

This technological marvel, spanning over 3,000 kilometers of optical fiber cabling, materialized from a collaborative effort involving Tsinghua University, China Mobile, Huawei Technologies, and Cernet Corporation. This alliance defied earlier expert projections, which anticipated such ultra-high-speed networks emerging closer to 2025.

The Beijing-Wuhan-Guangzhou connection forms a crucial segment of China’s ten-year-long Future Internet Technology Infrastructure (FITI) project, representing the latest iteration of the national China Education and Research Network (Cernet). Wu Jianping, FITI Project Leader, hailed this achievement as not only operationally successful but also a stepping stone toward even swifter internet capabilities.

Unprecedented Speed for a Connected Future

The implications of this milestone extend beyond mere speed records. Wang Lei, Vice-President of Huawei Technologies at Tsinghua University, lauded the network’s capability to transfer the equivalent data of 150 high-definition films within a single second. Xu Mingwei from Tsinghua University likened this new backbone network to a superfast train track, effectively replacing ten regular tracks in data transmission.

China underlines the pivotal role of backbone networks in serving national education, research needs, and the burgeoning demand for data transfer from industrial 5G applications like connected vehicles and mining operations.

With this remarkable achievement, China not only claims the title for the world’s fastest internet but propels the global digital landscape toward an era of unprecedented connectivity and data transfer speeds.

Nest Wi-Fi Pro

Google to release Nest Wi-Fi Pro update next week to fix slow internet speed

Google will launch a software upgrade for the brand-new Nest Wi-fi Pro close to the start of the next week to resolve some users’ slow Internet speeds.

Nest Wi-fi Pro
Image Source: thegoandroid.com

Google unveiled its newest IoT products, such as the Nest Wifi Pro, on October 4. The model looks hardly anything like most Wi-Fi routers and costs 200 USD, but it may be valuable for those who are committed to the Nest ecosystem and want a mesh networking setup. Why? The model includes Wi-Fi 6E, which expands on 802.11ax connectivity to provide customers with access to the 6 GHz band. As a matter of fact, the device is evidently future-proof and performs better.

Sanjay Noronha, Google Nest Wifi’s product lead said that “the company is currently investigating reports of a small number of users experiencing reduced Internet speeds on Nest Wifi Pro routers, and that its teams are working to roll out a fix,” as reported by The Verge.

Source: business-standard.com

Considering the combo of performance assurances and high price tag, it is not surprising that some customers were dissatisfied when they discovered a bug that in some cases, was restricting the Nest Wifi Pro to speeds of only around 50 Mbps.

Read More: Apple Restricts iPhone AirDrop With Everyone to Just 10 Minutes in China

It is noticeably slower than what one might anticipate out of a Wi-Fi 6E device which in actuality, for so many customers, may have signified a dramatic drop compared to the hardware they were using before purchasing Google’s. Luckily, it appears that the firm has heard the complaints and is hard at work on a bug fix.

Not every Nest Wifi Pro owner has reported slow internet speed issues. Google told The Verge that this issue affected only a small percentage of its users. The spokesperson said that Google is working on a bug fix for the issue and that it will begin the launch to consumers close to the start of the next week that means Monday is unclear, but it appears to be only a matter of days away.

According to the statement provided to The Verge, it appears that users in the United Kingdom were more likely to be affected by this glitch than consumers in the United States. That reason for the bug might well be connected to point-to-point protocol over ethernet (PPPoE). It is generally used by DSL service providers in the United Kingdom and DSL is still accessible in many other places, and those users may also be affected.

Google did not go into detail about why these slow speed issues are occurring, allowing the reader to presume what they can, from the information given. In the meantime, if you’ve a non-Pro Google Nest Wi-fi mesh network router and are undergoing slow speeds, the firm has an assistance document outlining possible solutions.